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O.Carm

O.Carm

The Carmelite Nuns in Onteniente, Spain, Celebrate Their Elective Chapter

On February 14th, the Carmelite community of the monastery of the Most Pure Blood of Christ celebrated its triennial elections. The monastery is located in Onteniente (Valencia), Spain.  

The monastery has a rich history. On September 18, 1575, some intrepid nuns from the Monastery of the Most Holy Incarnation of the Word from Valencia, Spain, traveled to Onteniente with the appropriate permissions of the King D. Felipe II, those of the Patriarch and Archbishop of Valencia, San Juan de Ribera, and with the approval of the Ontenienses Jurors. They intended to found a Carmelite Monastery, a cenacle, where, in company with Mary, the mother of Jesus, nuns would pray, imploring the action of the Holy Spirit in the permanent Pentecost of the Church.  

Sister Catalina Tejeda and the sisters were received with great enthusiasm by the people of the town. They saw them as their angels who would obtain God’s blessings for them. They settled in small buildings that had been set aside for them.  

Only a month later, one of the Carmelites died. A month later, a second Carmelite sister died. Their faith was tested but they fought to renew it. A year after arriving, the prioress, Mother Catalina Tejeda, also died. Instead of returning to Valencia, they became even more firmly rooted in the Lord and abandoned themselves to him. Soon their small monastery filled with postulants. They purchased more ground and constructed more cells to accommodate their increasing numbers. In 1914, Sr. Joachim Felius went to the city of Caudete to found a Carmelite monastery there.  

The flourishing of new members continued until the start of the Spanish Civil War in 1936. Despairing of riots and persecution, the community had to disperse with sisters returning to live with their relatives. The monastery building was in flames for a whole month, becoming uninhabitable, just a pile of rubble. After three years of conflict, Spain returned to normality and the monastery came back to life. While there was great economic hardship and food was  scarce. It was necessary to rebuild everything that had been destroyed. But in addition to the members of the community returning, twelve young women asked to join within a year. Enthusiastic and generous, they were not afraid of the situation of the monastery. With fervor and joy, they worked hard to restore the monastery knowing that, with meager resoures, the project would take time. The monastery eventually housed a community of 42 Carmelites sisters.  

The monastery belongs to the Mater Unitatis Federation. More information can be obtained by visiting the community's webpage.

The results of the elective chapter were as follows:

Prioress | Priora | Priora:  
Sor Ma Margarita Medina Armas, O. Carm.

1st Councilor  | 1ª Consejera | 1ª Consigliera:
Sor Ma Jesús Barahona Berzal, O. Carm.

2nd Councilor | 2ª Consejera 2ª Consigliera:
Sor Ma Gabriela Bordones Herrera, O. Carm.

Treasurer | Ecónoma | Economa
Sor Ma Gabriela Bordones Herrera, O. Carm.

Formator | Formadora | Formatrice
Sor Ma Gabriela Bordones Herrera, O. Carm.


Sacristan | Sacristana | Sacrestana
Sor Ma Lourdes Font Font, O. Carm.

* Photo courtesy of Fr. Matías Tejerina Espeso, O. Carm and of the Monastery.

Statue of Our Lady of Mount Carmel Discovered Untouched by Devastating Forest Fire

According to reports from local officials, a completely intact statue of Our Lady of Mount Carmel was discovered untouched during a recent forest fire that destroyed nearly 500 acres of vegetation in North Santander in Colombia.

The statue was found in the municipality of Pamplona, Colombia. Images of the statue went viral on social networks. The pictures are readily available on the internet.

According to a report in local media Correo Expreso, volunteers administering aid and donations discovered the undamaged statue. The Office of the Mayor of Pamplona shot a video at the site. During the video, Klaus Faber Mogollón, the mayor of Pamplona points out that the fire jumped across the road to the area where the statue is located. “Don’t ask me why, (but) nowhere in the grotto, not even in the back, is there any damage,” the mayor says.

So far, this environmental catastrophe hit eight Colombian departments. The North Santander has taken action to control the fire, which has been declared a public calamity.

See the news report at: https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=7445060275512116

Friday, 01 March 2024 09:45

March Schedule of the Prior General

Fr. Míċeál O'Neill, the prior general, has the following schedule planned for the month of March 2024:

March 1-2: End of Canonical Visitation of the Province of Aragon, Castille, and Valencia

March 4-16: Rome: Plenary Session of General Council

March 17-31: Canonical Visitation in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (Part 1) This visit will include the celebrations of the closure of the Jubilee year of Carmelite presence in the DRC.

