Answer the Call: Benedictine Sisters looking for a few good women!

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The Byzantine Benedictine Sisters of Queen of Heaven Monastery are looking for a few good women.
The Vindicator Newspaper, Youngstown Ohio
Published: Sunday, March 19, 2006

Sister Margaret Mary Schima, Order of St. Benedict, prioress of the Howland convent (Warren, OH), says the order has slowly diminished from 15 nuns in 1969 to seven sisters.

That’s why they are inviting single Catholic women to visit with them March 31 to April 2 at their Squires Lane convent in Howland across from Forum Health Hillside Rehabilitation Hospital.

“It’s a recruitment weekend,” Sister Margaret Mary acknowledges. One of the areas that will be covered is how the women will know that God is calling them to the religious life.

She and Sister Agnes Knapik, OSB, vocation director at the convent, said they aren’t looking for the 15- and 16-year-old girls convents once attracted. These girls tended not to remain nuns because they weren’t mature enough when they professed their vows.

** What they’re looking for **

The order is looking for “mature women” with work experience, an indication they have a stable life.

They seek women who have had their marriage annulled, women whose children no longer depend on them and even those in their 50s and 60s “because they still have 20 years left,” Sister Margaret Mary explained.

“You don’t have to be a college graduate,” she noted, because they work in various areas, not just education.

Their final vows include chastity, stability, obedience and pursuit of a monastic life in a group. Prayer is the center of their lives.

There is a benefits package. For example, the nuns have a retirement fund.

One of their fellow nuns works at a parish, another teaches at Kent State University and another volunteers doing children’s rehabilitation.

“We do other things than work in schools,” Sister Margaret Mary said.

Sister Agnes noted recruiting has been difficult in recent years and two nuns at the convent have died.

The nuns have been studying their future for the past four years. “We have to make plans for what will happen to us,” Sister Margaret Mary added.

Some convents have merged, but the Howland sisters represent the only Benedictine Byzantine order in the country.

They trace their beginnings to 1951 in Lisle, Ill. They moved to Warren at the request of the late Monsignor Sylvester Hladky to open a school at his Sts. Peter and Paul Parish. The school opened in 1954.

They lived at a motherhouse two blocks from the East Market Street church, and changed the name to reflect a monastery because it more aptly described the place where Benedictines live.

In 1970, the sisters moved to the Howland monastery on 10 acres the order bought.

Sister Margaret Mary pointed out that her order isn’t cloistered. “We’re not in a prison,” she said. They travel to meetings, attend concerts and visit their families. They even have a vacation fund.

The Howland Monastery is:
Benedictine Sisters of the Byzantine Rite
8640 Squires Lane Northeast
Warren, OH 44484-1646

(330) 856-1813
 
Just to clarify the above post, one does not need to be a Byzantine Catholic to investigate this opportunity. One need only be a sincerely devout Catholic layperson of any tradition: Latin, Maronite, Copt, Armenian, Malabar, Malankar, Ge’ez, Syriac, anything! Although I realize that most of you ladies will be Latin Catholics.

Many Eastern Catholics avail themselves the oportunity of joining Latin orders like the Franciscan, Carmelite, etc. In this case we have a Benedictine monastic house with a Byzantine liturgical life, it should be very fulfilling. :yup:

You would have the benefit marvelous liturgical tradition, a rich prayer life and the ability to make a real difference in a smaller community setting.

Good luck and God Bless! 🙂
 
I pray that the Sisters will have a good turnout of prospective vocations!

It is encouraging that this Order is willing to consider older women. We often hear of men entering the priesthood at a mature age, as a second vocation, but the Orders of women religious seem to have a much lower maximum age (even some of the ones that will consider “older” women will take only up to age 40). Not all women are “tied down” with family responsibilities – some have never married, other are widows with grown children – we’ll never know which of them might have made good Religious Sisters if the vocations aren’t encouraged!

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