What's Happening

rss


Specify Alternate Text

August 8, 2019, Adrian, Michigan“Embracing the Future; Encuentro con El Futuro; Pagyakap sa Hinaharap.”

These words – chanted by more than 600 Adrian Dominican Sisters, Associates, Co-workers, and other Partners in Mission – rang out in joyful chant throughout a four-day gathering at the Adrian Dominican Sisters Motherhouse July 31-August 3, 2019. The words in English, Spanish and Tagalog, sung to a tune composed by Sister Gloria Korhonen, OP, captured the tone and the theme of the all-Congregation assembly.

Sister Patricia Siemen, OP, Prioress, called for Embracing the Future 18 months earlier “as an opportunity for remembering, transforming, gathering, embracing and deepening our Adrian Dominican story, Mission, and Vision.”

 

Wednesday, July 31, 2019

During the opening ritual Sister Nery “Luchy” Sori, OP, lights one of four candles symbolizing the previous gatherings of the Congregation.

The opening ritual called forth remembrance of three other gatherings of the Adrian Dominican Congregation. The ritual included the lighting of the Fire of Divine Love for Embracing the Future, as well as the lighting of candles representing each of the three previous gatherings. Readings during the ritual included opening remarks by the Prioress convening each gathering: Sister Rosemary Ferguson, OP, Re-Membering, 1977; Sister Nadine Foley, OP, Transformations, 1989; and Sister Janet Capone, OP, Gathering 2002.

“It has been 17 transformative years since 2002 when we last all gathered in one place at the same time,” Sister Patricia noted in her opening address. She welcomed the Sisters and Associates who joined the Congregation since that last gathering, including members of two Dominican congregations that merged with the Adrian Dominican Sisters: the Edmonds Dominican Congregation of Edmonds, Washington, in 2003, and the Dominican Congregation of Our Lady of Remedies, based in Pampanga, the Philippines, in 2011.

Sister Patricia noted the challenges ahead as the Congregation faces a new way of life in the future. ”The call and response of religious life is always a Spirit-filled narrative,” she said, “so let us not be surprised, then, if Holy Wisdom leads us into new ways of responding as a community to the needs of the people of God.” 

In spite of the uncertainty and the shifts in our world, Sister Patricia urged the Sisters and Associates to trust in God’s promise – and in the prayer of the Sisters who had gone before them in death. “We call on the holy women who have risked and journeyed before us,” she said. “We stand on their shoulders – all 1,621 strong. They are our guides, our strength, our inspiration as we journey into the third decade of the 21st Century.”

 

Thursday, August 1, 2019

Sisters and Associates prepare to listen to a panel of younger Sisters reflect a talk on the “Four Faces of Asia Pacific” by Sister Zenaida Nacpil, OP.

In the opening address of the first full day, Sister Teresa Maya, CCVI, Past President of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR) spoke on “Encuentro con el Futuro – Our Charism as a Prism to Behold the Horizon.”  

A native of Mexico and a member of the Sisters of Charity of the Incarnate Word, Sister Teresa addressed the fears that many Sisters face as their numbers decrease. Congregations of religious Sisters have been watching the future for 50 years “and we’ve been doing it with the typical statistical obsession of the United States,” she said. They have developed their own “narrative of diminishment.” 

Sister Teresa urged Sisters to have faith that they will be enough to accomplish God’s mission for them, and to avoid the pitfalls of complacency, denial, and panic in facing the future of religious life. Communities such as the Benedictines have learned that they do not need to be in large numbers to make a difference. “They’re not obsessed with numbers,” Sister Teresa said. “We don’t need to be 3,000 to be what God needs. We need to be who we are today. We are enough.”

Sister Teresa focused much of her talk on charism – or spiritualty – as the real guide for religious life now and in the future. The Dominicans, the Order of Preachers, follow the spirituality of St. Dominic, who preached the truth and God’s love to win the people of his time back to the Catholic Church. The Dominican charism also includes the four pillars of community, prayer, study, and ministry or preaching.  

