Seven Sisters in Art

Greetings dearest Sisters…

When I happed upon this Legros paintingI swiftly passed a copy onto our Chaplain, Fr Joseph Johnson, with a re-title: “The Original Seven Sisters”.   And indeed perhaps this century plus painting has something to say to us, the modern-day Seven Sisters, who likewise routinely andfaithfully seek our place of prayer. We, like the intercessor to the far right, put our parcel from the day’s work aside and out of sight for an hour each week, as we consider our dedicated task before us – an hour of prayer offered for the sanctity of a priest.  (And notice – the intercessor appears to have a glowing nimbus about her face!)

In the simplicity of color and setting in this painting, the images here seem to easily draw one not merely into a study of the faces, but so too toward a desire to consider the hidden movement of the souls.  That is where the truest action dwells.  The attentive gaze, the half-closed eyelids of meditation, the seeking look of affection – all intimate to that deeper place of heart to which prayer beckons and brings.  The hands of the intercessors speak also.  One caresses sacred beads, another points heavenward, while still another settles in place with a binder in hand of perhaps familiar and worn pages.  All, again, with the mission of bringing the mind and soul more in tune with the One to whom the intercessor seeks. Some women make their offerings on their knees, low to the ground, reminding the heart of its true position in the presence of He Who is All, He Who is Able.  For those that sit, perhaps there is not sufficient room or ability to kneel physically, yet the heart desires and postures in lieu.

For me, both eye and heart rest on the intercessor of the far left.  She is leaning in, gesturing a desire to get closer, nearer her Lord.  She is holding a light in hopes of perhaps assisting a spiritual nearsightedness.  Further, she has adjusted her head cover to allow an ear to be open to the chapel’s air, as if enabling a better chance at listening in how to proceed, how to pray.  This is the image of the one still learning, still seeking.

Perhaps you sense yourself too in the orientation of one of these intercessors.  For some, each week’s Holy Hour may express itself similarly, for others it is perhaps varied.  And is not this the beauty of our call as a Seven Sister intercessor.  We have liberty in our Hour, freedom to allow the winds of the Holy Spirit to blow where they may, how they may.  Each week there is truly a fresh and unique spiritual bouquet offered to each priest.  We only see in part, for we are not alone in the offering.

St John Climacus (+606) said it early – and said it well. Consider his words as you take on the mantel of prayer as a Seven Sister and offer your weekly bouquet of prayers for a priest’s well-being and sanctity.  Read these poignant lines  in light of your call to this type of prayer offering. Be encouraged and affirmed and humbled.  Every breath of prayer has eternal merit.

“Prayer is union with God and colloquy with Him.
Prayer maintains the equilibrium of the world,
reconciles people to God,
produces holy tears,
forms a bridge over temptations,
and acts as a buttress between us and affliction.
Prayer drives away the struggles of the spirit.
It is the blessedness to come. It is an action that will never come to an end.
Prayer is a spring of the virtues,
it is an illumination of the mind,
it is a curtain to shut out despair,
it is a sign of hope, it is a victory over depression.
Prayer is a mirror in which we see our steps forward,
it is a signpost of the route to follow,
it is an unveiling of good things to come,
it is a pledge of glory.”

Please, please, please pray for me (one wee Hail Mary a day) – that I will not ‘spoil the beautiful work that God has entrusted…’  (Bl Mother Teresa of Calcutta)

United in prayer and mission –
that our prayers may find the hearts of every Bishop and priest

Janette
+JMJ+

Legros21.jpg

SAVE the DATE:  First Saturday, Nov 5, 2016
Seven Sisters Gathering
St Patrick ~ Oak Grove, MN
Details to happily follow
(Most likely: mid morning thru mid afternoon, incl holy Mass, lunch)

IMPORTANT:  Anchoresses – Many priest assignments changed in the Spring/Summer. Please send this info (if you have not already done so), to affirm your group is still active and to bring any changes to my attention.  Every group is important!

Return email: Seven Sisters Roster Info in subject line.  Supply this info:

Anchoress first/last name
Anchoress email, phone, postal address
Priest’s name
Priest’s position (Pastor, retired, Chaplain, rector, etc)
Parish name (or seminary, hospital, etc)
Location of parish (city/state) (Arch) Diocese
Date (originally in parish) Apostolate group began

Discerning our Commitment

Greetings dearest Sisters…

Early in the month I offered a Holy Hour for you – for the special intention of your active discernment regarding your involvement in Seven Sisters in the upcoming year.  I have not ceased smiling (or praying) as I so very often considered that you are in that deep place of interior listening.  At the same time several new Seven Sisters groups have sprouted forth this month, affirming that this remains a work worthy of our attention.  Truly, every sacrifice and every breath of prayer has merit!