Wednesday, 28 February 2024 11:16

800-Year-Old Irish Carmelite Friary Vandalized

800-year-old Irish Carmelite Friary in Castlelyons Vandalized

The gardai (police) in north County Cork are appealing for help in tracking down 'taggers' who targeted the 800-year-old Carmelite foundation in Castlelyon. Although now in ruins, the monastery—a listed National Monument—has been a place of religious devotion for almost 800 years.

Several parts of the standing walls of the Friary and graveyard were tagged with black spray paint. Shocked locals reported the incident to Gardai, who have been asking for help in tracking the taggers down.

Damaging or defacing national monuments in Ireland is a specific criminal offence and carries large penalties. Fines can cost offenders up to €50,000 or 12 months in prison.

Before the incident at the Carmelite friary, another Cork graveyard was targeted by vandals who removed mementos and items families had placed on graves, including toys from the graves of children.

The Castlelyon Carmelite friary was founded around 1307 and most of the existing buildings can be dated to the 15th Century. The first provincial chapter after the restoration of the Irish Province (1741) lists Castlelyon as one of the fourteen houses making up the province. However, the Castlelyon foundation is not listed in documents of the 1819 provincial chapter.

Tuesday, 27 February 2024 15:01

Lectio Divina March 2024

Opening Prayer

God, we do not want to die; we want to live.
We want to be happy but without paying the price. We belong to our times, when sacrifice and suffering are out of fashion. God, make our life worth living.
Give us back the age-old realization, that life means to be born again and again in pain, that it may become again a journey of hope to You, together with Christ Jesus, our Lord.

"Lectio divina," a Latin term, means "divine reading" and describes a way of reading the Scriptures whereby we gradually let go of our own agenda and open ourselves to what God wants to say to us. In the 12th century, a Carthusian monk called Guigo, described the stages which he saw as essential to the practice of Lectio divina. There are various ways of practicing Lectio divina either individually or in groups but Guigo's description remains fundamental.
Tuesday, 27 February 2024 12:41

Celebrating At Home - 3rd Sunday in Lent

Cleansing our hearts
(John 2:13-25)

The Gospels of the last two Sundays showed us that the Christian journey is from Temptation to Transfiguration. The Gospels of the next three Sundays of Lent present Jesus as the road (or The Way, as the early Christians referred to him) from temptation to transfiguration.
In the Old Testament scriptures the idea of the people of Israel being ‘the people of God’ is clearly established. By their behaviour they were to be a ‘light to the nations’, and the dwelling-place of God’s presence. Only much later did the idea of God dwelling in a building called a temple develop. Even so, the Jews never lost the sense that they were to be God’s own people.
The reading from Exodus commonly known as the Ten Commandments gives a pattern for God’s people to live in right relationship with God and neighbour; to be the dwelling-place of God’s presence.
In today’s Gospel we find a deeply passionate Jesus causing a near-riot in the outer precincts of the Temple. In John’s Gospel Jesus’ prophetic actions have less to do with ‘cleansing the Temple’ than with saying that the Temple is no longer the way to be in right relationship with God.
According to John, Jesus is the new, living temple of God’s presence and the meeting place between God and his people. Jesus is the way to be in right relationship with God and neighbour.
In our Catholic tradition we often refer to ourselves as ‘temples of the Holy Spirit’. We recognise that
we are sacred beings destined for union with God, people in whom the reign of God’s goodness
should be clearly seen in word, thought and action.
Lent is a time to decide what our life is about and what is important. Like Jesus in the Temple maybe we need to put an end to ways of thinking and behaving which clutter our lives, obscure God’s presence and fail to bring life to others.
As members of the Body of Christ we, too, are to be the place where God is found on earth.

Tuesday, 20 February 2024 13:04

Recent Publications from Edizioni Carmelitane

If you have not visited our webstore lately, you should check it out. We have a new look. The site can be accessed in Italian, English, and Spanish. The "search" engine as well as arranging books by collection gives quick access to all the publications. Payment can be made by credit card, debit card, or PayPal. Some books are also now available as ebooks.

Edizioni Carmelitane Webstore

St. Titus Brandsma
Titus Brandsma Mysticism -- Fundamentals and Characteristic Features, volume 4 of the Collected Works

For more information on this book ...

Bernard Hoose
Let Yourself Be Loved

For more information on this book ...

