Tet 2015

On Sunday night we had our annual celebration of the Lunar New Year, or Tet as our Vietnamese sisters call it! For the Vietnamese people this is the year of the goat (in other countries it\’s the year of the sheep). Our celebration was actually postponed from the 15th due to an event we hope to post later. But this gave us more time to prepare our dance, performed by some of the younger sisters and choreographed as always by Sr. Mary Christine.
For more pictures of our dance, please check out our website gallery, here. There are 7 pictures in all!
We also played games and had delicious Vietnamese treats and lucky money provided by a generous benefactor. We thank everyone who made our celebration possible!

Lenten Companions: St. Polycarp

\”O Father of The beloved and blessed Son, Jesus Christ…I bless Thee for counting me worthy of this day and hour, that in the number of martyrs I may partake of Christ\’s cup, to the resurrection of eternal life of both soul and body in the imperishablility that is the gift of the Holy Ghost.\”
–St. Polycarp
St. Polycarp is the first of our Lenten companions. He was a martyr who died about 155 and he is one of the \”Apostolic Fathers\”, meaning that he received his teaching directly from one of the first disciples or apostles. In fact, he is supposed to have been a disciple of St. John the Evangelist. Polycarp was a contemporary and friend to many other well-known Fathers of the Church, including St. Ignatius of Antioch and St. Irenaeus of Lyons. He was captured and martyred during a persecution of Christians in Smyrna, where he was bishop. His final prayer, quoted above, shows a strong Trinitarian theology, and ends with a doxology. Polycarp is an excellent Lenten companion for us because he remained true to his faith in the face of persecution and martyrdom (and this is becoming sadly more common for Christians today), and he followed faithfully in the footsteps of Christ, which all Christians are called to do, regardless of their state of life or the way their lives end. May Polycarp inspire us today to be faithful and unafraid to follow Christ to Calvary and beyond!

Lent 2015

Lent is here again! We\’ve heard a lot of Dominicans telling us recently, \”Instead of giving something up, why not do something extra for Lent?\” This doesn\’t necessarily mean extra church services, extra prayers, or extra volunteer time (although all those things are good practices!). It can also mean strengthening the virtues, building up those that are weak within us. You could try putting Paul\’s reminder about Christians being ambassadors for Christ into practice (as another friar told us). And hopefully, by practicing a new virtue for the six weeks of Lent, it will become a new good habit that will carry you through the months and years to come! So this Lent consider striving to be more grateful, more loving, more patient…or whatever you most need to work on. If you are faithful to your practice it will bear fruit in your life at Easter–or even before!
With this in mind, we\’re going to bring you some \”Lenten companions\” to help you as we proceed through Lent. We did this for Advent, and it seemed to be helpful for many, so we will try again for this season! We hope to have at least one Lenten companion each week, so please check to find out who\’s being featured. And we will also be posting monastery news and other things!
Have a blessed and holy Lent! We\’ll be meeting you on the way!

Association Council Meeting

The Council of the Association of Monasteries of Nuns of the Order of Preachers in the United States (that\’s a mouthful, isn\’t it?) met at our monastery last week. They kept very busy with their meetings, so we didn\’t see a lot of them, but we enjoyed having them with us! We did have one recreation where we could all talk to each other!
From left to right: Sr. Denise Marie (Summit), Sr. Mary Thomas (Farmington Hills), Sr. Mary Rose (Lufkin), Sr. Mary Catharine (Summit), Sr. Maria Christine (Menlo Park), Fr. Walter Wagner, OP (priest consultant), and Sr. Anna Marie (Springfield). 
We are so grateful for all their hard work getting ready for the 2016 Assembly and other projects!

Winter 2015 Issue of Monastery Bells

We\’ve got the winter 2015 issue of \”Monastery Bells\” in the mail! If you want to read it right now, just click here. 
We are also holding our annual raffle again this year! You can check out the prizes–we have seven, but two are not pictured as they are surprises–here. If you don\’t receive \”Monastery Bells\” by mail (and therefore do not get tickets for our raffle) we invite anyone in the United States (sorry, we can\’t mail prizes overseas) to enter just by sending us an email or contact form message with your name, address, and a way of contacting you! No donation is required, although we accept any donations gratefully. We hope to hear from you!

Visiting Sisters

We often have posts about Dominican friars who visit us…but yesterday we had a lovely visit from some Dominican sisters who are working in our diocese of Tyler, TX!

These are sisters from a congregation based in Puerto Rico, called the Dominican Sisters of Our Lady of the Holy Rosary of Fatima. Their mission is to \”bring Christ to the family, and the family to Christ\” so their primary work is social services. They have been doing great things in the diocese,  working mainly with the Hispanic population. We are so delighted to have some active Dominican sisters in our diocese again, and we hope they will visit us when they can. 
Here you can see most of our community, plus the visiting sisters and our chaplain, Fr. Marcos Ramos, OP. A true meeting of the Dominican family!

Still Growing on Lotus Lane

It\’s hard to know what to do with a poinsettia after Christmas. During the Christmas season, they are a beautiful addition to all the liturgical festivities…then in mid-January you have all these dying flowers in conspicuously red and green pots, which are usually disposed of in the dead of night when no one is around. A sad ending! But for one lucky poinsettia, things turned out very differently. A few years ago, Sr. Mary Jeremiah nabbed one of these wilting poinsettias after Christmas and determined to keep it alive. Like the servant in the Gospel who hoed and watered the fig tree for another year to see if it would eventually bear fruit, Sister carefully tended her poinsettia and saved it from several attempts to be thrown out. The first couple of years, the poinsettia flourished, but its leaves remained stubbornly green. However, this year Sr. Mary Jeremiah\’s patience finally paid off, and the leaves are slowly turning a brilliant shade of red!
Sr. Mary Jeremiah in the library with her poinsettia and our community librarian, Sr. Mary Annunciata, another firm believer in the little poinsettia that could!
 
Being nuns, we of course draw a moral from all this gardening. So often our good efforts seem to come to nothing. But grace often works slowly, imperceptibly in our lives, so that one day we realize things have changed without realizing the exact moment when the change came! It\’s like the seed in another parable–the farmer plants it, and then he sleeps and rises, every day noticing the seed had grown, but he does not know how or when it actually happened. May we continue to be patient with ourselves and others, so that the seeds (and green leaves) of grace make reach their fulfillment in due time!