All posts by ourlady

Ice Cream Social Jun 4, 2016

June 4, 2016 – We were delighted to see so many of our friends at the 6th Annual Ice Cream Social, June 4, 2016, at the St. Mary’s Parish Hall, Bloomfield, NM. A big thank you to all those who participated in having a fun time.  There were eleven Raffles, eleven Bingos, eleven door prizes and lots of delicious tacos, fresh rice, beans, home made salsa with chips, silent auction and entertainment. The winner of the GRAND PRIZE, A JUBILEE YEAR OF MERCY PILGRIMAGE TO ITALY with Father James Walker & Deacon Roger Garcia: Departure U. S. October 12 Return to U. S. October 21 2016, went to someone from Farmington, NM. Congratulations to all the winners!  God bless you and know that we pray that you have a safe summer.  From Mother Benedicta

Easter Newsletter Mar 27, 2016

Alleluia, Christ is Risen; He is truly Risen, Alleluia!

March 27, 2016

Dear Friends,

May your celebration of Our Lord’s Resurrection be a sacred time and be filled with joy! We appreciate all your correspondence to us, your support and friendship.

Florence and Jose at our first joyful gathering with Florez family, Gobernador, 2007.

Our dear benefactor and friend, Jose M. Florez, gave his gentle and kind soul to the Lord Jesus on Saturday, February 20, 2016. He will be missed by his wife, Florence, his children and of course the many friends who loved him.  He lived in the footsteps of St. Joseph and leaves a legacy of humility and love. Jose was born on March 19, 1922, the Feast of St. Joseph. After his Funeral Mass and burial at the Gobernador Santo Nino Cemetery, there was a reception that followed at the monastery, St. Joseph Center. Nine years ago, on July 11, 2007, the Feast of St. Benedict, marked a milestone in the history of the Monastery of Our Lady of the Desert. Jose and Florence Florez, donated 40 acres of their beloved land in Gobernador, New Mexico, to build the monastery in honor of voicing his wish that care for the sisters be continued for generations to come.

Our annual Novena to St. Joseph begins on March 10th.  You and your families are included in our prayers.  May St. Joseph who is an example of mercy, intercede for all your needs. Loving Saint Joseph, faithful follower of Jesus Christ, we raise our hearts to you to implore your powerful intercession in obtaining from the Divine Heart of Jesus all the graces necessary for our spiritual and temporal welfare, particularly the grace of a happy death.

The peak of the Liturgical Year is the Easter Triduum from the evening of Holy Thursday to the evening of Easter Sunday, unfolding for us Christ’s Paschal Mystery.  The Triduum marks the end of the Lenten season and leads to the Mass of the Resurrection of the Lord at the Easter Vigil, when the Paschal candle is lit for the Liturgical New Year. Father Thomas Benedict, OSB, our Chaplain, will be leaving once again during the Easter week, to assist in the formation program for 3 months at the St. Benedict’s Abbey near Polokwane, South Africa. Please keep him in your prayers.

The schedule for the Triduum with Father Thomas Benedict, Chaplain, presiding, includes:

Holy Thursday, March 24, 6:30 pm – Mass of the Lord’s Supper and Washing of the Feet with Adoration until 8:30 pm Good Friday, March 25, 2 pm Stations of the Cross and Liturgy Easter Sunday, March 26, 4 am – Easter Vigils with Mass, followed by a light breakfast.

Our Paschal candle painted by a nun of the Abbey of St. Walburga, Virginia Dale, Colorado, depicts the the image of the Women at the Tomb, and the Angel announcing the Good news.  From the Easter Sunday Vigil Mass, Year C, we read,

Why do you seek the living one among the dead?  He He is not here, but he has been raised.The women were Mary Magdalene, Joanna, and Mary the the mother of James (Luke 24:1-12)

Mark your calendars for JUNE 4, 2016, for our upcoming Ice Cream Social. This year the proceeds from this event will be divided between the Monastery and the parish of St. Rose of Lima, Blanco, NM.  St. Rose of Lima was our home when we began building our monastery in Gobernador, NM. We wish to support St. Rose of Lima and Pastor, Father Jim Walker, in their final phase of fundraising for their parish hall.  The Monastery’s portion of the proceeds will be used to construct an all-weather walkway for the St. Walburga building connecting it with the other Monastery buildings. The day will be filled with entertainment; our famous Bingo, called out by the Knights of Columbus; raffles; and a delicious taco meal and ice cream.  The function will be held at the St. Mary’s Parish, Bloomfield, NM, from 11:00 am – 3:00 pm.  You can win a trip for two adults to Italy, a ruby ring and other great prizes. Come join the fun!

