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For the month of October, Pope Leo XIV invites us to pray  “that believers in different religious traditions might work together to defend and promote peace, justice, and human fraternity.”

This prayer intention comes in a particularly significant month: it marks the 60th anniversary of Nostra aetate, the declaration of the Second Vatican Council that inaugurated a new era in the relationship between the Catholic Church and other religions—a time of dialogue, respect, and collaboration, more urgent than ever in a world marked by division, war, and misunderstanding.

At a time when the temptation of conflict seems to prevail, the Pope calls us to awaken the awareness of what unites us and to cultivate concrete forms of cooperation: “to live, pray, work, and dream together,” as brothers and sisters.

Watch the video Here 


Lord Jesus,
You, who in diversity are one
and look lovingly at every person,
help us to recognize ourselves as brothers and sisters,
called to live, pray, work, and dream together.

We live in a world full of beauty,
but also wounded by deep divisions.
Sometimes, religions, instead of uniting us,
become a cause of confrontation.

Give us your Spirit to purify our hearts,
so that we may recognize what unites us
and, from there, learn again how to listen
and collaborate without destroying.

May the concrete examples of peace,
justice and fraternity in religions
inspire us to believe that it is possible to live
and work together, beyond our differences.

May religions not be used as weapons or walls,
but rather lived as bridges and prophecy:
making the dream of the common good credible,
accompanying life, sustaining hope
and being the yeast of unity in a fragmented world.

Amen.


Pope Leo XIV's first Apostolic Exhortation, Dilexi te (I have loved you), speaks to all communities that choose to live alongside the poor. It helps us "to discover their richness and all that they have and can give to the world and to the Church today."

Click here to read the Apostolic Exhortation "Dilexi te" by Pope Leo XIV.

To:  All Adorers of the Blood of Christ,
Associates, Sojourners
and Lay Consecrated Women

“ For in him all the fullness was pleased to dwell, and through him to reconcile all thing for him, making peace by the blood of his cross, whether those on earth or those in heaven.”

Colossians 1: 19-20

Dear Sisters and Members of the Family of the Adorers of the Blood of Christ,
As I write this letter, we are making the immediate preparations for the great Precious Blood Family Jubilee here in Rome.  Close to 2000 will participate from nearly every continent.  At the same time, sisters near perpetual profession are arriving for their month long seminar together and our pre-novices are making their way to the novitiate in Rome.  There is excitement, energy and anticipation here in the Congregation’s House.  The “fullness of Christ” dwelling among us in so many ways.
What will it mean to celebrate this special feast  in this Jubilee of Hope?  How will we Sow Seeds of Hope and Promote Communion in a world so fractured and fragile?  Our charism and mission are so necessary, so needed.  What is ours to do?  That has been my constant prayer. 
I was reading a bit of history of this feast and noticed that in 1934, during the Jubilee Year of Redemption, July 1, was made a “solemnity”, which later was combined with the feast of the Body and Blood of Christ.  However, the Precious Blood Family has kept July 1, as a titular feast.  Everywhere in the world, we come together, we remember the great gift of Christ’s Precious Blood, given for the LIFE of the world, the tender love of Jesus for all without reserve.  The Blood of Christ that makes peace through all the joy, pain and suffering.
The General Administration has been completing our Canonical Visit of the Region Italy (not yet in Argentina and Philippines Missions and Guinea Bissau Foundation). As we made our way from one area to another, we were constantly struck by the welcome, the hospitality, the “presence” of our sisters from the youngest to the oldest.  Every Adorer holds in her heart a deep passion for the mission and the spirit of our congregation for the life of the world, our dear neighbor.  We adore Christ present in every person and situation we meet. 
Our new Pope Leo XIV reminded us on the day of the Beginning of his Ponticate:
“Brothers and sisters, I would like that our first great desire be for a united Church, a sign of unity and communion, which becomes a leaven for a reconciled world.
In this our time, we still see too much discord, too many wounds caused by hatred, violence, prejudice, the fear of difference, and an economic paradigm that exploits the Earth’s resources and marginalizes the poorest. For our part, we want to be a small leaven of unity, communion and fraternity within the world. We want to say to the world, with humility and joy: Look to Christ! Come closer to him! Welcome his word that enlightens and consoles! Listen to his offer of love and become his one family: in the one Christ, we are one. This is the path to follow together, among ourselves but also with our sister Christian churches, with those who follow other religious paths, with those who are searching for God, with all women and men of good will, in order to build a new world where peace reigns!”
Our General Assembly Direction Statement of 2023, calls us to this very spirit.  “Like St. Maria De Mattias, a woman passionate for mission to her dear neighbor we state our commitment to collaborate in Christ’s redemptive work by caring for the beauty of life in respect for the dignity of every person and being ready to go to the peripheries with God’s compassion.” 
How are you invited to enter into the work of reconciling compassion?
Who are the “dear neighbors” needing your presence and compassion?
Where are the “peripheries” that need you to bring God’s compassion?
With the light of the Holy Spirit, the courage of St. Maria De Mattias, the passion of St. Gaspar del Bufalo , the guidance of Bl. Giovanni Merlini and all our Holy Sisters and Brothers, let us continue to seek “that beautiful order of things that the great Son of God came to establish in his own Blood.”  (St. Maria De Mattias)
Together, as one family in the Blood of Christ, as brothers and sisters, let us walk towards God and love one another.
In Christ’s tender love and peace,
Rome, Italy
July 1, 2025
Sr. Maria  L. Hughes, ASC
General Superior
With the Sisters of the General Administration
Sr. Wiesława Przybyło, ASC Councilor
Sr. Patrizia Pasquini, ASC Councilor
Sr. Danijela Anić, ASC Councilor
Sr. Florida Evaristi Malenda, ASC Councilor
Sr. Barbara Perali, ASC Secretary
Sr. Monica Rini, ASC Treasurer
Saturday, 07 December 2024 10:10

