Thread for Women Discerning Religious Life

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Thank you very much for your suggestions, but I really believe God is calling me to abandon healthcare since I can’t find an order that I am really attracted to that has it as their apostolate. I’ve looked at several, even the Sisters of St. Francis of the Martyr St. George or the Sisters of St. Francis of Perpetual Adoration. The Franciscan Sisters of the Renewal are the only that have impressed on me an attraction to their life. If things change, I’d be willing to reconsider the others. It depends on what God has planned for me. 😃
Have you thought of or seen the Servants of Mary, Ministers to the Sick - sisterservantsofmary.com/ - ? They are a wonderful nursing order.

If you think you might be, I have on a VHS tape and can copy to a DVD a WONDERFUL 10-15min or more vocational mini-documentary that was on EWTN in the late 90s and maybe more recently? that I copied as I was looking at them myself. I am a LVN. If you are interested, I can send you this show on them on DVD for free if you like.

Their show/video is MUCH more impactful and gives a better look at the sisters, their life, charism, apostolate than the website does. They are in various locations too.

Or how about the Dominican Sisters of Hawthorne?
 
I discovered, on being notified through changedetect.com, of an update in the Women’s Formation link of the Adrian Dominicans,

adriandominicans.org/BecomeaSister/InFormation.aspx

–of the reception into the novitiate of Sister Xiomara, who is originally from the Dominican Republic. She was trained as an industrial designer, became a successful fashion designer, and the results are visible in the beautiful dress she wore at her reception, which is on YouTube.

adriandominicans.org/WhatsHappening/AdrianDominicanNews/AdrianDominicanNewsView/tabid/816/smid/1423/ArticleID/1/reftab/153/t/Sister%20Xiomara%20Mendez-Hernandez%20is%20received%20Into%20the%20Novitiate/Default.aspx

During her Candidate year (postulancy) she preached to migrants at St. Mary’s Church, where she was stationed. (Dominicans = preaching).
 
I am quite a bit older than y’all, and I am in search if a third order, tertitary, or oblates. The Augustinians, seem to be drawing me. However, I live in South Carolina, so they would have to be in Georgia or North Carolina. Any help would be prayerfully received.

James 15:5

Blessed be all the branches of the Vine.

Old and Searching :gopray2:
 
Hi!

I’m 14 and I think I want to enter a contemplative convent.

The Benedictine Sisters caught my eye.
 
Thank you very much for your suggestions, but I really believe God is calling me to abandon healthcare since I can’t find an order that I am really attracted to that has it as their apostolate. I’ve looked at several, even the Sisters of St. Francis of the Martyr St. George or the Sisters of St. Francis of Perpetual Adoration. The Franciscan Sisters of the Renewal are the only that have impressed on me an attraction to their life. If things change, I’d be willing to reconsider the others. It depends on what God has planned for me. 😃
Carmelite girl

I hope all is well with you as you come to yes another turn on your vocation journey
I am sure that you have looked into all these help tools.
  1. Are there any habited Franciscan sisters or retreat centers near you???

    This would be a good way to find Franciscan communities around…
  2. vocationsplacement.org
    ( I highly recommend them as a starting search engine… they ask for parameters such as habited/non… rule… and apostolate/activeor contemplative. while they do give a mix and broaden the search {this because many of their initial peeps dont have a starting point}… I found he materials rec eve if from a community which didnt fit me? I found much of the materials to help.
3)www.relgiousministries.com*

that is a good one to find sisters in health care then narrow to community or find Franciscan communities (100s of them) then narrow by area or apostolate
  1. Vision and Vocationmatch.com have good magazines
I realize visiting is the best… but being able to narrow or perhaps broaden the search helps sometimes

Blessings and you will be in my prayers
 
Thank you very much for your suggestions, but I really believe God is calling me to abandon health care since I can’t find an order that I am really attracted to that has it as their apostolate. I’ve looked at several, even the Sisters of St. Francis of the Martyr St. George or the Sisters of St. Francis of Perpetual Adoration. The Franciscan Sisters of the Renewal are the only that have impressed on me an attraction to their life. If things change, I’d be willing to reconsider the others. It depends on what God has planned for me. 😃
Carmelite girl

I hope all is well with you as you come to yes another turn on your vocation journey
I am sure that you have looked into all these help tools.
  1. Are there any habited Franciscan sisters or retreat centers near you???

