“Let them have at heart the conversion of sinners…the
sanctification of the neighbor, freedom of souls in purgatory and
the exaltation of Holy Mother Church. Let them pray also for the
Sovereign Pontiff…and for all evangelical workers…
A Life of Worship and Self-Gift
“To this end, let them frequently offer to the Eternal Father the
Passion of Jesus Christ. This being the very end of the Institude
of the Daughters of the Cross and Passion of Jesus Christ.”
~ St. Paul of the Cross in his Primitive Regulations for the
Passionist Nuns 1772
Our Passionist Vows:
Listen, O daughter, give ear to my words;
forget your own people and your father’s house.
So will the king desire your beauty:
He is your lord, pay homage to Him.
~ Psalm 45 - The marriage of the King
To grasp the beauty of our vowed life, I encourage all our young
people to visit the Vatican website and click on the letter of Pope
John Paul II, Vita Consecrata. It is truly a masterpiece.>
There we read that consecrated life is deeply rooted in the example
and teaching of Jesus. It is a gift of God the Father to the Church
through the Holy Spirit. Through the profession of our religious
vows, the characteristic features of Jesus, the chaste, poor and
obedient One, are made constantly visible in the world.>
The Holy Father says that in every age, there have been men and
women who called by God and obedient to the prompting of the Holy
Spirit, have chosen this special way of following Christ in order
to devote themselves to Him with an undivided heart. Like the
Apostles, they have left everything behind in order to be with
Christ at the service of God and the Church. They ordinarily commit
themselves to Christ through the vows of chastity, poverty and
obedience.>
The religious vows are to be seen as a unity. They are our marriage
covenant with the Lamb, in response to His choice and call. “You
did not choose Me. No, I chose you.” (John 15:16) We give ourselves
to God in Jesus Christ, desiring to love Him in an undivided way,
and to dedicate our entire lives to the service of the Church
through our hidden life of prayer and sacrifice.>
What makes us different from every other order of cloistered Nuns
in the Church is what we call our “Passion Vow.”>
Yes! The very first vow we pronounce at our religious profession is
the vow to promote devotion to the Passion of Christ. This vow
expresses the unique purpose of our Institute, distinguishing us
from other religious institutes. We also make the vows of chastity,
poverty and obedience, and finally, we bind ourselves to observe
strict cloister by making a vow of enclosure.>
Our Holy Founder, St. Paul of the Cross, wanted us to “have much at
heart the spread of devotion to the Passion of Jesus.” There are
many ways in which we fulfill this beautiful vow. The principal way
is to fulfill it in our own souls first of all, by a life-long
striving for an intimate relationship of love and gratitude,
adoration and praise of Jesus in His Passion, death and
resurrection, and also by praying that others will experience the
blessed fruits of His bitter sufferings and death. Our great desire
is to attain the union of love with Our Lord in His Paschal Mystery
and to share in His mission of redeeming the world. This is
foundational because one cannot give what one does not
have.>
But there are many other ways in which we strive to honor Christ in
His Passion and death, and to make Him loved by others. Among these
are the contacts we have through letters, phone, our website and
through the guest house attached to but separate from our
monastery. Our Holy Founder said that love is ingenious. There are
countless ways in which cloistered Nuns can remind others of Our
Lord’s great love and suffering, especially at times of personal
and family trials, and so forth.>
The Holy Spirit has also called together a group of lay and
clerical Passionist Oblates who meet every month at our monastery.
These priests and lay people share our spirituality, making their
own commitment to the Passion of Jesus, and they strive to carry
this spirit with them back into their daily lives.>
The guest house also provides a place where people can come into an
atmosphere of silence and prayerfulness for a time of retreat. By
joining in the liturgical prayer of our community, they also
experience our devotion to the Passion.>