Redazione
Legacy of Benedict XVI and consacrated life
"… It is Your Face, O Lord, that I seek!"
Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI’s paschal passing has affected us profoundly. It constitutes an important moment in the life of the Church: one that has left us feeling sincerely moved and deeply grateful. We have honoured our Pope Emeritus and marvelled at both his moral stature and the gratitude that has spontaneously arisen in those who found spiritual nourishment in his words. A choral ‘Thank you’ has burst forth from the heart of the Church.
In various circumstances, the Holy Father stated that life is not something that comes full circle but is, rather, a journey that leads to an encounter, a fullness of being. We thank the Lord for the clarity of his faith, for the gift of his thinking and for the simplicity in which he always lived and with which he communicated the depths of God’s mystery.
As consecrated women, we loved and supported the humble labourer in the Lord’s vineyard, welcoming his magisterium’s prophetic intuitions and allowing his teachings to challenge us. We will remember him for the humility and wisdom with which he accompanied the Church and those in religious life.
Retracing the years of his pontificate, it is clear that Pope Benedict sought to bring consecrated life back to its original core: the form of life that Christ chose. “Belonging to the Lord,” he said to the Superiors General gathered together at the audience held on 22 May 2006, “means to be on fire with his incandescent love, to be transformed by the splendour of his beauty: our littleness is offered to him as a sacrifice of sweet fragrance so that it becomes a witness of the greatness of his presence for our epoch, which has great need to be inebriated by the richness of his grace”.
He has encouraged us to be credible and luminous signs in the world: to be the fire of the Gospel and its paradoxes, without conforming to the mentality of this world but, rather, continually transforming and renewing our commitment, so as to be able to discern God’s will, what is good, acceptable and perfect to him (c.f. Rm 12: 2).
Pope Benedict XVI always recognized the special role of women in the life of the Church and gave them a crucial part to play: “[…] given the distinctive influence of women in society, they must be encouraged to embrace the opportunity to uphold the dignity of life through their involvement in education and their participation in political and civic life. […] The genius of women to mobilize and organize endows them with the skills and motivation to develop everexpanding networks for sharing experiences and generating new ideas.” (Message of His Holiness Benedict XVI to Participants in the International Conference on the theme: “Life, Family and Development: The Role of Women in the Promotion of Human Rights”, 20 March 2009)
“[…] the women had had an experience of a special bond with the Lord, which was
fundamental for the practical life of the Christian community, and this is always the case in every epoch and not only when the Church was taking her first steps” (Pope Benedict XVI, Angelus, 9 April 2012).
(...) His witness as a man in love with God who sought his Lord is an invitation to cultivate the desire to constantly seek a Face: “Faciem tuam, Domine, requiram” (Ps. 27: 8). And to direct one’s own journeying – both in the small, everyday steps as well as in the more important decisions – towards completing this pilgrimage of the heart.
Dear Pope Emeritus, to you we express our profound and eternal gratitude.
Sr. Nadia Coppa, A.S.C. - President of the UISG
VIVAT Spain Workshop
The River of the Blood of Christ in the State of Amazonas
When talking about Amazonia, we are speaking about a broad region including many states in Brazil: the state of Amazonas whose capital is Manaus; the state of Para with Belem as capital; the state of Acre with Rio Branco as capital; the state of Amapa with its capital in Macapa; the state of Roraima with its capital in Boa Vista and the state of Rondonia, with its capital in Porto Velho. When talking about Amazonia, we are speaking about a broad region including many states in Brazil: the state of Amazonas whose capital is Manaus; the state of Para with Belem as capital; the state of Acre with Rio Branco as capital; the state of Amapa with its capital in Macapa; the state of Roraima with its capital in Boa Vista and the state of Rondonia, with its capital in Porto Velho. The first Adorers from the Province of Schaan arrived in Para in 1936 and served for 17 years in the cities of Porto de Moz and Altamira, from which they left in March 1953 when the first Brazilian Adorers arrived to take their places. The mission of the Adorers in Brazil began in 1936 in the Prelature of the Xingu. But with the passing of time the few Sisters became sick and during WWII lost contact with their motherhouse.The ASC Mission began in Amazonas in 1947 when 4 pioneer ASC Missionaries arrived from the province of Wichita, in the United States upon invitation from the Redemptorist Fathers. The Redemptorists needed Sisters as catechists, teachers in schools