Beatification of Sister Miriam Teresa Demjanovich, S.C.

Today the first ever beatification to occur on US soil will give the title “Blessed” to a member of the Sisters of Charity of St. Elizabeth, Convent Station, New Jersey (SCNJ), Sister Miriam Teresa Demjanovich, S.C. Sister Miriam’s beatification will be held at 9:30am at the Cathedral Basilica of the Sacred Heart in Newark, New Jersey. In 2005 the Church adjusted the process by which saints are named. As part of this, it is now permitted for beatifications to occur in the native land of the person to be beatified.

Sister Rosemary Moynihan, General Superior of the Sisters of Charity of St. Elizabeth, said of Sister Miriam Teresa:

“God makes saints out of the simple events of life. Holiness is not beyond any one of us in our daily, ordinary lives. Miriam Teresa made it clear that the grace of God is given to each of us freely. Each day we are given the invitation and strength to live in union with the Spirit of God found in each and every one we meet and in all creation.”

Our colleagues at the National Shrine of Saint Elizabeth of Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton will be holding a special Mass in the Basilica today at 1:30pm to mark the beatification. The Mass is open to the public. For more information see the Shrine’s website

Learn more about Sister Miriam Demjanovich’s life and cause for canonization in this site from the Sisters of Charity of St. Elizabeth.

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Feast of St. Vincent de Paul

Vincent painting

Oil painting of Vincent de Paul (used with permission of Daughters of Charity Provincial Archives)

Today we mark the Feast of St. Vincent de Paul.

“So, our vocation is to go, not just to one parish, not just to one diocese, but all over the world; and do what? To set people’s hearts on fire, to do what the Son of God did. He came to set the world on fire in order to inflame it with His love.”

Vincent de Paul, Conference of May 30, 1659
(Letter #207, Correspondence, Conferences, and Documents, edited by Sister Marie Poole. Vol.12, p.215)

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New exhibit, “We Saw The First Spade of Earth Turned”

Provincial House groundbreaking

Sister Isabel Toohey, Visitatrix breaking ground for the new St. Joseph’s Provincial House on September 27, 1961 (used with permission of Daughters of Charity Provincial Archives)

On Sept. 27, 1961, Sr. Isabel Toohey, Visitatrix of the Emmitsburg Province, broke ground for the construction of a new Provincial House. There for this “never-to-be-forgotten moment” were sisters who had processed from the old Central House on the original property (now owned by FEMA).
The new Provincial House was considered the flowering of the seed planted by St. Elizabeth Ann Seton. She and her first sisters arrived in Emmitsburg in 1809 and on July 31 took possession of their first home, the Stone House. The growing community moved into the White House the following year. In 1826, they took up residence in a larger building that served, with necessary additions, as the Central House for 138 years. The ground breaking for a new Provincial House took place on 27 Sept. 1961 and in less than three years, the building was ready, with sisters moved in on 12 Sept. 1964. Arriving soon after were 69 postulants.

Speaking at the ceremony was Fr. Francis J. Dodd, C.M., who told those gathered, “This is a very simple ceremony, but I hope that it will mark a memorable occasion. We have, by God’s Providence, been able to prepare a place for our sick and ancient Sisters. We are faced at home now with an acute problem of providing for the members of the Community itself. The buildings you occupy have served wonderfully well, many of them for more than a century. They are not now adequate. Besides that, the maintenance is growing year by year. So, the economic thing to do is to prepare a new Central House. A few years ago, we had Seminary Sisters for a few months; the Postulants did not come here; we did not have a Juniorate. Now we have Postulants, Seminary Sisters and the Sisters of the Juniorate. And the Juniorate will soon be for two years…. So a larger building is needed. That is why we meet on this occasion to turn the first spade of ground in the work to be begun.”

One of the most memorable aspects of the new Provincial House was the “big chapel,” as one of the sisters called it. Originally meant as a private place for the sisters, it would become the Basilica of St. Elizabeth Ann Seton.

To remember these events, the Provincial Archives traces the planning and building of this house in a new exhibit, “called “’We Saw the First Spade of Earth Turned….’: The Building of St. Joseph’s Provincial House.” Featuring photographs, architectural plans, artifacts, and a special video of some of the sisters who were the original occupants, the exhibit will be open through January 9, 2015. Watch for a virtual tour of the exhibit here on our blog!

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