As we continue to make straight His ways, may you experience new life through the Resurrection of Jesus Christ!

Easter Joy and Peace, Mother Benedicta Serna, OSB, Prioress

Easter Triduum Mar 24, 2016

Easter Triduum 2016

vigil_fire

EASTER SUNDAY 2016- Vigil Fire was lit at 4:00 am, the Solemn Beginning of the Easter Vigil. Few guests assembled with us, Mother Benedicta carrying the Paschal candle. Father Thomas Benedict recited:  “On this most holy night, when Our Lord Jesus Christ passed from death to life, the Church invites her children, throughout the whole world to come together in vigil and prayer.”

Holy Saturday – There is no Mass on Holy Saturday.  From Romans 6:4:  “We were indeed buried with him through baptism into death, so that, just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, we too might live in newness of life.”  Today I think of life after our human death, at the same time trying to let go of the old or at least something that could be a positive change in my daily life. God give us the grace to know that good things are there to grasp! We pray for you. God bless you! 

cross_march16
The Cross outside our Chapel.

GOOD FRIDAY OF THE LORD’S PASSION – Isaiah 52:13-53:12 • Psalm 31:2,6,12-13,15-17,25; Hebrews 4:14-16,5:7-9; John 18:1-19:42 – Here at Our Lady of the Desert, after we recited the Stations of The Cross, we had the Good Friday liturgy, which included the Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ according to John, the Veneration of the Cross as Father Thomas Benedict entoned, “This is the wood of the cross, on which hung the Savior of the world.” After the Veneration of the Cross, the Blessed Sacrament was brought in for the distribution of Holy Communion.  We had a few guests and with the silence and the sound of the wind blowing, one could be in tune with the remembrance of Our Lord’s Passion.  We remember that Jesus Christ is always with us during our passions, our struggles, our pains and illnesses because He suffered, He died and He rose. Know that we keep you in our prayers.

God bless you! SK

HOLY THURSDAY

"Oh God, be gracious and bless us! So will your ways be known upon earth!

"Where charity and love are found, God is there."
“Where charity and love are found, God is there.”

“When he had washed their feet and put on his clothes again he went back to the table. Do you understand he said what I have done to you? You call me Master and Lord, and rightly; so I am. If I, then, the Lord and Master, have washed your feet, you should wash each other’s feet. I have given you an example so that you may copy what I have done to you.”

Jose Florez, Obiturary Feb 20, 2016

Jose Merced Florez – Obituary Feb 20, 2016
 
Jose Merced Florez, 93, of Blanco, with his family by his side, gave his gentle and kind soul to the Lord Jesus on Saturday, Feb. 20, 2016. He knew no stranger and spent his entire life serving his family and his community. He was born March 19, 1922, in Gobernador, to Abel and Fidela Vasquez Florez. He served as a sergeant fourth class in the U.S. Army Air Force in the South Pacific Theater during World War II. His service included the liberatiojose_picn of the Philippines in 1945. In 1946, Jose married Florence Hancock, and they were blessed with 12 children. They made their home in Blanco and were to celebrate 70 years of marriage on Oct. 26, 2016. In 1979, after 30 years of service, he retired from the El Paso Natural Gas Company and continued his passion for ranching, building the BAR MF family ranch along the San Juan River. In 2007, Jos being an extremely faithful man, donated land in Gobernador to the Benedictine Sisters to establish Our Lady of the Desert Monastery. He encouraged his family to be stewards of the monastery, voicing his wish that care for the sisters be continued for generations to come.On July 11, 2007, on the Feast of St. Benedict, marked a milestone in the history of the Monastery of Our Lady of the Desert! Our friends, Mr. and Mrs. Jose and Florence Florez, officially signed over to the sisters 40 acres of land in Gobernador, New Mexico, near Chama. This event took place during a ceremony with some of the Florez family, guests and monks in Phase III at the Monastery of Christ in the Desert.  We were delighted to have the presence of Reverend James Walker, Vicar General for the Diocese of Gallup, here to represent Bishop Donald Pelotte, Bishop of Gallup. Louella B. Evans, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Florez, Notary Public, signed and sealed the documents in order for them to be recorded in the county of Tierra Amarilla, this same day.

