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Veritas
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Just stumbled across this... There must be 70 pictures (?!). They cover everything from the Fathers and the Brides to the reception of the holy habit, Latin High Mass, pictures with the clergy, and the dinner after. I've never seen so many good pictures from such an event. So, I hope you enjoy, too!

http://www.icrsp.org/Adoratrices/prise-hab...sehabit2007.htm
the lords sheep
What beautiful Names!!!

Sœur Marthe Marie du Cœur sacerdotal du Christ Roi.
Sister Martha Marie of the Priestly Heart of Christ the King

and

Sœur Sophie Marie du Cœur Immaculé
Sister Sophie Marie of the Immaculate Heart

Prayers for these beautiful new nuns!
Stacey
Prayers for the new novices they look very happy, but,,, i am very
uncomfortable with all of it really. When i am clothed on the 25th i won't be a Bride of Christ - matrimony is a wonderful sacrament, religious life is a wonderful thing - but it is not a sacrament - in both we offer ourselves to Christ but in different ways so i don't see why some try to make them the same. To me this is making Clothing a parody of a wedding - fathers giving them away, bridal gowns and a wedding breakfast? I could not have entered an order that did this - thankfully our Clothing is simple and private - the really big occasion comes at Profession - even then it's not a spousal relationship.
At the same time i wish them well and they do look beautiful, Adele. this is the first rant i have had on here - must be because i'm getting nervous.
Staretz
They look quite happy indeed. I am glad they have persevered at least to this point. And you'll be fine, Adele smile.gif
st-annes
It's a beautiful website.
Jennirom
Thank you for sharing these lovely pictures.
jkaands
QUOTE(Stacey @ Jan 13 2008, 03:25 AM) *
Prayers for the new novices they look very happy, but,,, i am very
uncomfortable with all of it really. When i am clothed on the 25th i won't be a Bride of Christ - matrimony is a wonderful sacrament, religious life is a wonderful thing - but it is not a sacrament - in both we offer ourselves to Christ but in different ways so i don't see why some try to make them the same. To me this is making Clothing a parody of a wedding - fathers giving them away, bridal gowns and a wedding breakfast? I could not have entered an order that did this - thankfully our Clothing is simple and private - the really big occasion comes at Profession - even then it's not a spousal relationship.
At the same time i wish them well and they do look beautiful, Adele. this is the first rant i have had on here - must be because i'm getting nervous.

jkaands
Adele, you're supposed to be nervous.

Not to extend the metaphor of marriage, which I don't support either, if you're not nervous before your clothing, you don't realize how big a step it is, even tho' there will be more important steps.

Your 'nerves' are completely appropriate.

But please put descriptions of the event on the Colwich blog and put in some pictures, if you can!

To my knowledge, yours is the only contemplative Benedictine blog out there, and one of the few contemplative blogs--are there any others?
Sr. Mary Catharine
QUOTE(jkaands @ Jan 13 2008, 01:58 PM) *
Adele, you're supposed to be nervous.

Not to extend the metaphor of marriage, which I don't support either, if you're not nervous before your clothing, you don't realize how big a step it is, even tho' there will be more important steps.

Your 'nerves' are completely appropriate.

But please put descriptions of the event on the Colwich blog and put in some pictures, if you can!

To my knowledge, yours is the only contemplative Benedictine blog out there, and one of the few contemplative blogs--are there any others?



The nuns at St. Walburga's have a blog. It's linked to their website: www.walburga.org
Benedicite07
QUOTE(Stacey @ Jan 13 2008, 02:25 AM) *
When i am clothed on the 25th i won't be a Bride of Christ - matrimony is a wonderful sacrament, religious life is a wonderful thing - but it is not a sacrament - in both we offer ourselves to Christ but in different ways so i don't see why some try to make them the same. To me this is making Clothing a parody of a wedding - fathers giving them away, bridal gowns and a wedding breakfast? I could not have entered an order that did this - thankfully our Clothing is simple and private - the really big occasion comes at Profession - even then it's not a spousal relationship.


Dear Stacey,

I am intrigued by your statement that when you are clothed you won't be a Bride of Christ. If you don't consider yourself to be a Bride of Christ either when you are clothed or when you are professed, what do you believe you will be?

What do you make of St. Teresa of Avila, St. Therese and and other mystics who consistently refer to Jesus as their heavenly bridegroom? Therese going so far as to pen a wedding annoucement?