and helping the sick. There were many vocations among the young women of their parish. The Fathers wanted to welcome congregations who would accept young Brazilian vocations. This was the request that Father John McCormick sent to Sister Aloysia Barthelme, Provincial of Wichita in August, 1946. In response to that request and to the letter received from Msgr. Joao da Mata Andrade do Amaral, Bishop of Manaus, the Provincial of Wichita and her Council decided to send two Sisters to visit the Redemptorist Missions along the Amazon River. Sr. Julitta Elsen went to Altamira, where the Adorers of the Schaan Province were located to encourage them and communicate to them that they would certainly open a mission in Amazonia. From Altamira, in Para, the two Sisters went to Manaus, also visiting the other Redemptorist missions of Coari, Codajas and Manacapuru. They returned to the U. S. in November 1946, taking with them the first Brazilian candidate, Noemi Cinque, the future Venerable Serafina, for her formation to religious life as a postulant and novice in Wichita, Kansas. Chosen from among the many volunteers for the mission in Amazonas, Brazil were Sr. Georgiana Heimermann and her sister Sr. Marciana Heimermann, as well as Sisters Julitta Elsen and Jane Frances Baalmann (Sr. Joana Francisca, as she was known in Brazil). On September 26, 1947 Pope Pius XII warmly approved the idea of the Mission in Amazonia and gave his apostolic blessing on the missionary work of the Adorers during the General Chapter of the Sisters in Rome, where the Provincial of Wichita and Sister Julitta Elsen were present as delegates. The four missionaries appointed for the Brazilian Mission received their mission crosses in Wichita on November 23, 1947 from the hands of the Bishop Mark Carroll, Bishop of Wichita. Father Fagan, Redemptorist Provincial of St. Louis, gave a touching homily. A Pan American flight took the four pioneers to Manaus on November 30, 1947 at 11:00a.m. Father Joao McCormick, Sister Cornelio and many parishioners were at the airport to welcome the Sisters and went to the Bishop’s house where the official welcome was given. The following day they visited the governor of the state, Loepoldo Amorim da Silva Neves, and then the North American Consulate in addition to visiting churches, schools and hospitals. During the two weeks spent in Manaus, they studied Portuguese with great commitment, helped by their teachers Lucinda and Lili Azevedo, who hosted them in their home. At midnight on December 21 the Sisters, accompanied by Father Jose Elworthy, left on the industrial motor boat from Manaus to Coari, where they arrived at 4:00p.m. on Saturday, December 25. Father Joao Maria Kreuzer had gathered the whole town, which was very small, to welcome the first Sisters that would work in Coari. On the Sunday after Christmas, December 26, Father Jose Elworthy, the pastor, celebrated a high Mass of thanksgiving for the arrival of the Sisters in Coari, in Amazonas. Thus, the Mission of the Sisters Adorers of the Blood of Christ was born in the state of Amazonas, Brazil.
January 2023
Mary The Mother Of God and World Day for Peace
“In the fullness of time God sent his Son.” (Gal 4:4)
Lord Jesus, King of Justice and Peace, who came into the world through the availability of Mary your Mother, grant us Your Peace!
May Mary, the Mother of God, help us to Live in Fullness!
LIVE IN FULLNESS
December 25, 2022
The St. Egidio community has been animating the 11AM Mass in our Precious Blood Church every Sunday for about three years. This Christmas, for the second time and the first since the pandemic, after the Eucharistic Celebration they transformed the church into a dining hall and organized a Christmas meal for the poor in our area.
This is the 40th anniversary of this initiative, with 800 lunch rooms for the poor set up by the San Egidio community all over the world! This is truly a commendable experience considering the organization, which began weeks earlier, and involved members of the general administration and the international community for the preparations and organization of the spaces.
The Adorers did not hesitate to welcome this experience and celebrate Christmas with the poor of the neighborhood, sitting with them to share the meal and the gift of fraternity around a single table. It was a time to get to know each other, make new friends, and strengthen bonds. In the dining room there were the guests, members of the St. Egidio community, volunteers ready to serve. Among them to our surprise there was a show business personality, actor and presenter, Flavio Insinna. The artist, we found out, is from the neighborhood. His mother lives on Via Gallia and he grew up in the Nativity Parish where he got to know the St. Egidio community.
The joy experienced on the day was great. The co-workers and the volunteers leaving at the end of the meal expressed gratitude and appreciation for the welcome and the witness of community, all united in presence and service. For us Adorers, too, the experience gave us the opportunity once again to be a significant presence in the area, available to those in need.