Antonio Vitale
Un Frate Pericoloso
La vicenda umana di Tito Brandsma, martire carmelitano

For more information on this play ...

Simona Durante
L'attività di padre Serafino Maria Potenza (1697-1763)

For more information on this book ...

Tuesday, 20 February 2024 08:50

Celebrating At Home - 2nd Sunday in Lent

From temptation to transfiguration 2
(Mark 9:2-10)

This Sunday’s Gospel of the Transfiguration completes the ‘little parable’ formed by the Gospels of the first two Sundays of Lent.
These Gospels tell us what Lent is about and what Christian life is about: a constant journey from temptation and doubt to transfiguration and faith.
Transfiguration means to be ‘shot-through’ with the presence of God. Being transfigured is about allowing the presence of God to completely transform us. It is a revolution of mind and heart driven by God’s Spirit and enabled by our open heartedness. Our life as Christians is about being transfigured by the Spirit of God so that God is seen in, and experienced through, us. That is what Peter, James and John saw in the transfigured Jesus.
The journey to transfiguration requires faith and perseverance. The story of Abraham in the first reading is a story of great faith and trust. Abraham faced the loss of his dearly loved son, the source of all his hope for the future. He trusted and his son was spared. That was a clear sign to Abraham that God is about bringing life, not death, to his people.
It takes faith and perseverance to dare to allow ourselves to be driven by the passion, hope and vision of God rather than our own desires and wants.
Listening to the living word of the ‘Beloved Son’ forms in us the heart of God.

Monday, 19 February 2024 08:34

The Carmelites of Malta Plan their Future

Carmelites Decide to Remain in Valletta, Fgura, and Santa Venera

During the 2024 Provincial Chapter of the Maltese Province of the Carmelite Order, it was decided that the Carmelites would continue to sustain their presence and service in three out of six communities. This decision aimed to maintain the Carmelite presence in the parish of Fgura, at the national shrine of Our Lady of Mount Carmel in Valletta, and in the parish of St Venera.  The Order will also continue to care for St Elias College. Consideration will be given to exploring new arrangements for houses where a continued presence is no longer viable. These decision have been taken due to decreased numbers in vocations.

Regrettably, the Chapter, with a heavy heart, also acknowledged the impracticality of maintaining a Carmelite community of friars in Mdina and Balluta. Collaborating closely with Archbishop Charles Scicluna and the laity who identify with the Carmelite Order, plans for the future ministry of pastoral care in Balluta will be formulated. Moreover, efforts will be made, in collaboration with the laity, to ensure the continuity of the Carmelite priory of Mdina as a centre for Carmelite spirituality.

Recognizing the long tradition of the Carmelite Order in Malta since the fifteenth century and the generous support from local communities over the decades, the Carmelites express understanding of the disappointment that this decision may bring to many. These changes are undertaken to fortify community life, strengthen Catholic witness, and promote vocations to continue enriching the Church in Malta with the Carmelite charism.

In the course of the Provincial Chapter, the new government of the Maltese Province was also elected, set to serve until 2027: Fr Charles Mallia as prior provincial, with Fr Maurice Abela, Fr Martin Schembri, Fr Alex Scerri, and Fr Ivan Scicluna as councillors.

Friday, 16 February 2024 08:56

Causa Nostrae Laetitiae

INITIUM NOVITIATUS
19-01-24  Daniel Paraguassú (PAR) Paranavaí, Brasil
19-01-24  Lucas Mateus Pereira de Sousa (Pern) Paranavaí, Brasil
19-01-24  Adryan Carlos da Silva (Pern) Paranavaí, Brasil
19-01-24  Gabriel Cabral de Sousa (Pern) Paranavaí, Brasil
19-01-24  Frankilin Rosneyda Silva Barbosa (Pern) Paranavaí, Brasil
19-01-24  Leandro da Silva Hardaim (Flum) Paranavaí, Brasil

PROFESSIO SOLEMNIS
02-02-24  Ronam Maria Rodrigues e Silva (Pern) Olinda, Brasil
02-02-24. João Paulo Prata (Pern) Olinda, Brasil

ORDINATIO SACERDOTALIS
27-01-24  Oscar A. Robles, Jr. (Phil) Agusan del Sur, Philippines
27-01-24  Marjune R. Caloring (Phil) Agusan del Sur, Philippines
27-01-24  Kim Paul M. Escobal (Phil) Agusan del Sur, Philippines
27-01-24  Rio Mar S. Sindac (Phil) Agusan del Sur, Philippines

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