Sister Teresa noted the special need for the Dominican charism today as so many people need to hear of God’s love for them. “Conversation is vital,” she said. “You need to be you now more than ever before because you know with your Dominican preaching that you are called to a conversation that is an encounter with the future.”

Sister Teresa told Sisters and Associates to stay true to their inner compass – the Gospel and the charism. “Have we truly allowed the charism to permeate us? If we have, we won’t worry about the future.” 

Sister Zenaida Nacpil, OP, former Chapter Prioress of the Sisters in the Our Lady of Remedies Mission Chapter in the Philippines, turned the assembly’s attention to Asia Pacific in her afternoon talk, “Four Faces of Asia Pacific – Embracing Prophetic Preaching with our Suffering Multitude.”

Sister Zenaida began by introducing participants to her continent: the largest and most populous. Asia is plagued by globalization, which is transforming the values of many from harmony to consumerism and an emphasis on relationship to consumerism and from traditions to technology, she said. Asia has become a “big supplier of cheap labor to Western countries,” and many have fallen prey to human trafficking in labor or as mail order brides. In addition, Sister Zenaida said, poor people in Asia became “victims of development” as corporations from the United States and other Western areas plunder the continent’s natural resources.

The mission of Sisters in the Philippines, she added, is to read the “signs of the times” and to respond to the needs of the people. “We are awakened by the deafening cry of the Earth and the cry of the poor,” she said. The Sisters also journey with the indigenous peoples of the Philippines and work with lay partners and people of other faith traditions. “Now today it is imperative for us to study other religions because we do not have a monopoly on truth,” she said. 

Sister Patricia Harvat, OP, General Councilor, introduces a panel of younger Sisters, from left, Liberty Mendoza, OP, Katherine Frazier, OP, Emmy Chelagat Choge, OP, and Basilia De la Cruz, OP, with translator Sister Rose Ann Schlitt, OP.

A panel of younger Dominican Sisters gave their response, each from her own experience. Sister Liberty Mendoza, OP, who ministers at the Dominican School of Apalit in Pampanga, the Philippines, spoke of her school’s efforts to train teachers in the Dominican charism so they can share it when they move to other schools. 

Sister Katherine Frazier, OP, Director of Mission Integration at Regina Dominican High School in Wilmette, Illinois, spoke of the language of the students and of the need to meet the students where they are. 

Reflecting on her native Kenya, Sister Emmy Chelagat Choge, OP, used the rainbow as a symbol of the diversity of the tribes of Kenya. 

Through a translator Sister Basilia De la Cruz, OP, principal of Espíritu Santo Fe y Alegría School in the Dominican Republic, spoke of the educational efforts in her country and of her own confidence in the future of religious life.

The day concluded with a procession to the Congregation’s cemetery, where Sisters and Associates prayed in gratitude for the Sisters lying in rest there and asked for their guidance and prayers. After the service, Sister Patricia invited participants to wander through the cemetery and visit the graves of the Sisters they knew and loved.

 

Sisters and Associates process to the Adrian Dominican Cemetery to honor and remember and honor 1,621 deceased Adrian Dominican Sisters.

 

Friday, August 2, 2019

Graphic designer Dana Wright-Wasson creates a mural of concepts brought forward during the small groups’ communal sharing.

Friday was a turning point. After a full day of heavy input, participants began with small group communal sharing. They reflected on and discussed two questions: What is required of us (personally and communally) to welcome and co-create an unknown future? What strengthens and nourishes you to live well in our changing reality? 

Each group submitted one or two words that captured the essence of their reflection. In large group sharing – and through the artistic efforts of graphic designer Dana Wright-Wasson – they discovered the common themes that emerged, including trust, curiosity, openness, and presence.

The afternoon brought another change as Partners in Mission – Co-workers from the Motherhouse Campus and the Congregation’s sponsored institutions – joined the gathering. “Thank you for your generous self-offering in setting aside this time to be with us,” Sister Patricia told the partners. “You bring vast experience of collaborating with others in your professional lives.”

The emphasis during the afternoon was on collaborative partnership. The theme was drawn out during a discussion between Sister Patricia and Associate Dee Joyner, who ministers for the Congregation as Director of the Office of Resilient Communities. 

