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Benedictine Sisters of FL

Holy Name Monastery
Founded 1889

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Holy Week

Consider the call

March 20, 2023 by Holy Name Monastery 1 Comment

Do You Hear the Call?

The woman said to him, “Sir give me this water, so that I may never be thirsty or have to keep coming here to draw water.” (John 4:15)

Imagine yourself at the well with Jesus.  Ask Him what He wants you to do.  What is the answer that you hear?

If you hear the gentle yet persistent call, “Follow me”, consider religious life.

The Benedictine Sisters of Florida are welcoming single women who are practicing Roman Catholics to spend some time with us to learn more about religious life.  You will have the opportunity to worship with us, pray with us, relax with us.  You will also be welcome to participate in our ministries and learn about the Benedictine charism.

Holy Name Monastery, our home, is located in Saint Leo, Florida, about a 40 minute drive north of Tampa on Interstate 75.

The time available is Holy Wek and the First Week of Easter (April 2-16, 2023).  You can stay for a few days, a week or longer.

To schedule a visit with us or to request further information, please email us at Vocations@saintleo.edu.

 

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Filed Under: Prayer Tagged With: bendictine sisters of florida, First Week of Easter, Follow Him, Follow Me, Holy Week, vocations

Holy Thursday

April 14, 2022 by Holy Name Monastery Leave a Comment

It is Holy Thursday.  The daily events continue to unfold in the house.  Sr. Mary Romana and Kathleen Daye are outside tending to the garden.  It is the season for picking blueberries and mulberries.  The fruits of their labor (and that of Sr. Miriam) will come into the chapel and the kitchen for the Easter celebration.  Sr. Miriam (ever the teacher) has put out a single sheet displaying butterflies of the rainforest (in color!) for the sisters to enjoy.  Two native to our area are included: the zebra longwing and the spicebush swallowtail.  I am not surprised.  It can feel very tropical here some days.  Sr. Donna will be working in the kitchen making preparations for the weekend (e.g. baking a lamb shaped cake for Sunday and hot cross buns for tomorrow).  Sr. Roberta sat with our two guests at breakfast and is now on a Zoom call, mostly likely with one the many charities she supports with her presence.  Volunteer Jo Shine has come to join us for the Triduum.  She is an expert at drying dishes and putting them away in their proper place.  Employee John Barthle has moved the cactus out of the chapel.  It will soon be time to come in from our forty days in the spiritual desert of Lent.  Sr. Elizabeth, our sacristan, and Sr. Mary David, our liturgist, are making preparations for the Holy Thursday Mass.  Srs. Jean and Donna have left for their ministry at Daystar Hope.  They, together with other volunteers, will be there this morning to distribute food and clothing to those who come and ask.  Sr. Mary Clare is in her office, answering phone and email inquiries about monastery retreats.  Sr. Margaret Mary is practicing the keyboard and will be accompanist for tonight and tomorrow’s liturgies.  Some sisters are doing last minute laundry.  Sr. Dianne is putting final touches on the Easter Sunday liturgies.  Marietta Dinopol has gone for a walk.

All of this busy-ness will come to a halt this evening as we enter into the Triduum, the liturgical expression of the Mystery of our Christian faith.  Rest assured that we will take you and your intentions with us.  Blessings to you and yours during this holy time.

~by Sister Eileen Dunbar

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Filed Under: Prayer Tagged With: Benedictine Sisters, Butterflies, cake, Easter, Holy Thursday, Holy Week, sisters

Life Journey = Process

April 11, 2022 by Holy Name Monastery Leave a Comment

Father, not My will but yours, be done
Lk. 22:42b

It’s Palm Sunday. We’re invited to be part of the parade and celebrate. It is the start of the journey that will lead the teacher and servant leader, Jesus, an example of humility, to death on the cross and then to New Risen Life.

Life is a journey; we share this journey. It is a process; we choose to walk with Jesus and follow His Way, then we forget and have to start over again.

In the Passion we hear the long story of those last days of Jesus in Holy Week. There are many characters there.  As we prayerfully reflect, we need ask ourselves, “Who am I?”

  • the Apostles who sleep while Jesus prays
  • Peter who follows,  but says, “I don’t know Him”
  • Pilate or Herod who want to see a sign and also please the crowd
  • the Cyrenian forced to carry the cross
  • mourning women who followed, faithfully with Mary, to the ends

The truth is we’ve been all these persons in the Passion.