    This would be a good way to find Franciscan communities around…
    The best thing you could do is connect with Franciscans, then broaden to a community serving and living the lifestyle you are thinking of.
Are you still drawn to active relgious life? Have you connected with the other Franciscans posting here??? sometimes they have links to communities that might help…
2) vocationsplacement.org
( I highly recommend them as a starting search engine… they ask for parameters such as habited/non… rule… and apostolate/active or contemplative. while they do give a mix and broaden the search {this because many of their initial peeps don’t have a starting point}… I found he materials rec eve if from a community which didnt fit me? I found much of the materials to help.

3)www.relgiousministries.com*

that is a good one to find sisters in health care then narrow to community or find Franciscan communities (100s of them) then narrow by area or apostolate
  1. Vision and Vocationmatch.com have good magazines
I realize visiting is the best… but being able to narrow or perhaps broaden the search helps sometimes…again am sure you have used much of this. Just wanted to post in case it helped anyone else.

Blessings and you will be in my prayers
 
I have become quite interested in the Benedictine nun communities. I have been using vocationsplacement.org for quite some time now, but I can’t seem to find any other sects beside Dominican and Benedictine sisters. Are there any other types of Caatholic nuns/sisters besides these two? If so, what are they?
 
There are the Poor Clare Colettines, Carmelites, Cistercians and Visitation nuns for contemplative orders besides the Dominicans and Benedictines. These are the oldest orders.

Are you interested in active, semi-active, contemplative?
 
I am interested in the active orders that spend a lot of time out in the local community but also live together in their own monastery/house. I am mostly interested in ones that minister in the areas of education, children/youth, and the homeless.
 
I see your Religion says “Protestant - United Methodist”. Are you converting or have you finished RCIA and are now catholic but didn’t change your Religion part of your profile?

You’d have to be Catholic to enter any Catholic religious order. Unless you are looking at the Anglican orders?

There are many active/semi-active orders doing what you are looking for. Some are:

Carmelite Sisters of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus in Los Angles - carmel-msh.org/ - does education, healthcare, the elderly.

The CFR sisters - franciscansisterscfr.com/ - who some forum members are or have visited - work with the poor, etc.

There’s so many more but I guess we should know - if you want to say - what your religion is!
 
I am interested in the active orders that spend a lot of time out in the local community but also live together in their own monastery/house. I am mostly interested in ones that minister in the areas of education, children/youth, and the homeless.
There’s an order in Ann Arbor MI, The Servants of God’s Love, that runs a foster home.
Also in Ann Arbor is the Sisters of Mary Mother of the Eucharist. They are a teaching order.

JMJ+
~Betsy

Totus tuus Maria!
 
Although I still have ties with the UMC community, I am considered to be in the Inquirer stage of RCIA. So for the moment, I guess you could say I’m inbetween.
 
Can someone help me? I’m looking for really strict contemplative orders
 
Thank you sister the Poor Clares have interested me for quite some time.
Any other suggestions are welcome too.
 
Adrienne, I am assuming by strict you mean a cloistered community that likely wears a traditional habit . I suggest you also look at the Carmelites and the Passionist nuns, possibly Dominican nuns. Are you interested in a particular part of the country? You will find most of these orders in all parts of the US, however there are relatively few Passionist Nuns monasteries. There are also contemplatives who are not cloistered but I would say they probably live a very structured life (read: strict).
 
Thank you sister the Poor Clares have interested me for quite some time.
Any other suggestions are welcome too.
I too love the Poor Clare Colettines. I discerned with a fantastic community strict to St. Clare’s Rule and St. Colette’s reform.

Look at the Poor Clare Colettines in Cleveland, OH: poorclarecolettines-cleveland.org/

Photos of them: cmykstudios.com/poorclares/index.htm the nuns in the slightly modified veil are the externs

Article on them: cleveland.com/religion/index.ssf/2006/12/a_secluded_path_inside_the_cha.html

Community picture and picture of their externs (scroll down 1-2 pictures) in Cardinal Sean’s blog: cardinalseansblog.org/2007/06/

Or Poor Clare Colettines of Santa Barbara, CA: poorclaressantabarbara.org/

The West Springfield Dominican cloistered nuns are great too. They just went back to the full traditional habit and traditions/customs a few years back and are getting alot of vocations: op-stjoseph.org/nuns/ws/

Then the Discalced Carmelites following the 1990 Constitutions are best that strictly adhere to St. Teresa of Avila’s rule, constitutions, teachings, etc. Most are listed at the St. Joseph Association of Carmels: carmelitenunsstjoseph.org/ . There are a few excellent 1990 Carmels no in this association like Cristo Rey Carmel in San Fran, and Valapraiso Carmel in Nevada that is founded from Cristo Rey and I think a few.