Blessings,

Julie
Stacey
Hi Julie, I think that marriage is a sacrament from God it is about uniting men and women on earth - physically, mentally and spiritually. Marriage is about procreation in loving union - obviously that doesn't apply to religious life. Here i give myself totally ,physically - by leaving my home and those i love, by trying to make everything i do sacred in the monastery and embracing the difficult bits and i remain a sexual woman but chose to channel my sexuality differently - on a spiritual rather than physical level. i try to connect with God and offer myself mentally and spiritually - and i say try because i do find it hard to pray at times. It's quite hard for me to explain here, but i do think that both are so wonderful in their own right there is no need to mix them up. Marriage and religious life are vocations - do you expect a married woman to act and dress as a nun - no, so why should i act and dress as a Bride. We lose something of the depth and beauty of both when we try to make them seem the same and link them in this way.
The thing i feel most stongly about is that this 'wedding' is a Clothing ceremony. It's a very early step on the way - outwardly it makes the biggest impact putting on the habit - now we look like nuns - we look like we are separate - but we have a long way to go; our Rule says don't try to be holy before you are holy.
I can accept the ring at Solemn Profession as it puts a seal on the fact that the vows are being taken, so a life committment is being made. Vows are taken at a wedding - they are far away at Clothing and as the novitiate is a testing time and most don't make it - why not keep it simple and let it point towards the goal. I wonder what they do at life profession if this is this communities Clothing?

I think others have written on this on this Phorum before and they expressed themselves better than i have. I am strongly drawn to the Saints you mention but their spirituality goes far beyond the 'bridal bits' - and they were both much younger than i when they entered a convent - with very different life experiences - i am 42 not 15, so maybe that changes things too. I don't know...........it's personal to each of us. I am happy for them,
Thanks for asking, now i must be off to prayers, Pax Adele.
Staretz
One of the monks of Christ in the Desert has a blog called Tales from the Cenobite. Also, the Prior of Holy Cross Monastery, a foundation of Christ in the Desert, also keeps a blog, called Daily Bread.
Sr. Mary Catharine
QUOTE(Stacey @ Jan 13 2008, 04:03 PM) *
Hi Julie, I think that marriage is a sacrament from God it is about uniting men and women on earth - physically, mentally and spiritually. Marriage is about procreation in loving union - obviously that doesn't apply to religious life. Here i give myself totally ,physically - by leaving my home and those i love, by trying to make everything i do sacred in the monastery and embracing the difficult bits and i remain a sexual woman but chose to channel my sexuality differently - on a spiritual rather than physical level. i try to connect with God and offer myself mentally and spiritually - and i say try because i do find it hard to pray at times. It's quite hard for me to explain here, but i do think that both are so wonderful in their own right there is no need to mix them up. Marriage and religious life are vocations - do you expect a married woman to act and dress as a nun - no, so why should i act and dress as a Bride. We lose something of the depth and beauty of both when we try to make them seem the same and link them in this way.
The thing i feel most stongly about is that this 'wedding' is a Clothing ceremony. It's a very early step on the way - outwardly it makes the biggest impact putting on the habit - now we look like nuns - we look like we are separate - but we have a long way to go; our Rule says don't try to be holy before you are holy.
I can accept the ring at Solemn Profession as it puts a seal on the fact that the vows are being taken, so a life committment is being made. Vows are taken at a wedding - they are far away at Clothing and as the novitiate is a testing time and most don't make it - why not keep it simple and let it point towards the goal. I wonder what they do at life profession if this is this communities Clothing?

I think others have written on this on this Phorum before and they expressed themselves better than i have. I am strongly drawn to the Saints you mention but their spirituality goes far beyond the 'bridal bits' - and they were both much younger than i when they entered a convent - with very different life experiences - i am 42 not 15, so maybe that changes things too. I don't know...........it's personal to each of us. I am happy for them,
Thanks for asking, now i must be off to prayers, Pax Adele.


Adele, while I find meaning in the spousal imagery, I am with you in being uncomfortable about the clothing being a wedding. The wedding dress at clothing was part of many religious communities, including Benedictines for part of their history but it really came into prominence for many Orders after the French Revolution. We Dominicans had it for a short period but our profession is very similar to the Cistercians--simple, almost stark, but fraught with meaning. Clothing was done in the Chapter hall for most of our history.

The bridal aspect is NOT the primary meaning behind monastic life. A quick look into monastic history is that it is foremost a response of our baptismal committment and the response of those who could no longer witness to Christ through the shedding of the their blood.

