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Our Prayer Life Prayer is knowing God loves you That foundation led me to an important decision as a sophomore at St. Theresa College in Winona, Minnesota. Since I was very young I had felt a desire to become a religious sister. Reading about the lives of the saints, especially St. Teresa the Little Flower of Jesus, inspired me. As a college student I felt distracted because I was studying to be a teacher, not a sister, and it seemed time to take that step. I was unsure and I wanted God's guidance, asking, ‘Is this really what you want or is it my imagination?' I was praying for help, guidance, and courage. In time, I felt God was guiding me toward religious life and I went to Wisconsin to join a religious order. However, I found prayer life there structured in a way that wasn't always conducive to building a close relationship with God. I began every day with morning prayers at 5:30 a.m. then continued with Mass, noon day prayer, and other routine prayers that didn't vary. While still at the convent, I began work as a high school home economics teacher, and prayer life continued to be much the same, yielding little inspiration. But in 1971, I discovered a great joy in prayer that led me down a very different path. An accident leads to a deeper prayer life I still remember the details of that experience. He said ‘Let us put ourselves in God's presence.' Then he took out his New Testament and began to read. The story was about Jesus visiting Peter's mother-in-law who was sick with a fever. He touched her; the fever left and she got up and waited on him. After he read that story, the priest said to me, "He loves you as much as He ever loved her, if you only believed it." The next day during the procedure, I felt no pain. The doctor quickly found the ruptured disc that had been the source of years of pain and scheduled surgery the next day. I walked out of the hospital nine days later and have never had problems with the injury again. The effect of that one prayer experience didn't end there. While still lying in a hospital bed, I could hear a patient in another room moaning and crying. I wished I was able to be at the patient's bed side to share her prayer experience. And so began a new period of searching in my life. For the next five years I prayed for direction. "What are you saying to me?" I asked God in prayer. I believed I was being called to chaplaincy. I loved teaching, but I also knew when God called me to do something new, I needed to respond. So in 1976, I trained to be a hospital chaplain.
Responding to God's love I found work in chaplaincy didn't blend with the routine of the community, so I sought another community and found the Sisters of Bon Secours. I began the process of transferring to the community in 1987, becoming a member in 1990. I find in the community of the Sisters of Bon Secours prayer is much freer and more spontaneous. We determine together as a local community the structure we wish to use (time, place and type of prayer, e.g., Divine Office, faith sharing, etc.); and we each determine what we use for our own personal prayer time. Prayer routine leads to daily resolutions In the evening, after some relaxation, which might include watching television, I like to pray the liturgy of the hours and pray for the people in need or for local issues, such as for the plight of the people in Detroit's inner city. Evening is a good time to talk with God. Over the years my prayer journey has taught me that the key is knowing God loves you. When I take that knowledge to prayer, I know what I hear from God will not be my will, but God asking me to do something for Him. OUR
PRAYER LIFE • YOUR
PRAYER CORNER • DAILY
REFLECTIONS Copyright © 2006 Sisters of Bon Secours USA. All rights reserved. |
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