It is with sadness that we share some news about Mater Redemptoris House of Formation.
We learned on May 18th that the Bishop is ending our ministry here at Mater Redemptoris. We will be leaving on June 30th, so we had to cancel our summer retreats. We were able to keep the Vocation Pilgrimage. The men's seminary formation program, called Regency, is moving into the house in the fall.
We thank you for your support, prayers, financial assistance and joy over the years! We have been honored to serve you, your daughters and families. May Our Lady hold you close and bring you to her Son. You are in our prayers. Please keep us in your prayers during this time of transition as well.
Tuesday, June 4, 2019
Wednesday, April 24, 2019
Summer Events - Registration NOW OPEN!
Come join the Sisters for a week in June!
Seek the Heart of Jesus!
Click the flier
above or below
to register!
Come join the Sisters for an overnight
at Mater Redemptoris this coming July!
Encounter the joy of Jesus!
Friday, April 5, 2019
Shine brightly - by Zoey
God is the spoken word of light. He consumes us with His light into our very souls. It is through this light that the Holy Spirit guides our very hearts. Let Him guide you into His loving arms, so that His light can surge into the world shining from your heart.
Especially with Lent here, this is a great time for this. Brothers and sisters in Christ, let the Father shine into your hearts so as to receive the gifts that He wants to bestow upon you during these 40 days. And in doing so, grow even deeper in your relationship with Jesus.
Especially with Lent here, this is a great time for this. Brothers and sisters in Christ, let the Father shine into your hearts so as to receive the gifts that He wants to bestow upon you during these 40 days. And in doing so, grow even deeper in your relationship with Jesus.
Wednesday, April 3, 2019
Punishment or Gift? - by Allyson
"Who would believe what we have heard? To whom has the arm of the Lord been revealed? He grew up like a sapling before him, like a shoot parched from the earth; There was in him no stately being to make us look at him nor appearance that would attract us to him. He was spurned and avoided by men, a man of suffering accustomed to infirmity. One of those from whom men hide their faces, spurned and we held him in no esteem. Yet it was our infirmities that he bore, our sufferings that he endured. While we thought of him as stricken, as one smitten by God and afflicted. But he was pierced for offenses, crushed for our sins. Upon him was the chastisement that makes us whole, by his stripes we were healed."
Isaiah 53:1-5I use to view suffering as a punishment from God. But this verse has helped me see that Jesus has already endured our suffering. We as Christians are called to take up our Cross daily and follow Him. If we unite our sufferings with His, the Lord can use that for the salvation of souls which is pretty incredible.
Mother Teresa said that when we are suffering Jesus is so close to us and He is kissing us. As we journey through Lent, let us ask the Lord to give us the courage to take up our Crosses.
Monday, April 1, 2019
Be Still - by Tessa
"You will hear My voice, I claim you as My choice. Be still and know that I am here." "You are Mine" by David Haas, verse 1Many times, I get caught up in my own ideas, desires, or preferences, and this can make it difficult to hear God's voice. If someone gives me a critique or compliment and I focus all my energy on that, this too can become an obstacle to what the Lord is wanting to say to me. Yet, despite whatever obstacles that stand between me and Jesus, He always finds a way around them!
He lovingly confirms that I will hear His voice, that if He loves me as much as He has shown me, then He will not leave me to fend for myself! If I desire His will for me, He will make Himself heard. And not only will I "hear His voice" but I am being "claimed" as Christ's number one choice! He didn't have to choose me, but He did, because He knows all I can become when I am united to Himself. I am snatched from the devil, who would have claimed me instead!
"Be still and know I am here." These words are the only words that last. When I am jumping from one obligation to the next, when I am anxious or distressed, Jesus reminds me to pause, take a breath, and remember that everything doesn't have to, and will never, depend on me alone. Jesus is "jumping" with me and has everything under control. I have no need to worry!
Saturday, March 30, 2019
Suffering - by Mikalya
Original sin brought about suffering. God does not will me to suffer, but He permits it. He permits it so that I can unite my sufferings to Christ in His passion and death. Jesus suffered for me, but He also suffers with me. He can use my sufferings as reparation for my sin or the sins of others who have hurt Him. Uniting my sufferings to those of Our Lord helps to relieve His suffering. I can also relieve His suffering by acts of virtue and penance.
