Today is the feast of the
Presentation of Jesus in the Temple, and the official day of Prayer for
Consecrated Life. Nary a mention of it
yesterday or today at Mass. Must remember
to meditate on the Hidden Life—the first 30 years!
Introduction to the recent evening for Iona College students. |
Menu for dinner announced! |
Reflection with Iona College students |
I got some pictures of Iona
College’s recent visit to us off of Bob’s phone! Folks seemed to be happy—or were they just
hungry and being polite till dinner or dessert showed?
On Saturday, January 31st,
John spent the morning teamed with Sr. Maura O’Donovan, CHF in a presentation
about the work of the Burning Bush group.
Burning Bush is a collaboration of
religious who, concerned about peace making in this violent time, share
ideas and actions to build peace and support peace makers.
Sr. Maura and Br. John at the Holy Family Motherhouse |
The
presentation was to an assembly of Sisters of the Holy Family. Their website notes: “Twenty
years before the Civil War of the United States, and before it was legal for
such a Congregation to exist, the Sisters of the Holy Family were founded in
New Orleans, Louisiana by Venerable Henriette Delille, a free woman of
color. Co-foundresses of this
religious community of African-American women were Juliette Gaudin and
Josephine Charles.”
Focus on the screen--you are not getting sleepy--I hope. |
Was John taking lunch orders? |
There are some smiles? |
John worked with the Sisters last year at the Academy of Our Lady on the grounds of their Motherhouse. That was with the Discovery Walks Program; John is a coach for school leaders seeing to improve the academic life of the school. This visit was to share on a collaborative program among religious in the Archdiocese of New Orleans reaching out to all concerned about peacemaking.
Sr.
Maura gave a series of brief presentations, and John facilitated the groups’
responses. As in a classroom, ‘pair and
share’ enabled all participants to be involved and John took notes on their
insights to share with the Burning Bush committee. The Sisters were an informed, involved group with insights and great wisdom to share.
That
evening Bob, Charles [after an afternoon of Offenbach] and John had dinner with
Sr. Vera Butler, PBVM and Sr. Enid Storey, PBVM at their home in the Lakeview
area of New Orleans, west of City Park.
It was a wonderful evening.
FOR
REFLECTION
Henriette
applied to join religious life with the Ursuline and Carmelite Sisters, but was
refused because she admitted to being of mixed race.
Venerable Henriette Delille |
But as other
women joined Henriette and her friends, the community that evolved became
known as the Sisters of the Holy Family. In addition to education, the Sisters
worked in hospitals, in social work and with the sick elderly. This was at a
time in history when educating black people could be punished by prison or even
death.
Mother
Henriette died in 1862, at the age of only 50. Her only recorded writing was
penned in the inside cover of an 1836 prayer book: “I believe in God. I hope in God.
I love God. I want to live and die for God.”
Today, her
congregation’s more than 200 members operate schools for the poor and homes for
the elderly in Louisiana and several other states, as well as in the Central
American country of Belize.
Mother Henriette’s
sainthood cause was opened in 1988, and the New Orleans archdiocesan
investigation was completed in 2005. She is the first native-born Creole whose
cause for sainthood has been officially recognized by the Church.
She was declared “venerable” by Pope Benedict XVI in 2010.
BLOG 02.02.15
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