© Congregation of the Sisters of Divine Providence
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Happy New Year!See the Video: https://www.facebook.com/reel/11132649598954312025.01.05 275
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Merry Christmas!2024.12.24 300
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Christmas Greetings by Sr. BarbaraHappy Christmas to All! www.youtube.com/shorts/mXMO95u5hTI2024.12.24 290
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2024 Advent LetterAdvent Letter, 2024 image: google image Dear Sisters and Associates, At the CLB Meeting in October in Korea there was a discussion and a hope that, along with the monthly CDP Environment Day and Eco Challenges provided by the Laudato Si Commission, there could be something else that we might do as a whole Congregation together. Sr. Michele Bisbey told the CLB Members about what she was planning for the Marie de la Roche Province during the Advent season and she graciously offered to share it with the whole Congregation. Thus, we would all be spending time on the same texts during the Advent season. I am happy to announce to you that the four-week Advent series will John the Baptist: Joy on the Periphery, Widening the Circle of Friends Here is an Introduction to the Series by Sister Michele accompanied by the titles of each week’s presentation. Jesus, who is Providence Incarnate, has called us “friends.” Our international congregation of Divine Providence, which includes vowed members, associates, Providence Partners, Providence Companions, Circle of Friends, and the family of Providence is becoming an intercultural “Circle of Friends.” This Advent season we will join together in prayer and reflection through the lens of John the Baptist, the Advent prophet of joy. May our Circle widen to accompany and embrace those, like John, who exist on the margins, the periphery. A different aspect of John’s spirituality and ministry will be explored each week. The titles are: December 1: Leaping for Joy December 8: Prepare the Way/Baptizing on Jordan’s banks December 15: What did you go to the desert to see? December 22: He must increase, I must decrease Suggestions for prayer and reflection will be translated into our four languages and posted on our congregational website. Additional insights will be shared with the Provincials and Mission Director to distribute, as is appropriate for each area. When I think of Advent joy, I am reminded of the phrase from Nehemiah 8:10: “the joy of the Lord is my strength.” I believe this is a call to find our confidence, hope, and courage in the Lord. When we truly and fully trust in our Provident God and rely on God’s promises, our hearts are filled with joy…and that joy becomes the anchor of our strength. This kind of joy is a deep, abiding joy that comes from knowing that we are loved, forgiven, and empowered by God. It can bring us a resilience and endurance among the daily tasks of our ministry and community life. Even as we may face difficulties, overcome obstacles and see the situations in our world as hopeless and counter-cultural to joy, we can cultivate a culture of joy and celebration. We can encourage one another, inspire growth, widen our circle of friends, and strengthen our collective witness to the world. Perhaps as we look through the eyes of John the Baptist this Advent, we can view life with a spiritual lens, focusing on God’s faithfulness, and realize that our joy is not contingent on what we face but on Who walks beside us. So let us seek God wholeheartedly as we embrace these four weeks together. Let us cultivate gratitude for the blessings given us. Let us surrender our own will to God’s will. Let us serve others with love and compassion which brings joy both to them and to us. It is my hope that sharing these four weeks of Advent together as one congregation will indeed widen our circle of friends, deepen our Providence spirituality, and help us to feel even more interconnected. Choose Joy; it’s contagious! Happy Advent! Sr. Barbara McMullen Congregational Leader *** Please, see the attachment for Sr. Michele Bisbey's prayer and reflection.2024.12.05 428
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Link of Talk by Sr. BarbaraThis is a short video talk by Sr. Barbara about First Sunday of Advent. To listen in Korean, German, and Spanish: (1) Select Settings [ ] on the right side of the toolbar below the video (2) Click Subtitles (3) Click Your Language Watch Video https://www.cdpgeneralate.org/watch/#lg=1&slide=02024.12.02 393
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Happy Thanksgiving!Happy and Blessed Thanksgiving! "And whatever you do, in word or in deed, do everything in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through him." (Colossians 3:17) https://www.instagram.com/p/DC6rdXLJu7V/2024.11.28 307
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Congregation 'Instagram'We've launched Congregation's Instagram, so check back often to see what we're up to! Link: https://www.instagram.com/cdp7.13/?fbclid=IwY2xjawGvdmRleHRuA2FlbQIxMAABHTKIN0P8LyKWyKzTSdg40bWavP0Mlzr-vzo9qagVRa6aMG07uyQEZL0FBg_aem_oz2_fQRDgtmgoQtPEL086g2024.11.24 381
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Bazaar at St. Francis of Assisi churchThe CLT team participated as vendors in a bazaar held at St. Francis church, selling eco-friendly scrubbers and Korean face mask sheets. The bazaar also featured a variety of handicrafts, baked goods, drinks, Christmas decorations, and more.Despite the slightly wet and cold weather with rain, many people in the area visited and had a great time shopping and fellowshipping.2024.11.24 357