Left to right: Louella B. Evans, Jose Florez, Florence Florez, Abbot Philip Lawrence, Mother Mary Benedicta Serna and Sister Mary FisherLeft to right: Louella B. Evans, Jose Florez, Florence Florez, Abbot Philip Lawrence, Mother Mary Benedicta Serna and Sister Mary Fisher

Newsletter Aug 2015

Newsletter Aug 2015

Early days in Santa Cruz, NM, 1990: Top Row:
Sr. Scholastica, Sr. Mary Catherine; Front Row:
Abbot Philip, Mother Julianne, and Sr. Benedicta

Visit our website to view the slides of our 25 years of
history at www.ourladyofthedesert.org, Home page,
entitled “25 Years of Blessings.

This beautiful painting of Saint Benedict holding a cup with the snake by Sister Elizabeth, represents the miracle of St Benedict when his brothers attempted to poison him because he was too zealous a superior in his younger days. He holds his Rule is in his left hand. The background depicts our history in pictures: February 2, 1990, we began as Oblates
of the Monastery of Christ the Desert, Abiquiu, NM. At that time the sisters lived in El Rito, NM, as shown in the upper right corner. Shortly after, the sisters moved to Santa Cruz, NM, where they lived from 1990 to 1997. The Church of Santa Cruz, to the right middle of St. Benedict, is where we attended daily Mass. In 1997 the monks of the Monastery of Christ in the Desert invited us to join them in the Chama Canyon, where we lived with the monks for 10 years (upper left image church of the Monastery of Christ in the Desert). On the Feast of St Anthony, June 13, 2008 our community moved to St. Rose of Lima Parish, Blanco, NM, the temporary home for eighteen months, while the initial monastery was being built in Gobernador. On August 29, 2009, Passion of St John the Baptist, with the help of friends from Blanco and surrounding community we moved to Gobernador, NM. St Benedict is depicted surrounded by the big, endless expanse of Gobernador, symbolizing a prosperous move into the future!

We ask your prayers for our Sister Elizabeth who is pursuing a transfer of her vow of stability for health reasons to the Benedictine Sisters of Perpetual Adoration, Missouri.

Dear Friends,

February 2, 2015, the Feast of the Presentation of Our Lord in the Temple began the celebration of the 25th Anniversary of our founding. As I pondered this important mile stone, I asked myself what brought us through these 25 years? Of course the only answer is, God. The reason for coming to the monastery is to seek God. When I discovered this was the purpose of monastic life it thrilled my heart, it is no wonder the sisters and I felt drawn to this life. The possibilities were exciting! Twenty five years of searching for God in the Desert. How have we found God? Well, it has not been in visions of Jesus or his mighty angels or holy saints; nor do we spend our days in ecstasy. I must admit all this I hoped for as a young nun! But we learn to find God “among the pots and pans, as St Theresa of Avila liked to say. God is found in our daily dealings with each other, in serving each other, in the silence and solitude of the desert and in the guests who come to our door, not very glamorous but real. Sometime during the early days of our move to Gobernador, New Mexico in August 2009, a question from Psalm 77 caught my attention, it possible for God, to prepare a table in the Desert? This verse began to accompany me on my desert journey. We chant Psalm 77 every 2nd week at the Divine Office of Vigils at 4:30 AM. Just as we wait for the light of day to break forth I learned to wait for God to come forth as we build our monastery in honor of our Lady of the Desert.  The introduction to our psalter, the Psalms, explains that the psalms sing to us the human and divine history of Israel. Psalm 77 is the story of Israel’s journey through the desert and is entitled, God’s patience and humanity’s ingratitude. In reality, the Psalms speak of our own human and divine history, which includes times of ingratitude and fear, the human condition. But if there is anything this desert journey has taught me is that God’s patience and compassion always wins out in the end and with his grace so will our compassion and gratefulness. Over the past 25 years I came to realize that challenging questions and people and times make our faith stronger as we stumble along. Like the Israelites in the desert, our journey is forming us into living witnesses of Him who is full of compassion, our God who forgives our questioning doubts and fears and continues with us on this JOURNEY OF FAITH. How blessed we are to have friends like you who have also journeyed with us through these past 25 years.

