For Franciscan sisters, every day is prayer day

http://www.jsonline.com/features/religion/44507257.html
[]


Mark Hoffman


A sister and three prayer partners rise to make 
way for the next group in the Adoration Chapel of 
the Franciscan Sisters of Perpetual Adoration.

By <mailto:[email protected]>Annysa 
Johnson of the Journal Sentinel

Posted: May. 6, 2009
Photo Gallery
[]

Mark Hoffman
The monstrance holds the Holy Eucharist in the Adoration Chapel in La Crosse.

<http://www.jsonline.com/multimedia/photos/44488737.html>More photos
131 Years and Counting
    * 47,761 Days between Aug. 1, 1878, and March 
7, 2009, according to the 
<http://www.fspa.org/Prayer/perpetualadoration.html,>order's 
clock on its Web site.
    * 26 Presidencies - Hayes, Garfield, Arthur, 
Cleveland, Harrison, McKinley, Roosevelt, Taft, 
Wilson, Harding, Coolidge, Hoover, FDR, Truman, 
Eisenhower, JFK, LBJ, Nixon, Ford, Carter, Reagan, Bush, Clinton, Bush, Obama
    * 8 Major wars - Spanish-American, World War 
I, World War II, Korea, Vietnam, Persian Gulf, Afghanistan, Iraq
    * 10 Popes - Leo XIII, Pius X, Benedict XV, 
Pius XI, Pius XII, John XXIII, Paul VI, John Paul 
I, John Paul II, Benedict XVI
    * Wisconsin's population grew from about 1.3 
million in 1880 to an estimated 5.6 million in 2008.

La Crosse ­ Every morning, about an hour and a 
half past midnight, Sister Marie Leone LaCroix 
rises in the darkness of her room at St. Rose Convent.

The Franciscan sister, 91, slides into her 
bathrobe and slippers, takes her cane and slowly 
makes her way to the dimly-lighted chapel.

There, LaCroix sits before the marble altar 
where, in an ornate golden vessel, rests a 
consecrated host Catholics believe to be the body 
of Christ. And there, she takes her place in an 
unending chain of prayer that began long before she was born.

"It's so quiet. It's such a serene time to be with God," LaCroix said.

Her order, the Franciscan Sisters of Perpetual 
Adoration, has prayed before the Holy Eucharist 
in shifts around the clock since 1878.

Millions of Americans will carve out a moment of 
their time Thursday to connect with God as part 
of the 59th annual National Day of Prayer. But 
for these sisters, who maintain what is thought 
to be the nation's longest-running perpetual 
adoration of the Eucharist - 131 years - it is a 
day like any other, a day devoted to prayer.

"That's our holy, sacred, wonderful privilege," LaCroix said.

Adoration of the Eucharistic, a Christian 
devotional practice that dates to the Middle 
Ages, is seeing a resurgence in some Catholic parishes and schools.

The La Crosse devotion grew out of a schism in a 
Franciscan order that settled in Milwaukee from 
Bavaria in the late 1840s to teach German immigrants.

Diverted from education to housekeeping for 
priests, the founders broke away, resettling 
first in Jefferson and later in La Crosse, where 
they taught in Catholic schools and cared for orphans.

In 1865, the order's superior made a two-fold 
promise: If God would bless their ministries with 
success, she vowed, the sisters would build a 
chapel and devote their lives to prayer in 
perpetual adoration of the Eucharist.

And so they have, through war and peace, through 
boom times and bust, through a raging fire that 
destroyed the original convent in the 1920s, 
killing one of the sisters before stopping just outside the chapel doors.

Today, 325 sisters and 120 lay partners offer 
their prayers for their community, the wider 
world and for the individual intentions of the 
faithful around the globe who send their 
petitions 
<http://www.fspa.org/Prayer/prayerrequest.asp>via 
e-mail or telephone or letter.

"I'm so touched by the requests that come in - a 
young child having surgery, or a mother with 
complications in pregnancy," said Sister Amy 
Taylor, 32, a former school teacher, who has 
spent the last year preparing to join the novitiate this summer.

"It's really about the human story, the daily 
struggles and joys," she said. "We intercess on 
their behalf. But we also journey with them."

These days, many requests reflect the economic 
turmoil roiling outside the convent's doors.

"They ask, 'Please pray for the sale of our 
house' or 'that I get a new job,' " said Sister 
Constance Walton, who coordinates the adoration.

She responds to all who seek their prayers, 
typing up a new list of intentions each day and 
shredding them each night to protect the privacy of petitioners.

"It moves your heart," she said, "to know that 
your neighbors and friends are dealing with these things."

Inside the Adoration Chapel, stone angels flank 
the marble altar awash in candlelight.

Chimes ring signifying the start of a new hour, 
and so begins a silent and solemn changeover.

The adorers stand, then step aside as their 
colleagues take their place. In unison, they pray:

"O Sacrament most holy,

O Sacrament divine,

All praise and all thanksgiving be every moment Thine.

Eucharistic Heart of Jesus, furnace of divine love,

Grant peace to the world."

The first group bows, almost imperceptibly toward 
the altar, then leaves, and the new adorers recite the Prayer of St. Francis:

"Lord, make me an instrument of your peace . . . "

But for a few specific prayers and the intentions 
prepared by Walton, the adorers are free to 
connect with the divine any way they choose. Some 
recite traditional prayers, some read from the 
Bible; some meditate or contemplate. And for some, it's changed over the years.

"I used to use more words," said Sister Mary 
Kathryn Fogarty, 70, who has been praying the 
adoration since she joined the order at the age 
of 20. "Now, I'm content to gaze upon Christ . . 
. to contemplate being in the presence of Christ."

Today, she prays not so much for things or 
specific outcomes, but for understanding and a 
closeness to God - not just for herself, but for 
those who petition for her prayers.

"I ask that that person comes to know how deep 
God's love for them is, how forgiven they are . . 
. and that if something is holding them back from 
that love and forgiveness, that they be able to 
let it go," Fogarty said. "I don't necessarily 
get what I want, but I get a deep peace."

For some, the years spent in adoration have 
changed even their understanding of the divine.

"You learn how to talk to Him. You find out what 
He's like, not as a statue, not as a stern 
punishing God. That has left me," said 97-year-old Sister Lucille Kleinheinz.

"You learn that he is light, and he is complete 
life. That's the God we worship in perpetual adoration."

Many find it hard to explain the depth of their devotion.

"You know, honey, that's awfully difficult," said 
LaCroix, a retired teacher at nearby Viterbo College.

"If you would ask an elderly couple who've been 
in love for years, 'How do you feel when you hold one another's hand?'

"You can't express that kind of love. I can't 
express my deep love for my God. It's something 
that is personal, profound and sacred."



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