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Journey Toward
Membership
Stages of Formation

Affiliation
Affiliation
is a time of searching. The affiliate and the community come to know each
other and together discern the affiliate's call to the Missionary
Benedictine way of life. The directress assists the affiliate in her growth
in spiritual, social and emotional maturity. The candidate will grow in her
relationship with Christ through personal prayer, spiritual reading,
guidance and service.
A
woman applying for affiliation is to be at least 18 years of age and
normally not over the age of 45. She will have completed her high school
education. The period of affiliation is normally six months to one year.
An affiliate provides her own living arrangements and continues her social
contacts, education and/or work in which she is involved. The relationship
between the affiliate and the community is informal, entailing no mutual
legal responsibilities.
Postulancy
Postulancy is a time of discerning. The purpose of the postulancy is to
review with the candidate her fitness for religious life; help her deepen
her religious knowledge and assist her in adjusting gradually to the new
mode of life. She will deepen her human and spiritual maturity through her
life in community, formation classes and spiritual guidance from the
postulant directress.
The affiliate applying for postulancy is to have the right intention;
sufficient mental and physical health; the ability to live and work with
others; sufficient education and the ability to learn; and the freedom from
any canonical impediment. An affiliate may request admittance to the
postulancy when she and her directress agree that she is reasonably certain
about her vocation and has met these requirements.
She is accepted into the postulancy in a simple ceremony. She receives the
Scriptures and the Rule of St. Benedict as tools to learn the Missionary
Benedictine way of life. The duration of the postulancy is generally two
years.
Novitiate
Novitiate is a
time of intense preparation for monastic profession. When the postulant and
her directress feel she is ready to enter this period of preparation, the
postulant requests acceptance into the novitiate.
The purpose of the novitiate is to help the novice continue to discern her
religious vocation, experience the community's way of life, become rooted in
mind and heart with the spirit of the Congregation, and examine the novice's
resolve and fitness for religious profession.
Entrance into the novitiate is marked by the Rite of Initiation in the
presence of the prioress and community where the novice receives the dress
of a novice and the basic documents of the Priory and the Congregation. The
duration of the novitiate lasts a minimum of thirteen months and may be
extended to an additional year and includes time for formative activity in
one of the houses of the priory.
Profession
Profession is a time of commitment and integration. If the novice believes
that God is calling her to this way of life, and that she will find her joy
in serving the Lord as a Missionary Benedictine Sister, she requests to
become a professed member of the community.
The ceremony of first profession of the novice takes place at a simple
Eucharistic celebration. She surrenders her life to God in this community
through her monastic vows of "conversatio," obedience and stability. She
receives the religious habit, veil, and her religious name. She sings a song
of trust and surrender; "Uphold me, Lord, according to your promise and I
shall live forever. Do not disappoint me in my hope."
The purpose of this initial commitment is to help the sister to learn how to
integrate a life of prayer and work, become more deeply rooted in the
community and the congregation, receive further training for missionary
activity and prepare for final monastic profession. The minimum length of
this commitment is three and a half years. However, this period may be
extended to help the sister prepare for her life of commitment.
Toward the end of her initial profession, the sister presents her request to
be admitted to final profession. After her acceptance and a period of
preparation, the final profession ceremony takes place during a Eucharistic
celebration. The sister receives a ring as a pledge of fidelity.
Meet our New Postulant
Vocation Discernment Opportunities
Three Keys to
Successful Vocation Decisions
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