After noting her involvement over the years with the Adrian Dominican Sisters, Dee reflected on her view of partnership. “If I’m going to establish a partnership I need to feel valued – that you really want to know what I think, that you’re willing to listen for understanding,” she said. “We have to act on the belief that our respective skills enhance the relationship and that the combination of our skills is needed to accomplish [our] goal.”

During the evening, Partners in Mission gathered with invited Sisters and Associates for a special dinner at Siena Heights University’s Dominican Hall to further discuss partnership both with the Congregation and one another. All participants were invited to a dessert social and tours of the new Performing Arts Center at Siena Heights University, which is beginning its centennial celebration.

 

Left: Associate Dee Joyner, right, speaks as part of a panel of presenters. From left, the panel includes Sister Patricia Siemen, OP, Prioress; Dr. M. Shawn Copeland, theologian; Teresa Maya, CCVI, Past-President of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious; and Sister Zenaida Nacpil, OP, past Chapter Prioress of Our Lady of Remedies Mission Chapter based in the Philippines.  Right: Partners in Mission and other invited guests enjoy a reception before dinner, held at Siena Heights University’s Dominican Hall.

 

Saturday, August 3, 2019

In the opening talk of August 3, theologian Dr. M. Shawn Copeland gave a “graduate-level presentation,” titled, “Embracing the Future: Authenticity in a Time of Impasse.” She summarized the worldwide challenges facing Christians and others of good will: poverty, injustice, disease, misogyny, racism and bigotry, and the sexual abuse crisis in the Catholic Church. “As global community, as nation, as society, as church, as members and associates, as persons in relationship with the Adrian Dominicans – we are undergoing a time of questioning and uncertainty,” she said. 

Shawn, a former Adrian Dominican Sister, focused the first part of her talk on Authenticity as Human Praxis. Specifically, she spoke of how Adrian Dominican Sisters and Associates live authentically as Dominicans when they live out the pillars of prayer, study, community, and ministry or service. 

In discussing the Adrian Dominican Sisters’ authenticity, Shawn pointed to two of the four Enactments that are guiding the Congregation through 2022. The Enactment on Sustainability has already seen “explicit actions on the Motherhouse campus,” including tracking waste, reducing plastics, and planting trees, while still other actions – such as the use of solar or wind power – are being explored for the future, Shawn said. “Theologically these plans reflect the desire and drive to incarnate authenticity as fruit of religious, intellectual, and moral conversion in service of God and love of neighbor,” she said.

However, Shawn found less explicit proof of actions toward the Enactment in which the Congregation pledges to “confront our racist attitudes and root out racist practices in our lives and systems.” She questioned whether the Congregation had made “specific sacrificial plans … to help white people confront, examine, and change attitudes of white racist supremacy” and challenged them to confront racist attitudes in sponsored institutions.

Shawn noted that becoming authentic is a life-long process. “Incarnating authenticity is never simple, never finished – not for you, not for me,” she said.

In the second section of her talk, Shawn focused on the sexual abuse crisis in the Catholic Church, made possible by a culture of clericalism, which “devalues and dismisses the common baptism [of] all Christians.” All too often, she said, the “drive for achievement displaces the drive for sanctity.”

Yet, Shawn encouraged the Sisters and Associates not to abandon the Church, nor to idolize it – but to work inside the Church and help to reform it. She quoted the directive by the new Master of the Dominican Order, Father Gerard Francisco Timoner III, OP: “We Dominicans must serve the Church. We must help to save and build [it].” 

Finally, Shawn spoke of Basic Ecclesial Communities as one way to help Christians authentically live out their faith. Popular in Latin America, the Philippines, and other regions, Basic Ecclesial Communities are composed of a diverse group of Catholics who meet together regularly as a community to share their faith. She pointed to Mission Groups – small groups of Adrian Dominican Sisters and Associates who meet regularly for Congregation responsibilities but also as communities – as examples of Basic Ecclesial Communities.

The afternoon brought together all of the speakers for a panel discussion to share their thoughts on and learnings from the gathering as a whole.