I trust that you have or will be given direction for your continued commitment or departure from the weekly Holy Hours as part of the Seven Sisters Apostolate group.

May this prayer of St Teresa Benedicta of the Cross (Edith Stein) be yours as well: “O my God, fill my soul with holy joy, courage and strength to serve You.  Enkindle Your love in me and then walk with me along the next stretch of road before me.  I do not see very far ahead, but when I have arrived where the horizon now closes down, a new prospect will open before me, and I shall meet it with peace. Amen.”

Please let your Anchoress know TODAY/soon  (if you haven’t already) the direction of your call for the coming year, so that ideally as we enter the month of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, the month of  June, committed intercessors (and subs) will be identified and able to seamlessly continue in prayerful support of the priest or bishop.

INPUT: During your discernment, perhaps you have formulated a comment or longer testimony to share with others in the Apostolate.  Likewise, perhaps the priest or bishop that you prayer for has offered a comment, as well.  Please pass those on to me for an upcoming communique, that we all may be edified by them.

IMPORTANT:  Anchoresses – Many priest assignments change in the Spring. Please send this info (if you have not already done so), to affirm your group is still active and to bring any changes to my attention.  Return email: Seven Sisters Roster Info in subject line please.

Please, please, please pray for me (one wee Hail Mary a day) – that I will not ‘spoil the beautiful work that God has entrusted…’  (Bl Mother Teresa of Calcutta)

United in prayer and mission –
that our prayers may find the hearts of every Bishop and priest

Janette
+JMJ+

Madonna of the Grapes, pray for us!
St John Vianney, pray for us!
St Margaret Clitherow, pray for us!

Dealing with Distractions

Seven Sister: One holy hour/one priest/each week/one heart of prayer

“Each leaf, each blade of grass vies for attention.
Even weeds carry tiny blossoms to astonish us.”

– Marianne Poloskey

Greetings dearest Seven Sisters…

A shared experience as intercessors, to this degree or that,  is distraction in prayer. There are times when our prayers seem to spill out as fragments of thoughts and appear likely to have no hope of reaching even the ceiling of the chapel.  And never is it more distracting to be distracted then when one is so earnestly offering that prayer for another’s soul!

Let us not lose heart! We are not alone in this experience.  Others have tread this path, and actually become Saints through perseverance of that path.  They  offer encouraging words and will no doubt make haste to help us in intercession to likewise persevere.

As she grew close to her death, Bl Elizabeth of the Trinity (soon to be canonized) began to sense that she would have a special mission in heaven to pray for those still on earth to experience the grace to move away from our distractions and enter more fully into God’s presence.

St Elizabeth of the Trinity, pray for us!

St Francis de Sales reminds us that intentional, persistent efforts have merit:

“If you do nothing else the whole time of prayer than bring your heart back and put it beside Our Lord, although each time you do so it turns away from Him, your hour will be very well employed.”

He counsels us to anticipate the hardships of distractions, but also the rewards of perseverance:

“His will is, that entering into prayer, we should be prepared to suffer the pain of continual distractions, dryness and disgust, which may come upon us, and that we should remain as constant as if we had enjoyed much peace and consolation.  It is quite certain that our prayer will be none the less pleasing to God nor less useful to ourselves, for having been made with difficulty.”

Begin the Hour by consecrating every minute of that Hour for the recipient of your prayers – come what may, distractions or not.

A Seven Sister intercessor can offer the suffering of distractions itself for the benefit of the priest.  Only in the marvelous perfection of divine economy can we expect such dividends!  Also as St Francis reminds, there is the added benefit that we have the certitude that our prayers, albeit imperfect, are pleasing to God.

St Teresa of Avila, presents her transparent heart, that we may likewise be assured that Our Lord is completely aware of all that our hearts endure:

“I could neither pray nor read, but there I remained, for hours together, uneasy in mind and afflicted in spirit on account of the weight of my trouble, and of the fear that perhaps after all I was being tricked by the devil, and wondering what in the world I could do for my relief.  Not a gleam of hope seemed to shine upon me from either earth or heaven; except just this: that in the midst of all my fears and dangers I never forgot how Our Lord must be seeing the weight of all I endured…”

ON A PRACTICAL NOTE: Our contemporary, Fr George Kosicki, CSB, imparts some advice:

“Anytime you come into the Eucharistic presence of the Lord and find that you are distracted and anxious about situations in your life, you can begin your prayer time with a litany of mercy as a way of letting go of all these thoughts. How?  Let me suggest a method that has helped me.