As time went on, the order of virgins was sort of melded into monastic life and that is where you start to get the bridal imagery. It's not wrong, it is a part of our consecration but again, it's not primary.

Consecrated women no less give themselves to God physically, spiritually and emotionally so we can truly use the image of marriage and spousal union.

Part of the renewal of religious life was to put back a proper perspective on the various stages of formation. Novitiate should be simple and the documents encourage it to be a private ceremony.

This community is brand new and very much in a "restoration" mode. I have NO problem with communities who wish to have the Tridentine Mass but that doesn't mean that one needs to roll back the clock and pretend it is 1930. Give them time to grow and mature.

Adele, I'm praying for you! Don't be too nervous! :-)
Veritas
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I, too, think the bridal imagery may not be appropriate until final vows -but I find it very significant, symbolic and meaningful. Like all things, it can be taken the right way or the wrong way, and I am inclined to think the differences of opinion stated on this thread may be in large part due to semantics.

God Bless you Adele!
jkaands
QUOTE(Staretz @ Jan 13 2008, 02:05 PM) *
One of the monks of Christ in the Desert has a blog called Tales from the Cenobite. Also, the Prior of Holy Cross Monastery, a foundation of Christ in the Desert, also keeps a blog, called Daily Bread.



Thanks!
TradMom
Dear Veritas,
My children and I just took some time to look at this gorgeous website and the photos! We stumbled through some of the French together!!!
Thank you so much for posting this! I am thrilled that you have given us all the opportunity to see such beauty in the midst of our day! I was so impressed by the way the families were included, and the after celebration looked so wonderful. What a novel way of encouraging vocations! By being gracious, warm and offering beauty! I am so glad the girls were able to have a special day "just for them" and had the opportunity to have their families present. I was especially touched by the picture of the young girls praying, while looking at the Nuns! You know Vocations were stirring in their hearts! The luncheon (as well, of course! THE CEREMONY) looked so elegant and lovely.
Does anybody know more about this community? Are they in the United States at all? Did I read correctly they are re-doing an old Dominican Monastery in Florence? What is their ministry? Spirituality? I would love to see more about this wonderful Order.
Thank you again, Veritas. Your thoughtfulness in providing the link was much appreciated by this family!
TradMom
TradMom
Oops!
I forgot the "Praised be Jesus Christ!" and I also forgot...."May God reward you!" I am trying, in honor of our own new little Carmelite, to keep these phrases ever present. In my excitement, I forgot. (I think the Carmelites will forgive me! As will HE!)

We have a new little one in our house, born on the Feast of the Epiphany!!! Therese Marie. (Not hard to figure out our family's spirituality, is it?!)
Perpetualove
Wow, Veritas. What a find. I hate to ask, but is this Order in full Communion with Rome?! I am hoping the answer is yes...I would LOVE to see more orders like this one! Thanks!
EJames2
QUOTE(Perpetualove @ Jan 14 2008, 04:17 PM) *
Wow, Veritas. What a find. I hate to ask, but is this Order in full Communion with Rome?! I am hoping the answer is yes...I would LOVE to see more orders like this one! Thanks!

YES, they are very much in Communion with the Apostolic See of Peter, and are affiliated with the 'Institute of Christ the King'(in the USA)..
here is the English website
http://www.institute-christ-king.org/AdorersRoyalHeart.htm

Vocation Inquiries in the USA - info@institute-christ-king.org
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http://www.institute-christ-king.org/
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Adorers of the Royal Heart of Jesus Christ
Sovereign Priest

Sisters' Letter (Translation)
Original in French with Images

Adorers of the Royal Heart of Jesus Christ, Sovereign Priest, we are children of St. Francis de Sales, Doctor of Love. It is in his school that we desire to learn, by practice of the hidden virtues, to love and adore God in spirit and in truth, in response to the infinite and merciful Love that pours forth from the Pierced Heart of the Sovereign Priest. It is to this Heart that we are consecrated -- as our motto “In Corde Regis” (in the Heart of the King) indicates -- so that we may render glory to God and intercede most particularly for the priests of the Institute and the souls entrusted to them.

Our spirituality is at the same time Salesian and Benedictine, according to the spirit of the Institute of Christ the King, the core of which is the cult rendered to God, the summit of Adoration. The love of the Liturgy taught by St. Benedict our holy patron, which is the life of the Church and of the Institute, brings us to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, “open window to the Divinity” (St. Francis de Sales) and establishes the rhythm of our days as primary source of our spirituality.

