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Benedictine Sisters of FL

Holy Name Monastery
Founded 1889

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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

The Experience

November 3, 2021 by Holy Name Monastery Leave a Comment

The Experience

“The Benedictine Hospitality experience was so great and deeply felt.  As always, God’s presence in this beautiful and heavenly place makes me feel blessed and cared for.  Hope I can come back for the 3rd time!”                                         

Fe A. Francisco

We receive communications like the above from so many guests after their visit to Holy Name Monastery.

For most it is no ordinary experience.  Reasons for those who reach-out to us vary from the joy and celebration of faith to the crushing blow of losing a loved one.  Whatever the reason, closeness to and a better understanding of God is the desire.  In the quiet, in walks on the property, reflection in the chapel, time to just be — the experience is often life changing.

Our prayer is to help guests experience what they are in need of so that when they leave this place, they feel a renewal and a confidence that they are not alone.  God is present in their lives.

As a supporter of our mission, you know such work has great value and you know funds raised are preciously and respectfully stewarded by the Sisters.  We ask that you share this message with your social network.  Give friends, family and colleagues the opportunity to know the joy of helping to change lives.  As an Ambassador for our cause, you can further help seekers, the needy, the elderly and those looking for direction in our chaotic world.

Even $5.00 donations on Giving Tuesday makes a difference and collectively can help ensure that our 2021 Goal of $30,000 is successful.

How to Participate in GivingTuesday:

  1. By Mail:
  • Send a check payable to Benedictine Sisters of Florida postmarked by Nov. 30th
  • PO Box 2450, St. Leo, FL 33574-2450

2. Online:

  • Go to our website: benedictinesistersoffl.org
  • Click on the “Donate Now” button at the top of the page
  • Fill-in the form and designate your donation for “Giving Tuesday”

 

 

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Filed Under: Prayer Tagged With: Ambassador, communications, Giving Tuesday, Giving Tuesday 2021, mail, online, sisters, The Experience, ways to give

Lives of Prayer and Peace

October 21, 2021 by Holy Name Monastery Leave a Comment

The Sisters’ lives of prayer, spirituality and hospitality make them models of how to live in peace and community.  We celebrate YOU, our volunteers and supporters for your partnership with us to make a difference in people’s lives.

 

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Filed Under: Prayer Tagged With: celebrate YOU, Lives of prayer and peace, Peace, Prayer, sisters, supporters, volunteers

Kansas Religious Groups Confront Climate Change

August 19, 2021 by Holy Name Monastery Leave a Comment

Heartland Farm near Great Bend is operated by the Dominican Sisters of Peace.

By Brian Grimmett, Kansas News Service

The sisters at Heartland Farm mark just one of several religious communities in Kansas turning their attention to a modern crisis — climate change. Motivated by their religious beliefs, they make a faith-based case for environmentalism.

GREAT BEND, Kan. — The Dominican Sisters of Peace have been farming with their faith in mind for more than three decades.

In the middle of a state where large-scale commodity and livestock farming has transformed the landscape, the order of nuns aim for a lighter touch on the land.

“If you don’t have a life-sustaining planet, you don’t have life,” said Sister Jane Belanger, who’s lived on the farm for about 13 years. “And if I could quote scripture, ‘I came to bring life and bring it more abundantly.’”

The sisters at Heartland Farm mark just one of several religious communities in Kansas turning their attention to a modern crisis — climate change. Motivated by their religious beliefs, they make a faith-based case for environmentalism.

Four sisters live at Heartland Farm. They’re joined by a rotating group of volunteers who earn room and board by helping out with chores. The sisters offer camps and classes on how to grow organic crops and spin fiber. (The raw wool comes from the alpacas the sisters keep on the property). They also sell what they don’t eat at a local farmer’s market.

“That speaks to people,” Belanger said. “We’re not coming in to solve your problems or tell you what to do, but we are offering an alternative way.”

Still, the message can draw opposition. Belanger recalled a conversation she had with a member of Heartland Farm’s advisory committee — someone she described as a “good Catholic man” — who said that as much as he admires what they’re doing, there’s no way he could do it on his farm.

She said people can, understandably, be set in their ways, including doing things that contribute to climate change.

Other religious communities that focus on the environment say they face similar resistance.