The formal time of Embracing the Future came to an end that afternoon with a closing ritual in which the candles representing the three previous gatherings were extinguished one by one, until finally the Fire of Divine Love representing the current gathering was formally extinguished. 

In her closing remarks, Sister Patricia spoke through a “heart filled to overflowing” with gratitude to all who had participated in the event and to others who made it possible: the many Co-workers at the Motherhouse who prepared for and served throughout the event; the speakers, presenters, and panelists; the Planning Committee, chaired by Sisters Marilín Llanes, OP, and Mariane Fahlman, OP; the Programming Committee, chaired by Sister Janet Schaeffler; Father Marcelo Solózano, OP, Presider at Liturgies; Sisters Esther Kennedy, OP, and Kathleen Schanz, OP, who planned and created the rituals and prayers; and the many Motherhouse Co-workers who prepared for and served during the event.

Sister Patricia compared the end of an event such as Embracing the Future to the waves of the ocean. “The ending of this Encuentro is only one wave coming to completion. The momentum and form of the next wave is already taking shape.” 

As participants prepared to leave the mountaintop of the experience, Sister Patricia reminded them of the work still ahead. “Together, we will continue carrying forth Gospel responses to those most in need,” she said. “Together, we will continue to create ways to influence the world through our exercise of authentic discipleship, as followers of the reign of the Jewish Jesus.” 

The Sisters of Our Lady of Remedies Mission Chapter will host a second experience of “Embracing the Future / Encuentro con el Futuro / Pagyakap sa Hinaharap” in the Philippines with 300 Partners in Mission October 5-6, 2019.

Feature photo (top): Sister Patricia Siemen, OP, Prioress, lights the Fire of Divine Love to open Embracing the Future / Encuentro con el Futuro / Pagyakap sa Hinaharap, a gathering of Sisters, Associates, and Partners in Mission.



Specify Alternate Text

August 6, 2019, Adrian, Michigan – Adrian Dominican Sisters, Associates, and special guests celebrated the Perpetual Profession of Vows of Sister Marilín Llanes, OP. The Liturgy and Ritual of Profession took place August 4, 2019, in St. Catherine Chapel at the Motherhouse of the Adrian Dominican Sisters.

Sister Marilín Llanes, OP, lies prostrate during the assembly’s chanting of the Litany of Dominican Saints.

Sister Marilín’s Final Profession followed the conclusion of Embracing the Future / Encuentro con el Futuro / Pagyakap sa Hinaharap, a gathering of more than 600 Adrian Dominican Sisters, Associates, and specially invited Partners in Mission who work with the Congregation in sponsored institutions and other shared ministries. Special guests for the profession liturgy included Sister Marilín’s family members and friends.

Sister Patricia Harvat, OP, General Council Liaison to the Formation Department, welcomed the assembly. “Some insights from our hearts can only be told with a story and today we ritualize the insights of Marilín’s heart, having fallen in love with the divine mystery beyond all space and time, leading to a lifetime commitment,” Sister Patricia said. “We rejoice with you, Marilín, in celebrating your ‘yes’ that was meant to be.”

A member of the Adrian Dominican Congregation from 1988 to 1995, Sister Marilín entered the discernment process for readmission on August 8, 2015, the Feast of St. Dominic, and made her First Profession of Vows on April 10, 2016. 

A native of the province of La Habana in Cuba and an only child, she immigrated to the United States at the age of 6 with her parents, Nancy and Ricardo Llanes. Sister Marilín grew up in the Miami area and earned a bachelor’s degree in business from Barry University, sponsored by the Adrian Dominican Sisters. She also holds a master’s degree in counseling from St. Mary’s University and a graduate degree in school psychology from Trinity University, both in San Antonio, Texas. 

Sister Marilín has been a school psychologist for 15 years, starting in 2004 for the Northside Independent School District in San Antonio, Texas, and, after her First Profession, with the Joliet, Illinois, School District.

Sister Rosa Monique Peña, OP, offers a reflection on the Gospel story of the Samaritan woman’s encounter with Jesus at the well.