Thank you. It is your love and support that has made it possible. Please know we hold you in our daily prayers as we begin our next 25 years! Peace and Blessings, Mother Benedicta Serna, OSB, Prioress


Mother Benedicta puts her sisters to work on
July 11th, but they have time for a pose. Shown are
Patricia, Mother Benedicta and Roberta.

Canonical visitors, with guests and community: Bottom row: Mother Mary Elizabeth Kloss, St. Scholastica Priory, Petersham, Massachusetts, Right Rev. Dom Cuthbert Brogan, St. Michael’s Abbey, Farnborough, Hampshire, United Kingdom, Mother Julianne. Second row are S. Hilda, S. Maria Manzano, also from St. Scholastica Priory, S. Guadalupe, S. Agnes Le and Mother Benedicta. Top row are S. Kateri, S. Mary and Brother Francis Martinez, from the Monastery of Christ in the Desert.

CANONICAL VISITATION – “In administering correction she (superior) should act prudently and not go to excess, lest in seeking too eagerly to scrape off the rust she break the vessel.” (Rule of St. Benedict, 64). In his Rule, St. Benedict takes into account charity keeping in mind those times of necessary corrections for the community members. – The overall purpose of a
monastic visitation is to help the community grow in self-understanding, to recognize and acknowledge the strengths and weaknesses, to identify what should be corrected or eliminated in our monastic life and to help with the vision and values. As part of the Catholic
Church, a visitation helps to further the progress of our vocation. The visitors, Abbot Cuthbert & Mother Mary Elizabeth stressed the concept of help and encouragement during our visitation July 20-21, 2015, and spoke individually with each sister. The final report was very
positive and we were reassured of the stability of the community. The sisters will now work on some of the suggestions to make our community even stronger.

VOCATION – Each person has a vocation. God created each person with gifts and talents toward a specific way of life, a vocation to serve God and others in a unique way, whether it be the single life, married life, or consecrated life. With your support, we were able to purchase and prepare a 6- bedroom building, St. Walburga, to house candidates interested in our monastic way of life. Now, we look forward to three women coming for a time of discernment to share our life: Dailes from Zambia, who has received a visa and will begin planning her flight very soon; Maria Rosario from Vera Cruz, Mexico, is waiting for an invitation letter for her Visa; and Cynthia from Austin, Texas, has asked to return for an Observership. We ask that you join us in praying for these women that they may know the will of God in their lives.

Please share this newsletter with the young women who might have a monastic vocation! Help us continue building a monastery of women dedicated to a life of prayer for the world and worship of God almighty in silence and solitude in the desert tradition of monastic
life. Our next “Come and See,” vocation weekend is planned for November 20-22, 2015.

Along with the Presider, Bishop James E. Wall, there were nine priests who celebrated the Mass for the Solemnity of St. Benedict. Over 150 friends from far and near joined us for this great day. In his homily, Bishop James E. Wall, emphasized the virtue of humility in our lives as taught by St. Augustine of Hippo. He came to realize that only a person with humility can follow Christ.

Plans for the construction of the St. Joseph patio began in February 2015. By March 2015, the lumber for the covering was purchased. The work on the frame for the concrete floor and the placement of the spike beams, began. The project also included the framing, placing of the rebar and the trench work necessary for the foundation. Thank you to all who have helped with the building projects since 2008, here in Gobernador.

MONASTERY NEWS – In April of this year, our Chaplain, Fr. Thomas Benedict, a monk from the Monastery of Christ in the Desert, spent three months giving formation classes at St. Benedict’s Abbey in Polokwane, Limpopo, South Africa. We are blessed with his talents and help with many of our projects. His dog, Rosco, likes to take Father for walks.

Sister Agnes Le enjoys gardening. tending to the beautiful flowers and vegetables, plus painting the sacramental candles. She attended her son’s wedding in Kansas for a few days.