“We have some churches that are good at promoting ecological ideas and some that aren’t,” said Helen Mueting, one of the nearly 100 Benedictine sisters at Mt. St. Scholastica in Atchison, Kansas. “We’re kind of like the squeaky wheel. We have to keep saying it.”

The sisters at the monastery try to live the principles found in Pope Francis’ 2015 encyclical Laudato sí, which focuses on the environment and its destruction.

The sisters grow an organic garden, harvest honey from several beehives on the property and have installed a 150-kilowatt solar system to help offset their electricity needs. They’ve also issued a statement calling for political leaders to support climate friendly legislation and a transition to renewable energy.

Mueting said those and other actions they’ve taken are driven by faith and a sense of responsibility for all of God’s creations.

“If we destroy the environment, we’re morally responsible for the people of the future as well as for the poor who are most devastated by climate change,” she said.

Making a connection between the impacts of climate change and care for the poor, she said, will be key to convincing more people of faith to act on climate change.

Some religious leaders hope that the moral appeal for action will even help combat theological based opposition built on the idea that there isn’t a need to care for the environment because God gave man dominion over the Earth and that Jesus Christ will one day come and renew it.

“To say it’s all ending anyway or even let’s bring it about, is like, to me, theologically really wrong,” said Cathleen Bascom, the bishop for the Episcopal Diocese of Kansas.

Bascom is also part of the left-leaning advocacy group known as Kansas Interfaith Action. It’s members often testify on climate issues to committees at the state Capitol.

“This is shepherding,” she said. “Because I want our children and grandchildren to be able to drink and be able to have crops and we’ve got to see this as holy.”

Religious communities can play a unique role in addressing climate change, said Rabbi Moti Rieber, the executive director of Kansas Interfaith Action. He said people of faith who view climate issues as moral issues are able to reach those that otherwise would only see it through a political lens.

“It’s up to us to demand that our political leaders take this conversation seriously and begin to address these issues,” Rieber said.

And while there’s still a long way to go to convince people of the seriousness of the climate crisis — including getting more religious leaders to talk about the issue from the pulpit and during Sunday school — Rieber said caring for God’s creations is a sacred duty.

“One of the reasons why we do this is because we’re convinced that it matters to God,” he said. “So therefore it should matter to us.”

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Filed Under: Blog, Front Page, Homily Tagged With: Brian Grimmett, climate change, Dominican Sister of Peace, Great Bend, Heartland Farm, Kansas News Service, sisters

Flag Day 2021

June 14, 2021 by Holy Name Monastery Leave a Comment

The Sisters celebrate Flag Day

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Filed Under: Prayer Tagged With: Benedictine Sisters of FL, Benedictine Sisters of Florida, Flag Day, Flag Day 2021, sisters, video

March – Celebrating Women and their Accomplishments

March 5, 2021 by Holy Name Monastery Leave a Comment

We are excited to share a video on March 8th in celebration of National Catholic Sisters Week.  The video features the practices and ministries of several Benedictine monasteries across the country including the Benedictine Sisters of Florida.  In addition to how catholic organizations honor women religious during March, this is the fifth year that they are part of National Women’s History Month.  While Sisters and nuns do not seek recognition, making them a part of this annual celebration every March is only fitting.

Our country has been served since the early 1700s by Sisters and nuns who established exceptional schools and hospitals and have been remarkable in their out-reach to the poor.  Their history is closely tied to the very development of our nation.  Today there are 45,605 Sisters and nuns who are consoling, inspiring and praying for those who have lost loved ones during the Covid pandemic.  Now as in so many past crises, vowed women are a God-send.

This year’s theme for National Women’s History Month is “Valiant Women of the Vote,” focusing on those who worked for women’s right to vote.  Faith and religion played a significant role in the fight for fairness.  Suffrage was not only a legal issue, but certainly a moral one.  Journalist Elaine Weiss wrote “The Women’s Hour: the Great Fight to Win the Vote,” highlighting the fact that women of various faiths came together to organize and lobby.  They saw suffrage as a matter of divine justice as well as human rights.

 

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Filed Under: Blog, Front Page, Homily Tagged With: Benedictine, Celebrating Women, Elaine Weiss, March-Celebrating Women and their Accomplishments, National Women's History Month, sisters, with God all things are possible

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PO Box 2450
12138 Wichers Road
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