In England, the only 1990 Carmel is the Carmel of Sheffield - which IS a VERY traditional Carmel: kirkedge.org.uk/index.html / This is an excellent Carmel and one I hope to visit soon.

Other great cloistered orders are the Visitation nuns:
Toledo Visitation: toledovisitation.org/

Philadelphia Visitation: philadelphiavisitation.org/

Rockville Visitation: catholicvirginian.org/archive/2008/2008vol83iss19/pages/parishprofile.html and their older site: web.archive.org/web/20010420220929/www.sistersofthevisitation.org/index.htm

Snellville, GA Visitation: db.religiouslife.com/reg_life/irl.nsf/org/36

Would NOT recommend the Tyringham Visitation.
 
Thank you thank you THANK YOU!!! You have given me a lot to consider! :D:D:D

Blessings on all!

Adi
 
Here’s a question for all the ladies that have posted so far and for those who might join us later: Have any of you felt equally called to life as a religious and a life of marriage and children? I used to be quite certain that God would lead me to marriage and a family (especially pre-conversion). During the time that I was studying Catholicism and post-conversion, I began to feel fascinated by and drawn to the life of the religious and a life of Christian service as a sister or nun. One moment I think that I want a husband and children and I want it with all my heart. The next I think that I want to devote myself to religious life and I want that with all my heart. I suspect that one of these desires will turn out to be the desire of my own heart and not God’s true calling, but how do I find out which is which? At this point in time, neither holds greater sway over the other and so I’m feeling rather confused. Have any of you ever felt equally pulled in opposite directions? Any insight/advice you might have to offer is greatly appreciated. I do so hate uncertainty. :confused:
I saw this question and I wanted to answer it. When I much younger I was seriously thinking about becoming a nun. I knew the nuns that taught at the Catholic school at my church in California at the time (St. Joseph of Cupertino). They were wonderful ladies. I even attended convent school. I was 19-21. I was certain that God was calling me to enter the convent.

You might asked what changed that. In 1979 my family took a trip to Europe. We were in the Black Forest and I prayed to God to show me what he wanted for me as that whole trip I saw myself married and with children. I prayed for wisdom because I thought if God was really calling me to be a nun, the urge to marry and have children as a vocation wouldn’t be so strong.

When we came back to the states, I decided to attend a Catholic girls school in Boston where I could still practice my Catholic Faith but at the same time be more social and just a normal girl. My time and experience there was such that I left not wanting to be a nun if it meant I was going to turn into a nasty person like the nun there who took such delight in telling me how stupid I was. It was really a very terrible experience being told I was so ignorant that I couldn’t learn anything. I left at Spring time as I got very ill there.

The funny thing is that God never did being a husband in my life, so there wasn’t the children. At 51 I am still single I can look back and say did I blow it by not entering the convent after coming back from Europe and going to Boston? Sure, there are times that I feel like I made a mistake by not entering the convent, but the truth is that the Catholic Church was always a safe place for me. I felt safe from the world outside that has not always been a happy place for me. It was my place to hide from the bad and the terrifying. I think I wanted to be a nun for the wrong reasons. I think I was running away from the bad in the world and not running to something. I don’t know if what I am saying is making sense.

I think that I was right in thinking that God’s vocation for me was marriage and family. I just think that something happen that hindered that from happening. Who knows it still might happen, lol. I am open to whatever path opens up to me in life.

We as women can serve God in whatever place we are in. I would encourage you to go on a retreat. At Convent school that I went to they had retreats for the girls/women who were considering the religious life. If you feel in your heart the desire for a husband and children than it may be that God is calling you to serve him through marriage and motherhood. The most important thing is to talk over your feelings with the sisters who you are close to. I know that they will be a great help in helping your discern God’s Will for your life.

I wish you the best as you are praying and discerning what God’s Will is for you. Who knows where the Lord will place us, but I believe he will show us where he wants us to be.

Best Wishes
Chrisy
 
Can someone help me? I’m looking for really strict contemplative orders
Can you define what you mean by ‘strict’?

-full habit?

-penitential practices?

-full office?

-perpetual fast and abstinence?

-papal enclosure?

Not all ‘strict’ enclosed monastic orders practice all of this.
 
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