Sister Rosa Monique Peña, OP, offered a reflection on the day’s Gospel, the story of the Samaritan woman at the well. Sister Rosa Monique described the woman as one whose life changed after her encounter with Jesus. Because of that encounter, Sister Rosa Monique said, the Samaritan woman was called to be an apostle to the people of her Samaritan town. Every time the woman returned to the well after that encounter, she would be reminded of her call to apostolic service. 

In the same way, Sister Rosa Monique said, St. Dominic found his place of discernment at an inn, where he spent the night praying for guidance as he tried to convert the innkeeper from heresies. 

“You, too, started in one direction and finished in another,” Sister Rosa Monique told Sister Marilín. “Let me say that your place of encounter was a desk in a second-grade classroom.” She described Sister Marilín’s first call when she volunteered to teach a religious education class and was assigned to a second-grade class. “Your analytical mind said that since you did not have religious education, the best place to start would be at the bottom.” Thinking she was a member of the class, Sister Marilín was surprised to learn that she was the teacher, but she accepted the challenge and it changed her life, Sister Rosa Monique said. 

“If the Samaritan woman had a well to go to for reflection and Dominic had a guest house, you, Marilín, have a second-grade desk,” Sister Rosa Monique concluded. “Go there frequently.” She encouraged members of the assembly to identify their own wells, their own places of reflection, and go to that place.

Sister Marilín Llanes, OP, states her intent to “enter into a lifetime communion with my loving God and my dear Adrian Dominican Sisters,” during the formal examination with Sister Patricia Siemen, OP, Prioress.

During the Rite of Profession, Sister Patricia Siemen, OP, Prioress of the Congregation, formally questioned Sister Marilín on her willingness to unite herself more closely to God by a bond of religious profession and to live a life of charity and center her ministerial activity in contemplation. 

Sister Marilín then stated her intent: “with all my heart and soul to enter into a lifetime communion with my loving God and my dear Adrian Dominican Sisters. I pray that I may be open to God’s grace and invite the Holy Spirit to weave in me a clear, strong, trusting, and joyful heart.”

Speaking in Spanish, Sister Marilin professed a vow of obedience to God, the Blessed Virgin Mary, St. Dominic, and Sister Patricia and her lawful successors, “according to the Rule of St. Augustine and the Constitution of the Sisters of St. Dominic of the Congregation of the Most Holy Rosary until death.” 

Sister Patricia presented her with a ring, signifying her perpetual fidelity to Jesus Christ. The ritual concluded with the signing of the profession documents by Sister Marilín and Sister Patricia Siemen; Sister Marilín’s two witnesses, Sister Patricia Harvat, OP, General Councilor, and Sister Xiomara Méndez-Hernández, OP; Sister Kathleen Klingen, OP, her Chapter Prioress; and Father Marcelo Solórzano, OP, celebrant. 

“On behalf of the whole Dominican family, and most especially our Adrian Dominican Congregation, I am truly delighted to affirm your profession as a Dominican Sister of Adrian,” Sister Patricia Siemen said. “We joyfully congratulate you and pray that our God continue to inspire you with a generous heart to answer the call to seek truth, make peace, and reverence life.” 

Enhancing the joy of the bilingual liturgy was the music, led by Music Director Denise Mathias. Musicians were Sisters Jean Keeley, OP, trumpet; Jeanne Wiest, OP, clarinet; and Sue Schreiber, OP, percussion. Serving as cantors were Sisters Katherine Frazier, OP, Mary Jones, OP, and Mary Priniski, OP. The Chapel Choir also helped to lead the assembly in music.

Feature photo (top): Sister Patricia Siemen, OP, right, addresses Sister Marilín Llanes, OP, shortly after the Final Profession of Vows.



Sister Marilín Llanes, OP, professes her Perpetual Vows to Sister Patricia Siemen, OP, Prioress. Observing the profession are her witnesses, Sisters Xiomara Méndez-Hernández, OP, left, and Sister Patricia Harvat, OP, center. 


 

 

Search News Articles

Recent Posts

Read More »