WOG One-Day Held in Winona Lake, IN

I just got home last evening from Winona Lake, IN where the Diocese of Fort Wayne/South Bend hosted a Women of Grace One-Day Conference at Grace College. It was a glorious day in the Lord as the capacity crowd of 350 women gathered together to experience the blessings God had in mind.

I again want to extend my thanks and gratitude to Bishop John M. D’Arcy and to Ginny Kohrman, Director of the Office of Spiritual Development and Evangelization, for their dedication and enthusiasm in sponsoring this conference and in making it a day filled to the brim with God’s love.  From beginning to end it was indeed grace-filled.

Thank you aslo to the women who gave of themselves so generously by participating in the many committees whose efforts made the day so special. And, of course, thank you to the many women who came to the event. What a blessing you were to me! May God bless all of you abundantly.

Our next Women of Grace One-Day Conference is October 25 at Blessed Sacrament Catholic Church in Clermont, FL. For more information, go to www.womenofgrace.com, click on “Speaking Engagements” and scroll down to the October 25th date. If you would like to find out about sponsoring a Women of Grace One-Day Conference at your parish or in your area, just give us a call at 1-800-558-5452 and ask for Thea at ext. 237.

 

 

WOW! at WOG Continued

Life just has a way of interrupting our plans, doesn’t it?

I wanted to get back to you yesterday with some of the details of the Women of Grace National Conference held in Sacramento, CA last weekend but as it turned out, the day seemed to have plans of its own and suddenly it was midnight and my task was left unaccomplished. Do you know what St. Teresa Benedicta of the Cross (Edith Stein) had to say about just such occurrences in her life? She said:

“When night comes, and retrospect shows that everything was patchwork and much that one had planned left undone, when so many things rouse shame and regret, then take all as is, lay it in God’s hands, and offer it up to Him. In this way we will be able to rest in Him, actually to rest and to begin the new day like a new life.”

And so, beginning this “new day like a new life,” I now share with you about the Women of Grace National Conference.

Women Gather for Weekend of Grace

Nearly five hundred women gathered at Sacramento’s Hyatt Regency Hotel located across from the Capitol for the Women of Grace National Conference the weekend of September 19-21. The Conference was preceded by the Benedicta Leadership Institute for Women.

Presenters for the Conference weekend were Catholic journalist and UN watchdog, Mary Jo Anderson; Healing the Culture’s president, Camille Pauley; radio show host and Catholic journalist, Teresa Tomeo; founder and president of Real Love, Inc., Mary Beth Bonacci; Women of Grace founder and president, Johnnette Benkovic; and chaplain and theological advisor for Women of Grace and Living His Life Abundantly, Father Edmund Sylvia, C.S.C. EWTN’s Raymond Arroyo was the keynote speaker at the banquet dinner on Saturday evening. Read the rest…

Reporting Live from The Benedicta Leadership Institute

“Purgatory is where you will have the capacity to see how the world would have been (your family, your neighborhood, your community, your world) had you done what God called you to do,” so said presenter, Mary Jo Anderson to the nearly 60 women who gathered yesterday for the first day of the Benedicta Leadership Institute for Women being held here in Sacramento, CA.

The Institute is an outgrowth of Women of Grace and seeks to identify, educate, develop and train Catholic women to be active leaders and mentors of the day in accord with their state in in life. Its hope is that Catholic women will infuse the institutions, organzations, and governmental agencies of our day and time with Catholic moral and social teachings so as to bring about the culture of life.

The presenters of this year’s Institute are Catholic Journalist Mary Jo Anderson and Camille Pauley, President of Healing the Culture.com. Yesterday both speakers encouraged the women to enter the marketplace of ideas armed with Catholic truth and ready to help make converts out of secularists who seek to separate the society of man from a godly perspective and godly principles.

Today, Pauley has led the women through a workshop experience in which they can apply the principles they have learned to real life situations. This practical application helps the women develop communication skills and team approach efforts to resolve issues and problem-solve solutions.

Demographically, the participants range in age from early thirties to mid sixties.

Following are some quotes from yesterday’s session that seemed particularly poignant to me. I hope they will give you pause for pondering and reflecting:

“Communities do not reflect the values of the people who live there. They reflect the values of the people who participate.”

“Separation of Church and State originated from the French Revolution and literally meant the separation of the State (France) from the Catholic Church.”

“Don’t view the secularist as your enemy, but rather as a potential convert.”

“It is not permissable for anyone to remain idle.”

The Women of Grace National Conference opens later this afternoon with a liturgy celebrated at the downtown Cathedral by Bishop Soto.

Check my blog for further updates this weekend live from Conference headquarters.

 

Feast of St. Robert Bellarmine

robert bellarmineToday is the feast day of St. Robert Bellarmine, a feast that reaches back to my early roots. I attended St. Robert Bellarmine Catholic School in East McKeesport, PA located on Fifth Avenue. My days there were happy ones and the Vincentian Sisters of Charity who taught there inculcated the truths of the Faith deeply into my heart.

I remember each one of those gifted women with great fondness: Sister Mary Concepta, 2nd grade; Sister Mary Euphemia, 3rd grade; Sister Mary Theophane, 4th grade; Sister Mary Denise, 5th grade; Sister Mary Gabriel, 6h grade, Sister Mary Philip, 7th grade, and Sister Mary Hermona, 8th grade. I attended a different Catholic school for first grade and was taught by a Dominican sister, Sister Mary Lois. She had the gift of prophesy though I don’t think she knew it — she routinely referred to me as Little Miss Talking Machine! Ha!