This Lent may I relieve the sufferings of of Christ by my extra acts of prayer, fasting, and almsgiving and come to a deeper relationship with Him.
This Lent may I relieve the sufferings of of Christ by my extra acts of prayer, fasting, and almsgiving and come to a deeper relationship with Him.
Thursday, March 28, 2019
Man has a Hole in His Head - by Mary Kate
Fulton Sheen once jokingly said that we have reason to hope because "man has a hole in his head." What he hoped to convey is that man by himself does not fill himself with goodness and truth. We do not fill our ears with sound, our mouths with food, our nose with smell, our eyes with sight. Rather, they are gifts from a greater source. This same source, our Blessed Lord, tells us that "the eye is the lamp of the body. If your eye is sound, your whole body will be full of light." (Mt. 6:22)
Lent is a time to devotedly return our gaze to the One Who is the light that shines in the darkness (Jn 1:5). Our sacrifices free us to be filled and dispose us to properly orient our gaze. I pray that we persevere in receiving life from Our Lord this Lent as we
"return with our whole heart." (Joel 2:12)
Lent is a time to devotedly return our gaze to the One Who is the light that shines in the darkness (Jn 1:5). Our sacrifices free us to be filled and dispose us to properly orient our gaze. I pray that we persevere in receiving life from Our Lord this Lent as we
Tuesday, March 26, 2019
Preparation - by Claire
All to often, Lent is looked on as a burden, annoyance or inconvenience. We concern ourselves with what to give up, what do do, what is too much or too hard, and what is too little or too easy. Eventually we decide on something and do our best to carry it out obediently, but not very joyfully. We've all had Lents like this, or seen it this way at some point in our lives, but this view does not do justice to the beauty of Lent.
In truth, Lent is the preparation time we have before receiving the greatest gift of all! It is a time to get to know Jesus in a more intimate way before we recall His suffering, death and resurrection. By abstaining from the pleasures of this world, the things we like most, we slowly remove our earthly supports. Through this, we begin to have more time to spend with Jesus. If we choose, we may grow much closer to Him, abandoning our sins, comforts and supports in favor of the virtue of trust. What a worthy effort! After all, it was all of our sins and supports that lifted Jesus off the ground at His crucifixion.
In this light, let us continue whole heartedly during this Lenten Season.
In truth, Lent is the preparation time we have before receiving the greatest gift of all! It is a time to get to know Jesus in a more intimate way before we recall His suffering, death and resurrection. By abstaining from the pleasures of this world, the things we like most, we slowly remove our earthly supports. Through this, we begin to have more time to spend with Jesus. If we choose, we may grow much closer to Him, abandoning our sins, comforts and supports in favor of the virtue of trust. What a worthy effort! After all, it was all of our sins and supports that lifted Jesus off the ground at His crucifixion.
In this light, let us continue whole heartedly during this Lenten Season.
Sunday, March 24, 2019
The Father's Love - by Holly
In the first reading on Ash Wednesday we hear from the prophet Joel: "Even now, says the Lord, return to me with your whole heart." Our lives are about relationship with God. Lent is a time set aside to renew that relationship with our Father, especially our trust in Him.
In these forty days, we are united with Christ who showed His trust in the Father, as He was "led out by the Spirit into the wilderness to be tempted." We also see His trusting surrender to the Father, during His passion, when He says, "Not my will but yours be done" and "Into your hands, I commend my spirit."
As I enter into this Lenten Season, I am bearing in mind that, as the Catechism states, "God's initiative of love always comes first; our own first step is always a response." Whenever I perform my selected penance, I am in fact, receiving my Father's love, poured out for me, and am then, in my action, responding to His great love. I am excited to spend the next forty days of this special season deepening my relationship with my Father, and I hope that everyone partaking in this blessed season responds to the invitation to a closer union with the One Who Loved us first.
In these forty days, we are united with Christ who showed His trust in the Father, as He was "led out by the Spirit into the wilderness to be tempted." We also see His trusting surrender to the Father, during His passion, when He says, "Not my will but yours be done" and "Into your hands, I commend my spirit."
