S
Sister_Kathleen
Guest
Dear Lainey:
I do know this “longing” comes from God in many packages. When my husband of 46 years died in 2001, and my mother six months later, I entered an order of mature women based in Tijuana, Mexico and lived their two years before returning to the U.S. to work in several dioceses during the past six years. I was 67 when I entered and will be 76 this summer.
I don’t know that I have ever felt like a “sister” - but I do know I had a quiet constant call to live a “consecrated life” - knowing I could live a consecrated life outside of a community of religious women.
We are the “Eudist Servants of the Eleventh Hour” (meaning we are older) - called to serve in the vineyard at the last hour - St. John Eudes is our spiritual father - he was best friends with St. Vincent de Paul more than 400 years ago. St. John founded the Congretagtion of the Sisters of Our Lady of Charity in 1641 and Eudist priests (CJM) a few years later. Both the Good Shephard Sisters and the Little Sisters of the Poor call him spiritual father as well. Both founded by women who became canonized saints.
His initial intent was to provide care for “abused women” - carried out to this day by the Sisters of OLC. We are a small branch off the trunk of the Sisters of OLC - our charism is mercy and our mission (although not exclusive) is prison ministry.
I have loved my life these past eight years and God-willing will renew my annual vows again March 25, 2010.
We have a website that explains who we are - it is the Eudist Servants of the Eleventh Hour and you can see the Sisters by opening the directory…at the top.
The three things that make us “different” is, we are older women between the ages of 45-65 when we enter (and that is flexible both ways), and we don’t live in common or take from a common fund. A few of us do hold salaried positions and most of us live on social security. We have been accepted as a Private Association of the Faithful with Juridic personality in a number of dioceses around the country. We were seven in number when we received our approbation in 2003, and we will be 30 in number this year.
We are one of a number of orders of religious women who accept older women. We invite them. We make vows of poverty, chastity, obedience and divine love.
And yes, many mature women from early times until now do have authentic voctions - whether single, or widowed by death or divorce, we are called.
I do have four grown children (all in their late '40s and '50s - and four living grandchildren in their '20s and '30s…
I hope this will help with your discernment. I, too, felt called to the “contemplative” life - enjoying solitude - yet I know that “contemplation” is a Grace given so that we can see God in all living things - and so some of us are called to become active contemplatives in the world, don’t you think?
God Bless. Take Care.
Sister Kathleen (Katie)
I do know this “longing” comes from God in many packages. When my husband of 46 years died in 2001, and my mother six months later, I entered an order of mature women based in Tijuana, Mexico and lived their two years before returning to the U.S. to work in several dioceses during the past six years. I was 67 when I entered and will be 76 this summer.
I don’t know that I have ever felt like a “sister” - but I do know I had a quiet constant call to live a “consecrated life” - knowing I could live a consecrated life outside of a community of religious women.
We are the “Eudist Servants of the Eleventh Hour” (meaning we are older) - called to serve in the vineyard at the last hour - St. John Eudes is our spiritual father - he was best friends with St. Vincent de Paul more than 400 years ago. St. John founded the Congretagtion of the Sisters of Our Lady of Charity in 1641 and Eudist priests (CJM) a few years later. Both the Good Shephard Sisters and the Little Sisters of the Poor call him spiritual father as well. Both founded by women who became canonized saints.
His initial intent was to provide care for “abused women” - carried out to this day by the Sisters of OLC. We are a small branch off the trunk of the Sisters of OLC - our charism is mercy and our mission (although not exclusive) is prison ministry.
I have loved my life these past eight years and God-willing will renew my annual vows again March 25, 2010.
We have a website that explains who we are - it is the Eudist Servants of the Eleventh Hour and you can see the Sisters by opening the directory…at the top.
The three things that make us “different” is, we are older women between the ages of 45-65 when we enter (and that is flexible both ways), and we don’t live in common or take from a common fund. A few of us do hold salaried positions and most of us live on social security. We have been accepted as a Private Association of the Faithful with Juridic personality in a number of dioceses around the country. We were seven in number when we received our approbation in 2003, and we will be 30 in number this year.
We are one of a number of orders of religious women who accept older women. We invite them. We make vows of poverty, chastity, obedience and divine love.
And yes, many mature women from early times until now do have authentic voctions - whether single, or widowed by death or divorce, we are called.
I do have four grown children (all in their late '40s and '50s - and four living grandchildren in their '20s and '30s…
I hope this will help with your discernment. I, too, felt called to the “contemplative” life - enjoying solitude - yet I know that “contemplation” is a Grace given so that we can see God in all living things - and so some of us are called to become active contemplatives in the world, don’t you think?
God Bless. Take Care.
Sister Kathleen (Katie)