Read the rest…

Women of Grace National Conference in Sacramento

 

 

We are busy preparing to leave for the Women of Grace® National Conference to be held at the Hyatt in downtown Sacramento. The event begins with the Benedicta Leadership Institute for Women Thursday, September 18 to Friday, September 19. The conference itself begins Friday evening the 19th and runs until Sunday afternoon, September 21. I will be blogging to you from the conference to keep you informed of all of the events and highlights. Please remember Father Ed, our staff, and myself in your prayers. May every woman who attends experience the peace, joy and delight that only Jesus Christ can bring!

Memorial of Our Lady of Sorrows

Our Lady of Sorrows

Our Lady of SorrowsToday we celebrate the Memorial of Our Lady of Sorrows. This title of the Blessed Mother is particularly meaningful for me and holds much significance. As many of you know, Our Lady was my constant spiritual companion as I sojourned through the pilgrimage of pain I experienced when my son, Simon, was killed in a vehicular accident shortly after his return from Iraq.

I contemplated the wounds of Mary’s immaculate heart, inflicted by her seven swords, and found in them a safe refuge in which I could place my own broken heart and bruised emotions. With maternal love and comfort, she procured for me from her Spouse, the Holy Spirit, the grace I needed to find hope and healing.

Then, when my husband was diagnosed with terminal brain cancer 51 weeks after Simon’s death, Our Lady of Sorrows once again mothered my soul, tending to me with maternal beatitude and grace.

Of course, when I speak of such things, I refer to those intimations of the heart that come to us in prayer and upon reception of the sacraments of the Church. In those holy moments, the veil of our understanding is sometimes lifted and we catch a glimpse of the eternal realities. Then, we see what a mother we have in Our Lady! This daughter of the Father, mother of the Son, and spouse of the Holy Spirit advocates, intercedes, and procures so much for us before the throne of God!

We should not be surprised that the Blessed Mother does such things for us. She is, after all, our spiritual mother, anticipated by the Father (Genesis 3:15) and given to us by her Son when He experienced His final agony (John 19: 26-27). This is the consistent teaching of the Church from her earliest days.

The document of the Second Vatican Council, Lumen Gentium, states the Church’s teaching beautifully:

61. Predestined from eternity by that decree of divine providence which determined the incarnation of the Word to be the Mother of God, the Blessed Virgin was in this earth the virgin Mother of the Redeemer, and above all others and in a singular way the generous associate and humble handmaid of the Lord. She conceived, brought forth and nourished Christ. she presented Him to the Father in the temple, and was united with Him by compassion as He died on the Cross. In this singular way she cooperated by her obedience, faith, hope and burning charity in the work of the Saviour in giving back supernatural life to souls. Wherefore she is our mother in the order of grace.

62. This maternity of Mary in the order of grace began with the consent which she gave in faith at the Annunciation and which she sustained without wavering beneath the cross, and lasts until The eternal fulfillment of all the elect. Taken up to heaven she did not lay aside this salvific duty, but by her constant intercession continued to bring us the gifts of eternal salvation.(15*) By her maternal charity, she cares for the brethren of her Son, who still journey on earth surrounded by dangers and difficulties, until they are led into the happiness of their true home. Therefore the Blessed Virgin is invoked by the Church under the titles of Advocate, Auxiliatrix, Adjutrix, and Mediatrix.(16*) This, however, is to be so understood that it neither takes away from nor adds anything to the dignity and efficaciousness of Christ the one Mediator.

            It is from the entrustment of Our Lady to St. John and the entrustment of St. John to Our Lady that our understanding of her spiritual maternity flows as well as the Church’s devotion to her as Our Lady of Sorrows. St. John stood with Mary at the foot of the cross. He witnessed first hand her holy grief and affliction, her steadfast devotion to her Son, and her maternal entrance into His sufferings.

            Devotion to Our Lady of Sorrows grew during the Middle Ages as well as art work depicting the swords in her heart. These seven swords represent the seven main sorrows of Our Lady’s life. I have found it interesting to reflect upon the fact that the Jewish understanding saw the number seven as the number of perfection. From this perspective, then, though no blood flowed from physical wounds, she suffered interiorly to the superlative degree.

            While the list has varied through time, since the 14th century, these seven chief sorrows of May have been called her seven dolors and were listed as:

The Prophesy of Simeon (Luke 2: 33-35)

The Flight into Egypt (Matthew 2: 13-15)

The Loss of the Child Jesus for Three Days (Luke 2: 41-52)

Meeting Jesus on the Way to Calvary (Luke 2: 25-40; Lam: 1: 12; John 19: 26-27)

The Crucifixion and Death of Jesus (Matthew 27: 27-53)

Jesus is Taken Down from the Cross (Luke 23: 50-53)

Jesus is Laid in the Tomb (Luke 23: 53-56)

 

            As our spiritual mother, Mary wants to help us in our travail. She wants to intercede for us and obtain the grace we need to experience healing and hope. Reflecting on this, Father Faber, a 19th century priest who plumbs the depths of Our Lady’s sorrows in his classic work, The Foot of the Cross, tells us that we should seek to see Our Lord’s passion through the loving eyes of His mother. Her tenderness and her beatitude can help us in our own struggles, suffering, and pain. She wants to share with us the operations of grace she received into her own soul as she offered all of her sufferings to God the Father for our sake and for the sake of the whole world.

“O Sorrowful and Immaculate Heart of Mary, pray for us who have recourse to thee.” Amen.

(The historical section of this post are taken from my first video teaching in a new Women of Grace® study to be released in the near future. Called Healed for Holiness: Mending the Wounds of the Heart, this study is dedicated to the Blessed Virgin Mary under her title of Our Lady of Sorrows. Watch my blog for the announcement of its release.)