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Obituaries: Sr. Carole RileyWe commend to your charity the soul of our beloved Sr. Carole Riley Who departed this life on November 3, 2024 In the sixty-fifth year of her religious life Age: 82 years, 5 months, 4 days Sister Carole Riley entered the Sisters of Divine Providence on September 6, 1959, giving up a promising future as a classical pianist. Quiet, devout, and disciplined, Carole seemed more fit for the Carmelites, but she was inspired by Sister Clare Louise at St. Anne’s Elementary School, Castle Shannon, and often spoke of how Providence had guided her here. In a 2021 interview, she said that as a young novice, she set a goal for herself, “to work and be a saint who made a difference in people’s lives, bringing them closer to Christ and heaven.” During her 65 years of religious life, she succeeded in the goal of bringing thousands closer to Christ, even giving summer “Almost Heaven” retreats in West Virginia, where she spent most of her last years. Like most of her novitiate classmates, Carole (then Sr. Mary Patrick) began her ministry teaching grade school students, but she quickly moved to teaching music in high school. Graduating from Duquesne University with a B.S. in Music Education, Carole began work on an M.S. in Music Education, followed by a Master’s in Music Performance and Theology, all from Duquesne. Beginning with teaching piano in the Music Department at Duquesne, Carole eventually became Chair of the Piano Department, Director of Graduate Studies in the Music School, and a full Professor. Carole also was a Distinguished Alumna and member of their Century Club.But what drew Carole to religious life was not music, but spirituality. While she was teaching in the Music Department, she began taking classes with Dutch-born Spiritan Father Adrian van Kaam, founder of the Institute of Formative Spirituality at Duquesne. This internationally renowned program combined existential psychology with philosophy and sociology. Carole not only earned a Ph.D. in the program but also continued to teach classes in the program, while still teaching piano. Spiritual direction was Carole’s gift. She became associated with the Cenacle Sisters, who founded a Retreat Cenacle near Duquesne. Carole was drawn to their retreat work and spiritual direction ministry. When the Cenacle closed in 1977, she helped the three remaining Sisters to relocate to Charleston, West Virginia, driving their donated truck for them. The relationship blossomed into a new ministry. She co-founded the Cenacle Retreat House, which became the ecumenical West Virginia Institute for Spiritualty, chartered in 1999. During her years in Charleston, Carole directed hundreds of individual and group retreats. She traveled to Europe, eight African countries, Asia, Australia, New Guinea, New Zealand, the Philippines, and almost every state in the Union. She gave retreats for men’s religious communities, seminarians, and many women’s communities. Because she could not fulfil all the requests for her retreats, Carole made videos and CDs for Alba House/St. Paul’s. The ecumenical nature of WVIS meant few of Carole’s retreats or workshops were solely Roman Catholic. One of the things she loved about this ministry was that it fulfilled the mandate of the Gospel, “That all may be one.” As the ministry grew, the Internet allowed her international reach through Zoom. Graduate credit was given through partnership with Indiana’s Graduate Theological Foundation. As Executive Director, Carole not only taught in the program, but trained many of the ministers she taught over the years at the Center. In a 2019 interview, Carole said, “We started out with the $40 people gave us that we used to open a bank account, and 20 years later, we’re still here with satellites in five states. These days, about 5,000 people come through the house in a year.” The shy, quiet young woman who entered the community so many years ago used the gifts God had given her in ways that Providence continued to provide. Her music training led to workshops using music for healing. The discipline that was her gift as a musician prioritized her own spiritual life. She continued to crave solitude in the midst of the many tasks in her life. She cherished weekends when they had no retreats.Carole Riley was truly a Woman of Providence. She worked hard, prayed always, and was generous with time and talent to the end of her life. In those last days when she chose solitude in her room at St. Joseph’s Center at The Commons, Carole finally had time for a silent retreat. While Carole is no longer with us, her spirit survives in the music teacher leading a children’s choir, in the recovered person addicted to alcohol or drugs, in the minister whose spirit was renewed after a retreat in Charleston. Carole died on November 3, the 23rd anniversary of winning the Emil Penet National Religious Formation Conference Award for the impact on the U.S. through the mentoring model. In countries around the world, she will be mourned, but she came home to die, once again guided by Providence. May her memory be a blessing. Birthday: May 31 Sr. Rita M. Yeasted, SFCC2024.11.24 564
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November Eco Challengego to: https://www.cdpgeneralate.org/bulletineboard/?uid=514&mod=document&pageid=12024.11.09 389