As I enter into this Lenten Season, I am bearing in mind that, as the Catechism states, "God's initiative of love always comes first; our own first step is always a response." Whenever I perform my selected penance, I am in fact, receiving my Father's love, poured out for me, and am then, in my action, responding to His great love. I am excited to spend the next forty days of this special season deepening my relationship with my Father, and I hope that everyone partaking in this blessed season responds to the invitation to a closer union with the One Who Loved us first.
Thursday, March 21, 2019
Intimidated or Not? - by Sarah
Lent can be intimidating. It's a trek of 40 days through the desert and a time of penance, fasting, and repentance, which typically aren't ideas that fill us with joy and excitement. With all it's difficulties and sacrifices, it can be easy to fall into viewing Lent as a burden or an inconvenience, and we start anticipating it with dread rather than eagerness.
When we take a step back and look at the big picture, though, something begins to emerge that isn't quite so unattractive. The self-denial is still there, but we can begin to see it in a different light. It isn't just suffering for the sake of suffering. Prayer, fasting and almsgiving lead us down the road of letting go of the good things of this life and becoming more attached to the ultimate Good and source of our happiness - God.
We don't just practice penance and penitence for the sake of beating ourselves up over our failings, but rather because this is a time when God opens His arms even wider to receive us back to Himself as His prodigal children. If we can learn to see Lent as a time we're privileged to have to draw closer to God, it can become a time of resting in the arms of the Father who never wants to be separated from us.
Yes, Lent is a trek of 40 days through the desert, but when God is our goal and companion along the way, it isn't quite so intimidating anymore.
When we take a step back and look at the big picture, though, something begins to emerge that isn't quite so unattractive. The self-denial is still there, but we can begin to see it in a different light. It isn't just suffering for the sake of suffering. Prayer, fasting and almsgiving lead us down the road of letting go of the good things of this life and becoming more attached to the ultimate Good and source of our happiness - God.
We don't just practice penance and penitence for the sake of beating ourselves up over our failings, but rather because this is a time when God opens His arms even wider to receive us back to Himself as His prodigal children. If we can learn to see Lent as a time we're privileged to have to draw closer to God, it can become a time of resting in the arms of the Father who never wants to be separated from us.
Yes, Lent is a trek of 40 days through the desert, but when God is our goal and companion along the way, it isn't quite so intimidating anymore.
Wednesday, March 20, 2019
Winter and Spring - by Mary Kate
I love how the seasons outside can reflect seasons in our interior life. When I look outside my window, the trees are bare and exposed. Their leaves no longer mask anything that lies beneath. All is simple and quiet, and it seems fitting to me that Lent falls at this transitional period between winter and spring.
Simplicity and barrenness eventually give way to new life, and it is all a gift from the Heart of the Father. All this can be said of us, too. The sacrifices we make a commitment to for love of Him bring a change within us that gives way to something that is vibrant like a new spring. For now, we make that space to allow the Lord to work as we
faithfully respond to His call, "Even now, return to Me with your whole heart." (Joel 2:12)
Simplicity and barrenness eventually give way to new life, and it is all a gift from the Heart of the Father. All this can be said of us, too. The sacrifices we make a commitment to for love of Him bring a change within us that gives way to something that is vibrant like a new spring. For now, we make that space to allow the Lord to work as we
faithfully respond to His call, "Even now, return to Me with your whole heart." (Joel 2:12)
Tuesday, March 19, 2019
Abounding in Mercy - by Abbie
“Yet even now,” says the Lord, “return to me with all your
heart…
Return to the Lord, your God, for he is gracious and
merciful,
slow to anger, and abounding in mercy…”
-Joel 2
:12-13
The Father
wants all of your heart: the good, the bad, and the ugly. He will always wait
for you to offer your heart to Him, because He is a kind and gentle Father who
respects the free will of His children. Give Him more of your heart this Lent.
Your Lenten sacrifice is an emptying of yourself or your time. What do you fill
that space or time with? I challenge you to allow Him to fill this space of your heart or this time during your day.
Return to Him in prayer. Ask for the grace to be filled by Him when your
fasting leaves you feeling hollow. When you fail at keeping your Lenten
sacrifice, like the prodigal son who squandered his inheritance, return to Him
in your failure for the Father will be “gracious and merciful, slow to anger,
and abounding in mercy.”
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)