We share in Jesus’ Passion–pain, in body/mind, and illness;  we’ve been hurt, forgotten, suffered loss, and feel condemned.  We’ve sinned and failed to love, to practice our faith, forgive, care for others, and build the kingdom.

I invite you to take some time to reflect on how Jesus is yet condemned to suffering/death among us and then act for justice.

Who am I in the Passion narrative today?

Jesus, Loving, suffering Savior, may  I ever companion You. May Your life journey always give me direction and help me to grow more able to share  Your love, and life.  Amen.

~by Sitser Mary David Hydro

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Filed Under: Blog, Front Page, Homily Tagged With: Amen, apostles, Holy Week, Jesus, Palm Sunday, parade and celebrate, passion, Peter, Savior, Sunday April 10th

“Walk While You Have the Light”

March 22, 2021 by Holy Name Monastery Leave a Comment

Let’s step back a moment to recall the setting for this Gospel; maybe settle yourself into it.  It is six days before Passover.  We’re in Bethany, at the home of Martha, Mary and Lazarus.  The three siblings are sharing hospitality with Jesus, his disciples and some other guests.  We are reclining at the dinner table with them.  Martha is busy in the kitchen with the many hostess’ pre-dinner tasks.  Lazarus is keeping the conversation flowing among the guests hoping to keep they unaware of how late it is getting.  Mary hesitantly approaches Jesus to sit at his feet.  This is the occasion when Mary poured aromatic oil on the feet of Jesus and dried them with her long-flowing hair.  (I wonder how long that sweet smell will linger in her hair.)  Judas, the one who would later betray Jesus, muttered a snide remark (probably under his breath) about the wastefulness of such extravagance.  (Remember, he was the one who had charge of the groups’ money bag.)  Jesus was exasperated, he had had it with Judas.  “Leave her alone.  The poor you have always with you.  Tonight you have me.  Let her do this in anticipation of my burial.”

In his narrative, John moves to his abbreviated account of Jesus’ entry into Jerusalem riding a colt – the Palm Sunday narrative – that we will celebrate next weekend. 

So, back to our dinner.  The evening grows long, the dessert’s been served and the after dinner libation; chatter’s winding down.  We become aware that a crowd is gathering out in the yard.  Folks have heard Jesus is inside.  They’re hoping, too, to see Lazarus.  Word had spread that Jesus had recently raised him from the dead.  Some guests approach Philip.  (And, my goodness, talk about an unspoken chain of command!)  The Greeks spoke to Philip: “Sir, we would like to see Jesus.”  Phillip spoke to Andrew, then Andrew with Phillip in tow, went and told Jesus.  Jesus’ reaction did not disappoint.  He must have raised their hopes.  Sounds like he could have said: “Your timing is good.”  Yes.  “The hour has come for the Son of Man to be glorified.”

The guests may have experienced a bit of puzzlement or some trepidation, when Jesus continued speaking: “Amen, I say to you: Unless a grain of wheat falls to the ground and dies, it remains just a grain of wheat.”  But, hope must have risen up in them as Jesus continued: “But, if it dies, it produces much fruit.”  Then hope bounces around on the seesaw of mystery as Jesus continues: “Whoever loves his life loses it; whoever hates life in this world will preserve it for eternal life.”

What IS this man talking about???  He closes the gap when He tells them: “Whoever serves me must follow me.”  Now, that made sense.  Of course, if you want to serve, you’ll be a follower.  You’ll listen to every podcast, follow every eblast and purchase all their books.  It only makes good sense if you want to absorb the flavor of your hero’s life.

John, the beloved disciple, changes gears at this point in his Gospel.  In the retelling of his memories, John, in his tenderness for his intimate friend –  recalls Jesus saying: “I am troubled now.”  I wonder did Jesus pause at this point in time to ponder the source of his uneasiness?  “I am troubled now.”  He questions, “Yet what should I say?  Father, save me from this hour?”  Then, it is like he straightens himself up, thinking aloud: “Why should I ask the Father to save me from this?  It was for this very purpose that I came to this hour.”

You could hear a pin drop.  Is that thunder we hear in the distance; now it’s closer.  Some say it’s the voice of an angel.  Jesus speaks: “This voice did not come for my sake but for yours. … When I am lifted up, I will draw everyone to myself.”  Over 2000 years later, from our side of the story, we know Jesus was indicating the kind of death he would die; and his resurrection.  Our Easter!  Our understanding of Jesus’ remark, and the events commemorated during Holy Week, will always be colored with an assurance of a good ending, of Easter and resurrection.

