Prayer: A Missionary Apostolate
The power of our prayer is a dynamic response to the call of our God to join in proclaiming the Kingdom of God. Our prayer is not static but rather goes out from us, unites with the prayers of our brothers and sisters and produces the fruit of the harvest.
Hello! I’m Sister Mary Thérese from the Passionist Monastery in Whitesville, Ky. Today, my friends, I would like to share a little of my life with you and how God became number one in my life. Or better still, how God captured me and how I responded to His gift of love.
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I was born Betty
Dale Seitz in Paducah, KY and I grew up in the country where the
beauty of nature was everywhere. There was a
lot of natural, God-given solitude. And so by nature solitude was weaved through
and through in my earlier life.
I mention solitude because I really believe it is one of the
foundational requisites by which one can hear God’s call. God’s language
sometimes is not all that easy to decipher, especially if there is a lot of
noise going on within and without. The exterior solitude that I was gifted with
was a real help to me in learning how to listen. Many times I could not
understand what I seemed to be hearing, but God in His
goodness sent interpreters, as you will see as I tell my vocation
story.
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I had wonderful parents and they worked hard to raise the eight children they had, I being the sixth child in the family. What they did and said affected me deeply.
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They taught us what sacrifice was mainly by their own
example. Even though we were poor we never lacked the necessities of
life.
When I started to school and made new friends I realized I had a
lot more than some of my little friends did by way of material things. I
remember feeling very happy when I was able to share some of what I had with
them. At a very early age I felt an attraction for people who did not have it so
good.
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This attraction grew as I read about the foreign missionaries and it was during this time, around the ages of 11 and 12, that I felt drawn to be a
Sister. The pictures of so many poor and destitute people tore at my heart and I
wanted to do something to relieve their sufferings. I remember thinking of
myself as being like one of those Sisters some day who cared for the poor.
It was precisely this strong something
inside me which I had felt
at different times during my early adolescence that I finally responded to one
Saturday morning as I sat alone at the breakfast table. I was midway in my
senior year and had been to one of those senior class parties that was filled
with a lot of fun and laughter the night before. It was late when I arrived home
that night, so I was late in getting up the next morning, which was the reason
for my being alone at the breakfast table - or perhaps this was the way God
had planned things for His annunciation to me.
I was neither to be a Sister of Mercy nor a missionary Sister
as I
had dreamed of for so long, but a contemplative of which I knew absolutely
nothing at that time.
For me Cod’s will was unfolding gradually and I needed
much patience, but most of all trust for things were looking rather bleak at
this moment.
While with the Sisters of Mercy I had learned how to speak to our
Lord in a personal way. I learned this on my own. Methods seemed all too
complicated and impersonal for my poor mind and heart. I was drawn at this time
to reflect on the Passion of Jesus and my choice of books at that time centered
on the Passion. During these months of waiting I became acquainted with the life of
St. Therese of Lisieux who was a great inspiration for me and whose name I was
later given as a Passionist Sister. I could relate to her own great desire and
dream of being a missionary. It was not God’s dream for her either. She taught
me how to accept the vocation God wanted to give me. It was at this time I began
to let go of what had been and to put my whole heart into searching for what the
Provincial had opened up to me and that my Dad had confirmed in a kind of
prophetic way.
I did not know very many Sisters except the Sisters of Mercy who
taught me in school. I observed the Sisters very closely and they were always a
source of admiration for me and made me aware of the sacred. Being a quiet and a
rather shy person I didn’t ask questions or share my thoughts and feelings. I
did not like school, but I found myself going to school to be with the Sisters,
so greatly was I attracted to them. They were the ones who exposed me to the
literature on the foreign missions. I was especially happy one year when I and
some of my friends saved enough money to buy a pagan baby. I got to name it and
received A picture of the baby later when it was baptized. I remember how
thrilled I was and my desire to be a missionary grew.
God’s call to me at the different stages in my life was not like
the Hound of Heaven as much as it was God’s presence --pursuing and calling me
in ways I could not dream of. I never found myself running away from the dream I
had. It was something that was with me all the time. I did not understand what
this presence was,’ but I did recognize something drawing me to be a religious
Sister.
I remember a cousin of mine looking at me in great wonderment and
asking, (this was after I had made my decision to enter religious life), "how
did you know you wanted to be a Sister?" Well, not being too experienced in
God’s ways, I said, after thinking about it for awhile,
"its something inside
that makes me want to be a Sister." It was as simple as that.