In these beginnings we lead, in essence, a non-cloistered contemplative life. We live in a house dedicated to Our Lady of Good Deliverance, in the heights of Gricigliano, commanding a magnificent view of the entire valley of the Sieci region. A priest from the seminary comes up to our little chapel for Holy Mass every morning, and for daily Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament in the afternoons. Throughout the course of the day, prayer and the recitation of the Divine Office keep us likewise before God, in adoration.


Building on the foundations established by the teachings of our third patron, St. Thomas Aquinas, we also profit from time dedicated to study and formation. Through this life of adoration lived at the heart of the Church -- life of prayer, study, and manual labor -- we are ready to take on an apostolic way of life alongside the Priests of the Institute, the nature of which Providence will reveal in due course.

As with the entire Institute, the Holy Virgin Our Mother, under the title of the Immaculate Conception, is our principal patroness. Her Heart takes us along the luminous road that leads to the Royal Heart of her Divine Son to Which we desire to conform ourselves.



The Sisters
EJames2
QUOTE(TradMom @ Jan 14 2008, 03:30 PM) *
Dear Veritas,
My children and I just took some time to look at this gorgeous website and the photos! We stumbled through some of the French together!!!
Thank you so much for posting this! I am thrilled that you have given us all the opportunity to see such beauty in the midst of our day! I was so impressed by the way the families were included, and the after celebration looked so wonderful. What a novel way of encouraging vocations! By being gracious, warm and offering beauty! I am so glad the girls were able to have a special day "just for them" and had the opportunity to have their families present. I was especially touched by the picture of the young girls praying, while looking at the Nuns! You know Vocations were stirring in their hearts! The luncheon (as well, of course! THE CEREMONY) looked so elegant and lovely.
Does anybody know more about this community? Are they in the United States at all? Did I read correctly they are re-doing an old Dominican Monastery in Florence? What is their ministry? Spirituality? I would love to see more about this wonderful Order.
Thank you again, Veritas. Your thoughtfulness in providing the link was much appreciated by this family!
TradMom

As the community expands, it is foreseen that foundations will be made alongside the apostolates of the Institute of Christ the King, where the Sisters will support the apostolic work of our priests. Counting already with three American sisters, it is foreseeable that the Sisters will eventually make a foundation in the United States.
http://www.institute-christ-king.org/AdorersRoyalHeart.htm
Veritas
QUOTE(Perpetualove @ Jan 14 2008, 06:17 PM) *
Wow, Veritas. What a find. I hate to ask, but is this Order in full Communion with Rome?! I am hoping the answer is yes...I would LOVE to see more orders like this one! Thanks!


Yep! They are in FULL communion! smile.gif
Perpetualove
QUOTE(Veritas @ Jan 14 2008, 08:02 PM) *
Yep! They are in FULL communion! smile.gif



Whew! Thanks to everybody for all of the research. Not to be silly and vain and superficial, and all of that stuff we all try NOT to be...BUT...how gorgeous are those habits?!!!
Veritas
QUOTE(Perpetualove @ Jan 14 2008, 09:20 PM) *
Whew! Thanks to everybody for all of the research. Not to be silly and vain and superficial, and all of that stuff we all try NOT to be...BUT...how gorgeous are those habits?!!!


+

Hey, we're Catholic! (not puritans). It's okay to appreciate the Beautiful! lol. I'm with you, they are lovely -especially the tealish/blue capes.
Veritas
QUOTE(TradMom @ Jan 14 2008, 05:30 PM) *
Dear Veritas,
My children and I just took some time to look at this gorgeous website and the photos! We stumbled through some of the French together!!!
Thank you so much for posting this! I am thrilled that you have given us all the opportunity to see such beauty in the midst of our day! I was so impressed by the way the families were included, and the after celebration looked so wonderful. What a novel way of encouraging vocations! By being gracious, warm and offering beauty! I am so glad the girls were able to have a special day "just for them" and had the opportunity to have their families present. I was especially touched by the picture of the young girls praying, while looking at the Nuns! You know Vocations were stirring in their hearts! The luncheon (as well, of course! THE CEREMONY) looked so elegant and lovely.
Does anybody know more about this community? Are they in the United States at all? Did I read correctly they are re-doing an old Dominican Monastery in Florence? What is their ministry? Spirituality? I would love to see more about this wonderful Order.
Thank you again, Veritas. Your thoughtfulness in providing the link was much appreciated by this family!
TradMom


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Wow. Thanks lol_grin.gif
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