A few lines later in his Gospel John will remind us of Jesus’ promise, (similar of the words he had said to Judas).  “The light will be among you only a little while.  Walk while you have the light, so that darkness may not overcome you.  Whoever walks in the dark does not know where he is going.  While you have the light, believe in the light, so that you may become children of the light.”

At this point in my preparation, I took a break and turned to my Lenten booklet.  This was the lesson God had planted there:  A young girl was watching her father, a pastor, preparing his Sunday sermon.  She knew she should keep quiet but curiosity won out.  She asked: “Daddy, how do you know what to say?”  “Why, God tells me,” her father replied.  “Ohhhh, then why do you keep crossing things out??”  Now, I love the techie computer function of “block, copy, cut, paste or save.”  But it was time to stop trying to refine what I had on paper.  So I looked to the Responsorial Psalm for a closing line: “Give me back the joy of your salvation, a willing spirit sustain in me.”  The church says:  AMEN.

~Reflection by Sister Roberta Bailey, OSB, Prioress

Today I wish  you a happy Saint Benedict’s day.  Benedict is the patron of a peaceful death – let us remember in particular all those who have died, or will die, during this time of pandemic.  May they, and all the departed, rest in peace.

Prayer to St. Benedict:  O, holy father Benedict, blessed by God both in grace and in name.  Who, while standing in prayer, with your hands raised to heaven, most happily yielded your angelic spirit  into the hands of your Creator, and promised zealously to defend against all the snares of the enemy, in the last struggle of death those who shall daily remind you of your glorious Father, this day and every day by your blessing that we may never be separated from our blessed Lord, from the society of yourself and all the blessed.  Amen. 

For information on the life of St. Benedict you may wish to refer to the Dialogues of St. Gregory, volume 2  https://www.osb.org/gen/greg/  For details about the circumstances that surrounded his death, refer especially to the final chapter on the aforementioned website. 

Have a good week and we prepare to slide into Holy Week next Sunday. 

 

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Filed Under: Blog, Front Page, Homily Tagged With: God, Holy Week, Jesus, Jesus' resurrection, John, Judas, Lazarus, Mary, Passover, resurrection, Saint Benedict, Walk While You Have the Light

From Holy Week into the Rest of our Lives

April 10, 2017 by Holy Name Monastery Leave a Comment

Excerpts from “Opening Doors to Jesus & with Jesus”

A reflection inspired by a homily by St. Pope John Paul II

The liturgy of Palm Sunday is a kind of solemn entrance into Holy Week. Yet Holy Week itself is an entry into something greater. Palm Sunday combines a welcoming of Jesus and a welcoming of Jesus into our most sacred place. This is a place more our own than Jerusalem.   Jesus came to the so-called “city of peace” and was welcomed by a great crowd. In a certain way this city can symbolize the human race and its ambivalent reaction to the coming of Christ.

Today we want to belong to the crowd of welcomers. But if we welcome Jesus as our Lord then we must remember that he is Lord of truth, freedom, justice and love. We welcome him precisely as Lord insofar as we also welcome these realities with faith and joy, not just outside but inside ourselves. If we know what we are doing, we realize we are being called to work with Jesus, and one another, to build peace and justice and truth and love. That begins with our opening of ourselves to Jesus’ coming, and involves committing ourselves to work with him to build these realities within ourselves. This, at least, is the first step. But all are not ready to do this. So we have to be ready also to accompany Jesus to the cross. Who can guide us as we too climb the hill of Calvary with our Divine and Human Teacher? There is no better guide than Mary. What she teaches is part of the gift we receive when in accepting her as our spiritual Mother.

St. John has to open his home; we have to open ourselves, our most sacred inner place. We start by welcoming her but that will lead us to welcome others. Will we respond as generously as Mary to the Lord’s call? Will we persevere with joy and fidelity in the mission to others that this implies? Will we let Mary teach us this? O Mary, give us your eyes so that on the face of the crucified Jesus we may recognize that of the Risen One, the one who fears nothing when doing what the Heavenly Father has called him to be and do.

The first lesson is that of standing at the cross and joining Jesus’ love and forgiveness. The second lesson is that of opening our heart to all those who need love and forgiveness. This is our path into Holy Week and it is the path of our entire life as we come from Holy Week into the rest of our lives.

~ by Sister Roberta Bailey, OSB, Prioress
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Filed Under: Blog, Homily Tagged With: Christ, Holy Week, Jerusalem, Jesus, Mary, Palm Sunday

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