Jubilee of the Precious Blood

Dear Sisters, Associates, Sojourners, Lay Consecrated Women and friends,
 The Year of Jubilee is soon to be open. As you know there is a commission preparing for the celebration of the Jubilee by the Family of the Precious Blood.
 There is now a weblink for this celebration. Please find the link below and "bookmark it" in your favorites.
 Over the months ahead, there is hope to add various resources and information. Be sure to come back and visit the page.
 Let us take this time as holy and sacred. Let us call on the power of the Blood of Christ to bring reconciliation, compassion and peace to our wounded and fractured world. May we be instruments of Christs compassionate love for all.
 Blessings and peace,

Sr Maria Hughes, asc General Superior

 Rome, November 26, 2024

Greetings and prayers for peace throughout our world,

As we prepare this letter, our Church is in Synod whose theme is How to be a missionary synodal Church. The meditations given during the preparatory retreat before the synod by Fr. Timothy Radcliffe, OP invite us to pause and ponder. Fr. Radcliffe used four themes of Christ’s resurrection in the Gospel of John. We invite you to visit the Vatican News website to ponder his words and challenges. These reflections call us to mercy and reconciling love.

We live in a very perplexing time in our Church, our world, in religious life and in our own congregation and local areas. We see and experience so much struggle for communion, when we as Adorers are called to be promoters of communion. There are wars, conflicts, polarizing actions between and among peoples. We bring our own human vulnerability to our life together as local community and congregation. How do we hold all this struggle in our hearts and not allow it to distract us and our mission of promoting communion? What could it look like to be persons of communion? Lights in the midst of darkness, hope in the midst of despair, Love in the midst of pain and suffering.

We are invited to focus on the healing and reconciling power of the Paschal Mystery. We have come to know the Christ of the Gospels, the Christ who lived, died and became fully known in the Resurrection.

This month we have eight women who are part of our heritage and are witnesses of the healing and reconciling power of Christ’s Life Blood. They were persons who lived their human life trusting God would accompany them in their weakness, their challenges, gifts, their vulnerability and frailty.