Betty Dale - 18 years old
High School Senior
Picture
As I sat there going over in my mind the things that happened the
night before, I suddenly had a strange, empty feeling within. It was something I
had never experienced before. It wasn’t a physical thing, like a lack of food,
for I had just eaten. I found myself wondering about the future, wondering like
I had never done before. Parties and everything life had to offer were indeed
exciting for me, but what about this sudden empty feeling that just came over
me? These things were not satisfying me. Then, the question came out from this
deep empty feeling — "Betty, what are you going to do with your life?"
Somehow,
the question demanded an answer. The religious life was before me again -
that
presence. The good feeling returned so strongly that the following Monday I went
to my teacher who was a Sister of Mercy and told her I would like to be a
Sister. What do I do? She did not seem surprised as I thought she would be.
After talking together, Sister arranged that I would enter the Sisters of Mercy
the following September in Cincinnati, Ohio.
After exposing my desire to Sister, I felt drawn to spend extra
time at Church and found myself going to Mass more frequently. I don’t recall
any specific prayers I said, other than the rosary, but I felt comfortable in
that special presence of our Lord. Perhaps the Sisters did the praying and I
just listened to the deep longing, for the call was strong. My classsmates did
not believe I was serious, but gradually they all told me they were happy for
me, and not one tried to discourage me.
On entering the Sisters of Mercy I was very happy except for one
thing. I wanted to be a missionary Sister and there wasn’t any indication that
this was going to happen. My time with the Sisters of Mercy was valuable because
it was a period of discovering God’s will for me.
In the midst of one of
her great loves - creating flower beds!
The Provincial asked to see me one cold day in January. She was
very kind and asked me, after a short conversation, if I had ever thought about
the contemplative life? She mentioned a few Orders to me. I said no, not really.
I didn’t even know they existed, much less think of any of them as a way of
life. She smiled and said she thought God was calling me to the cloistered life.
The cloistered life! I thought. What was that? This was a hard blow for me
because I had my heart set on helping the poor, and besides it meant starting
all over again.
It was only later in life that I realized this was God’s gentle way
of telling me that lie really did not want me to be a missionary Sister. A
Sister, yes, but not an active Sister out on the front lines as it were. That
was all good and indeed heroic, but it was not where God wanted me.
My two years and 4 months with the Sisters of Mercy stimulated a
real drawing to prayer and revealed other gifts that made the directress there
think that God was calling me to the contemplative life.
Leaving the Sisters of Mercy was very hard and it was the beginning
of a call into suffering. It was detachment from what I wanted and attachment to
what God wanted. God’s mysterious plan was hard to understand and I struggled.
On returning home my parents were understanding, especially my Dad,
who embraced me and said: "God has another place for you."
Yes, God did indeed
have another place for me, but at that time it was complete darkness.
This trial was hard, but since I had done everything in my power to
answer the call of the good God I must admit that despite my tears in leaving
the Sisters, I felt great peace in the depth of my heart. All the same this
peace dwelt only in the depths, and my soul was full to overflowing with
bitterness. Jesus seemed to be absent and there was nothing to reveal His
presence. The result of my own efforts seemed to be a plain failure.
Lover of the great outdoors,
gleaning riches for her many artistic creations
Leaving the Sisters, I remember saying in my heart, "I will be a
Sister some day." My choice now was to mature in the darkness of waiting for
nine months and let God form me in the womb of His Holy Will.
Never did I doubt
God’s call in this struggle. It was the struggle of not knowing where He was
calling me and when. How little did I know then that God writes straight with
crooked lines. My dream of being a missionary Sister in some foreign land was
not God’s dream of me. His dream of me was much more profound, so profound that
it confused me -- "I have chosen you. You have not chosen me."
I now went to my pastor for his advice. I was completely open to
him about my vocation. He encouraged me, prayed for me, told me about the Passionist Nuns
in Owensboro, and finally arranged that I make a weekend retreat with them. God indeed was revealing to me His will through others. And so, I
made the retreat and it was during this retreat that I truly said yes to the
past and yes to God’s will for me at the present. So quickly did it all happen
that I could hardly control the exalted feeling within me. Six weeks later I was
accepted as a postulant in the Passionist Congregation.
It is in being a Spouse of Jesus Crucified that I can always be a
missionary Sister at heart, for Jesus was the greatest missionary that ever came
into this world. And so my dream is being fulfilled at every moment through
prayer, penance and sacrifice and by having Jesus’ sufferings and death always
in my heart. This is God’s loving gift to me and it
is this gift that I share daily with the whole world through faith. God love and bless you.
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Sr. Mary Therese, CP of Jesus Crucified |
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