Simply begin asking the Holy Spirit to pray in you, and then respond to each of the distractions and anxieties – from whatever source – with short prayers such as: ‘Jesus, mercy’ or ‘Jesus, I trust in You.”

Imagine that each of the distractions, anxieties, fears, or hurts is a slide-show.  Project one ‘slide’ at a time on the wall and pray your response, and then move on to the next ‘slide.’ You will be surprised when suddenly you have run through all your slides and are at peace in the presence of the Lord.”

A final edifying comment from St Alphonsus Ligouri: “If you have many distractions at prayer, that prayer of yours may well be upsetting the devil a great deal.”

Keep up the good work, ladies!  Pray that your priest becomes a Saint – nothing less!

United in prayer and mission –
that our prayers may find the heart of every bishop and priest
… eternal gratitude as you remember to offer a wee Hail Mary for me each day….

Janette
+JMJ+

 Prayer (oil on canvas) ~ John Phillip (1859)

PRAYER (OIL ON CANVAS) ~ JOHN PHILLIP (1859)

The 2nd annual Seven Sisters gathering in Iowa (April 2) was memorable and inspiring!  Since last year’s retreat, there are 18 more priests covered by daily prayer!!!  What a wellspring of graces through the generous sacrifices of prayers of these women. Lasting gratitude for your stellar example!  Dubuque diocese coordinator, JoAnn Olson cjolson@mchsi.com – you rock!

My prayers heartily join yours as you commit in this upcoming month of May to discern (see Guidelines) your continued commitment or departure from the weekly Hour Hours as part of a Seven Sisters Apostolate group.  I will offer a Holy Hour for you and your discernment on May 6, the First Friday in May.

As we grow in knowledge, love and service of our priests, it comes to happen that we desire the same for our knowledge, love and service of our Eucharistic Lord. Many Seven Sisters (and friends) have signed up for free daily Eucharistic Reflections through the Apostolate, Truth Himself. Click here: Truth Himself  Anyone can be added to the distribution list anytime by sending me an email. Please include name.   joy2day2u@aol.com

 

Madonna of the Grapes, pray for us!
St John Vianney, pray for us!
St Margaret Clitherow, pray for us!

St. Margaret Clitherow

Let us remember the Feast of one of our patrons… St Margaret Clitherow, pray for us!

“I die for the love of my Lord Jesu.”- St Margaret Clitherow

Feast Day – March 26

“March 26th is one of two days the One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church honors a Pearl of Our Lady’s Dowry. The Church chose this day, as it was the first available. In reality, she was put to death on quite a momentous day. Not only was it March 25th – the date that the Feast of the Annuniciation is normally celebrated, but in the year that she died, 1586, this date was also Good Friday. She followed inher dear Saviour’s footsteps so closely that she died in a cruciform position, her hands and arms outstretched and bound to the floor on which she would be crushed. After having been secured in the cruciform position mentioned before, in imitation of Christ, the martyr was crushed to death by several hundred pounds of weights that were laid on top of her. She was not the only victim of the execution. She had been four months pregnant.”

Click here: A Good Friday Saint: Margaret Clitherow, the Pearl of York | Daily News | NCRegister.com

ALSO:  One of the Seven Sisters in Minnesota sent this timely prayer offering for priests… it is meant to be shared – and prayed!  Truly, truly the graces are flowing in this Jubilee Year of Mercy!

Divine Mercy Novena prayer for Seven Sisters priest:

Merciful Father, In the name of Jesus, the Virgin Mary and all the saints,  We pray that Fr.___, be washed in the PreciousBlood of the Lamb and be filled with all the gifts and fruitsof the Holy Spirit.  St. Faustina, we pray that Fr. ____ will be blessed by your mission of Divine Mercy and through your intercession help prepare him to offer himself totally to Merciful love and be filled with a great love of Divine Mercy.  Holy Spirit, Fire of Mercy, inspire Fr. ___ to help save every member of ______ Parishas a powerful missionary of Divine Mercy. We thank you Heavenly Father for all the graces and blessings you continue to pour out upon Fr. ____, and for making him a great apostle of Divine Mercy. We pray in Jesus name.  Amen.

United in prayer and mission –
that our prayers may find the heart of every bishop and priest
… eternal gratitude as you remember to offer a wee Holy Mary for me each day….
TO EACH of YOU – Happiest and Holiest of Easter and its full season of JOY!