We remember Venerable Serafina Cinque, the “the white angel of the Trans Amazonian Highway”

She was a very simple, practical person of faith. She relied on Divine Providence for the immediate needs and ways to ensure a future fullness of life for the dear neighbor. She sought to establish structures and systems to ensure good education, immediate health care and formation so that all may know their own dignity and become self-supporting. She is remembered as often saying, “How good God is.”



martiriWe remember our Five Sisters – Martyrs of Charity

Here we have five diverse expressions of the ASC charism with a common mission in Liberia West Africa. They sought to be present to whatever was most needed for our dear neighbor. They provided education, healthcare, social services, pastoral formation, accompaniment and empowerment. They felt the call to solidarity with the people deep in their hearts as a war creating pain, mistrust and broken relationships raged around them. They were truly called to be credible witnesses of charity by their communion with those who suffered.

We hear in their words vulnerable and mission centered Adorers:

“Never before have I felt I was supposed to be there. Now I believe I am supposed to go. I believe we need to move to the call of our mission, not to the call of our comfort.”

Sister Kathleen McGuire, ASC

“I’m glad that I came. There have been learnings in pain, vulnerability and suffering, which I probably would not have allowed myself to experience in another place and culture. This may be the most growthful time of my existence because it is the lives of my sisters and brothers that now have highest priority.” Sister Agnes Mueller, ASC

“Making this moment the best we can is the way life goes best. We’ve got to share with our whole body as well as our soul when we do something, and that is the difference between being alive or dead.” Sister Mary Joel Kolmer, ASC

“Perhaps we will come to see the day when everyone recognizes that we all inherit the earth and we can allow each person, each people to claim their rightful inheritance.” Sister Shirley Kolmer, ASC

“Well, it is two years now that the war started and it looks as if (Liberian guerilla fighter Charles Taylor) will not give up his land of fortune, between carrying buckets of diamonds and gold out of the country, also all the timber.” Sister Barbara Ann Muttra, ASC

We remember our Two Martyrs of Faith in Croatia

In these two women we find the mystery of God’s mission continuing beyond us. It is God’s mission not our own. These two women, caught in the midst of a violent world war were forced to make courageous choices. They remained true to their call to the charism and mission as Adorers, outside of the Adorers. They could have been forgotten, but the memory of their care and courage lived beyond them in those who knew and experienced their presence. God has a mission.

We remember these women and call them our Sisters of Faith:

Josipa Nevistić dispensed due to the ravages of World War II, continued to promote the faith and catechism. Following the war she suffered imprisonment, abuse and death. She is recorded among the Croatian martyrs of the Second World War. Only in the1990’s after the fall of communism was the light of her mission and presence revealed.

Eulalija Kuller

She too was a victim of the ravages of war, when our community house was appropriated by communists and the sisters were dispersed. She courageously searched for a place to live and serve, bringing the gift of music to a dark place. She too was abused and killed.  The local people knew her as a Martyr of faith, bringing her story to life after 1990.

Today, we, Adorers of the Blood of Christ and those who share in our charism, continue to be called as promoters of communion. People who know what it means to be human, forgiven, loved, accepted with our limitations and our gifts, given space to be fully ourselves in all our diversity. We have known the unconditional love of God and seek to bring this same reconciling love to all.

How might we be remembered? Adorers of the Blood of Christ, committed to deep and discerning listening, promoters of communion in every place, space and periphery. Persons who recognized their human frailty and celebrated God’s limitless grace. Promoters of Christ’s reconciling love for the dignity and life of All. See how they love one another.

Blessings of grace and peace,

Sr Maria Hughes, asc General Superior
Sunday, 01 December 2024 09:21

Advent in prayer for peace

I ask our Lord Jesus Christ to grant that his Sacred Heart may continue to pour forth the streams of living water that can heal the hurt we have caused,
strengthen our ability to love and serve others,
and inspire us to journey together towards a just, solidary and fraternal world.
Until that day when we will rejoice in celebrating together the banquet of the heavenly kingdom in the presence of the risen Lord,
who harmonizes all our differences in the light that radiates perpetually from his open heart.

May he be blessed forever.
 
Francis, Dilexit nos, 220
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