Sister Guadalupe is now creating handmade chains for small and large crosses. We appreciate her efforts in being the chantress and playing the keyboard.

Mother Julianne continues to manage the bookkeeping and loves to pamper those cats.  She is the community driver and makes sure the cars are in good shape.

From February thru August 2015, Sister Kateri took a sixth month leave to help her ill parents. She is transitioning back to the community in full force. This summer she completed a 2-year online Benedictine Spiritual Formation Program, with the sisters of Benet Hill, Colorado Springs, CO.

Sister Hilda takes care of the Guesthouse and does a great job in making the assignments for the sisters. She also assists in bookkeeping and still has time to weave beautiful bookmarks. We look forward to her mother’s visit from Guatemala.

Sister Mary is pretty much the keeper of our cats. Currently, she tends our little Santo Nino Giftshop, and is always willing to give a hand with liturgical and English pronunciation, as well as serving as Portress.

Mother Benedicta spent a few days with her family for the one year anniversary of the death of her brother, Johnny Serna.

Let us pray for Pope Francis for his apostolic journey to the United States, which is scheduled for September 22-27, 2015. He will visit Washington, New York and Philadelphia.

EXTRAORDINARY JUBILEE OF MERCY – DEC 8, 2015 NOV 20, 2016 – It will be a Holy Year of Mercy.  – Pope Francis

MERCY CHANGES EVERYTHING by Father Thomas Benedict Baxter
There were two monks who committed a very serious sin when they went to the village to sell their wares. But they were wise enough not to let the devil trick them into discouragement and so they came back to the desert and went to the Abba to confess their sins. To ease them into their conversion, they were asked to go and live on their own for one month on bread and water, to pray and do penance. When the time was over, Abba himself came over to reunite them with the disciples. However he was very surprised because one came out grim, downcast and pale while the other was radiant, buoyant and brisk. “What did you meditate upon?” Abba asked. The sad monk answered: “I thought constantly on the punishment
which I merit and the justice of God”. The joy-filled monk answered: “Well, I would remind myself constantly of the mercy of God and the love which Jesus Christ had for the sinner.” Both of them were joyfully accepted back in the community but Abba remarked on the wisdom of the brother who kept his mind fixed on the compassion of God. – Cardinal Walter Casper in speaking of the mercy of God teaches: Mercy is the faithfulness of God to his own
being as love. Because God is love. And mercy is the love revealed to us in concrete deeds and words. So mercy becomes not only the central attribute of God, but also the key of Christian existence. Be merciful as God is merciful. We have to imitate God’s mercy. (Commonweal, May 7, 2014) Christian community is called to manifest concrete deeds of love, mercy and forgiveness. It is the only way that we can be sustained in our commitment to the Gospel. As a priest, when I hear confessions, I know that my task is not judgement but reconciliation. God calls those who are far off to come near and we need to meet them on the way not with condemnation but with the warm embrace of mercy. The Gospel story of the Prodigal teaches us this in a very strong way.

Our prayers before God in the Eucharist are filled with
petitions for mercy: Kyrie eleison, have mercy on us
Lord. We who cry for mercy must offer it in turn. This
means being compassionate to those who reach out to us
for mercy and forgiveness. It is not an optional way of
living together. It is the only way to live together. This is
the first lesson in living in community and the primary
way that we witness to the Gospel in the world.
Who is it that needs your forgiveness today?
Who is it that cries out for mercy at your door?

Winter Heating Fund: Can you help? Though we are in the midst of a beautiful summer here at the monastery, we still know that winter with all its heating costs will be upon us soon enough. Like you, energy costs make up most of our monthly bills and your gift toward our energy needs would be a great help to us.  Currently, we use a mix of propane and electricity to take care of heating our buildings.  The electricity is on budget pay and is now set at $500 per month for the next year. Propane cost, of course, can be variable depending on the severity of the winter and the often fluctuating costs per gallon. We have two 1,000 gallon tanks that need to be filled in preparation for the winter season. We ask you to make a gift to our Winter Heating Fund.  Our bills, like yours, come in monthly. Please consider making a monthly gift to this fund. Thank you and God bless you!