Janette
+JMJ+

The Chrism Mass: a Celebration of the Priesthood

Seven Sister: One holy hour/one priest/each week/one heart of prayer

Greetings dearest Seven Sisters…

“The priest is the minister who in turn becomes the dispenser of God’s treasures.  These treasures are the fruits which have ripened on the tree of the Cross; they are the fruits of Christ’s sacrifice.”

Rt Rev Dom Antoine Forgeot, OSB

In this Holy Week ahead, the recipients of our intercessions surely stand in need of extra measures of our sacrifices of prayers and the ensuing graces.  At his ordination, the Church tells the priest through the voice of the presiding bishop, “Know well what you are doing, imitate the sacrifice to which you hold the key at Mass; so that by celebrating the mystery of the death of the Lord, you will strive to mortify within your limbs all sorts of vices and evil desires.”  As we weekly beseech the sanctity of the priest for whom we pray we do nothing less than reinforce this admonition of the bishop.  As servant and friend of Christ, the priest aspires greater intimacy with his Master.  He finds this in conforming to Christ’s likeness: His Way and His Will.

These days of Holy Week afford distinctive graces for the priest whose call beckons him to uniquely and more intimately walk the Via Crucis with Christ, the High Priest.  Graces abound, and especially so in this Jubilee Year of Mercy.  The priests are offered much, but at the same time asked to give much.  This is the economy of the Kingdom.

The Chrism Mass is celebrated during the Lenten season, conferring special graces to the priests.  In Rome the Mass is celebrated on Holy Thursday, the anniversary of the Institution of both Holy Eucharist and Holy Orders.  Elsewhere, the Mass, at the discretion of the local Ordinary, may be celebrated on Holy Thursday, during the week prior or earlier in the span of Holy Week.   The (Arch)bishop concelebrates with his college of presbyters, consecrates the holy chrism and other oils for sacramental use in the coming year, and dispenses them that evening to the priests.  At that special Liturgy, the priests also renew their commitment to Priestly service.  The (Arch)bishop asks the priests to stand and give witness to the renewal of their dedication to Christ through a life of sacrifice, devotion and love.

Beloved sons, on the anniversary of that day when Christ our Lord conferred His priesthood on His Apostles and on us, are you resolved to renew, in the presence of your Bishop and God’s holy people, the promises you once made?  (Response: I am)

Are you resolved to be more united with the Lord Jesus and more closely conformed to Him, denying yourselves and confirming those promises about sacred duties towards Christ’s Church which, prompted by love of Him, you willingly and joyfully pledged on the day of your priestly ordination?  (Response: I am)

Are you resolved to be faithful stewards of the mysteries of God in the Holy Eucharist and the other liturgical rites and to discharge faithfully the sacred office of teaching, following Christ the Head and Shepherd, not seeking any gain, but moved only by zeal for souls? (Response: I am)

But the priests are not the only ones asked to make a commitment.  The (Arch)bishop then asks the congregation to pray for the priests.

As for you, dearest sons and daughters, pray for your Priests, that the Lord may pour out His gifts abundantly on them, and keep them faithful as ministers of Christ, the High Priest, so that they may lead you to Him, Who is the source of salvation.  (Response: Christ hear us, Christ graciously hear us)

The (Arch) bishop then asks all present to pray for him as he carries out the duties of his office.

And pray also for me, that I may be faithful to the apostolic office entrusted to me in my lowliness and that in your midst I may be made day by day a living and more perfect image of Christ, the Priest, the Good Shepherd, the Teacher and the Servant of all. (Response: Christ hear us, Christ graciously hear us)

This year there is the unique juxtaposition of Good Friday being on March 25 (Annunciation) – so both the conception of Jesus and death of Jesus are contemplated on the same day.  Indeed this is a rich, rich time to be praying for our priests and bishops.   Let us remain steadfast and faithful to our commitment of prayers for our brothers in Christ.

Therefore, even though Adoration Chapels will vary in open times during Holy Week, let us not slacken in our committed Hour of prayer for the priest.  Let us be open to creative ways in how this may express itself during our committed day this week.  Perhaps utilizing the Holy Week services at our parish to offer our prayers or time intentionally allotted in the quiet of our home may be a viable option.  It may be helpful to pre-plan this offering that may be different from what is routinely offered.   If you have a copy, let me suggest using the Magnificat Year for Priests Companion this week to pray the Via Crucis for Priests by Fr Mark Daniel Kirby (pg 96).  It is fitting and deep of heart and tone.  Above all, let us be assured that every sacrifice of prayer has merit!

A closing remark from a Homily (Chrism Mass, Holy Thursday, 04/13/06) Pope Benedict XVI:

“The world needs God, not just any god, but the God of Jesus Christ, of the God who took the form of flesh and blood and loved us even to the point of dying for us.  The God who was resurrected and created within Himself a space for man.  This God must live in us and we in Him.  Such is our call as priests and it is only thus that our actions as priests can bring forth fruit.”

Blessed Holy Week to you – live deeply in His Love…
United in prayer and mission –
that our prayers may find the heart of every bishop and priest
… eternal gratitude as you remember to offer a wee Holy Mary for me each day….

Janette
+JMJ+

 

Recently I joined Seven Sisters in the Winona (MN) diocese.  What a JOY!
Anticipated Seven Sisters regional gathering: Dubuque, IA – April 2.  Your prayers are welcomed!
Another Communique coming Holy Saturday for Feast of St Margaret Clitherow – stayed tuned!

The Ears of the Heart

Greetings dearest Seven Sisters…

“Listen and attend with the ear of your heart.”

– St. Benedict

One of my past places of duty as an RN was serving in a convent of religious Sisters.  One afternoon, after a’flare up of verbal sparks’ within the community during lunch, Sr Barbara tread that higher ground and, with a sincere smile, simply said to me later in private, “To know someone is to love them.”  What grace she readily applied to this fellow Sister of hers, who in my witness certainly seemed to be unjustly critical and hurtful by her sharp words.  Sr Barbara heard ‘with the ear of her heart’ and chose a response in that deeper reality of love.

I have often gone back to that moment with Sister, in the quiet of the hallway of the convent, perplexed about the disturbing event in the Refectory.  She took my hand and heart in that moment and nudged me to leave that place of ruminating and join her in entering and lingering in the Heart of Christ, in that richer place of mercy and love for another.  She challenged me to listen and to see… differently… to serve that Sister with the charity Christ’s perspective and a hope for better and more peaceable lunchtimes ahead.

The very mission of our earthly life is to know God.  In that knowing it follows that we love Him and out of that loving, blooms an authentic desire to serve Him.  Sr Barbara reminded me that this sure pattern exists as we relate to our earthly brothers and sisters too.  Know, love, serve.

What a gift beyond all telling that each week we are called to look and listen and linger in the living Presence of Our Lord on behalf of the priest for whom we are committed to pray.  Each visit affords us the opportunity to see Christ a bit more clearly.  In that seeing and knowing, the graces exist to see the recipient of our prayers more clearly, as well.  Perhaps enough so, to even loosen our grip on an incomplete or narrow perspective and be open to a fuller one.

Christ calls His priests to conformity in Him, as alter Christus,  Click here: Alter Christus – to be holy and blameless.  Let us allow our prayers to be formed through the benefit of resting in the full spectrum of His Light in the Blessed Sacrament, where all things are made clear.  Let us ask for sanctity for our priests, nothing less.  Christ’s love compels our hearts (II Cor 5:14) “In loving one another through our works, we bring an increase of grace and a growth in divine love.” – Bl Mother Teresa of Calcutta

May we remain faithful to our commitment to be praying foremost for the sanctity of our priests, asking the graces for him to live fully in the call of his Holy Orders.  Let us persevere in the length of the full Holy Hour, offered solely for the intention of the priest, mindful of these words of Jesus to St Faustina: “I often wait with great graces until towards the end of prayer.”  Yes, let us avail ourselves to the great graces that assuredly await those who persevere…

PRAYER AID passed on from the practice of a Seven Sister in Minnesota:  Turn to the page outlining the Sacred Heart Novena (pg 10) in the Seven Sisters Guidelines booklet.  Affix a photocopy image (or sketch one) of the priest/bishop for whom you are praying, as a reminder that your prayers are meant to conform him to the image that is pictured ‘above’, the image of Jesus Christ Himself.

United in prayer and mission –
that our prayers may find the heart of every bishop and priest
… eternal gratitude as you remember to offer a wee Holy Mary for me each day….

Janette
+JMJ+

PS The Jan 31 gathering three weeks ago with the ever-growing Seven Sisters in Florida was blessed with grace upon grace. These women are filled with exemplary zeal and joy.  One woman shared that on her committed day (Saturday) she ‘wakes up with the graces of thoughts of the priest for whom she is committed to pray’.  She stated she finds herself offering the entire day to him, the gem and pinnacle being the Holy Hour!  What generosity and witness of continued fruit through the Apostolate.

Next anticipated Seven Sisters regional gathering is in Iowa – April 2.