The Catholic Spirit - November 11, 2021

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10 • THE CATHOLIC SPIRIT

A commitment Religious

growing number of ways for women to take on consecrated life is present in the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis: The Handmaids are now established in Hopkins, a Pro Ecclesia Sancta sister took first vows at St. Mark in October and a parishioner of St. Paul in Ham Lake has found a secular institute to be the right fit for her in living out the faith.

For New Ulm-based Handmaids, a new convent, a new opportunity By Maura Keller For The Catholic Spirit

By Maria Wiering The Catholic Spirit

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oung women dedicating their lives to God as the Handmaids of the Heart of Jesus have a new convent in Hopkins to call home. In August, 12 sisters within the religious community moved into the newly renovated convent at St. Gabriel the Archangel to fulfill a call to work in the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis. “The (archdiocese) has always been home, and it has always been a dream to be here,” said Mother Mary Clare Roufs, who founded the community in 2007 with three other women. “We love the priests and we love the people. It is really home for a lot of our sisters. As diocesan sisters, we want our sisters to be serving in their home dioceses when and where they can.” Mother Mary Clare formed the idea for the Handmaids of the Heart of Jesus after receiving what she called “the founding grace” in December 2006. “I was at The St. Paul Seminary and Archbishop (Harry) Flynn was preaching on Mary, and he simply started by saying, ‘Mary. How beautiful is the name Mary?’ And I just thought that God wanted a new community of sisters,” Mother Mary Clare recalled. “This charism was really being born in my heart, and so I asked a few young women to consider living the life with me, and we started in August 2007 with the permission of Archbishop Flynn. From that day it has been a time in which the Lord just continues to lead us every step of the way.” The Handmaids lived in the archdiocese for three years before Bishop John LeVoir of New Ulm formally invited them to be established in his diocese in December 2009. “In March 2010, Bishop LeVoir formally established us as a ‘public association of the lay faithful’ in hopes of us becoming a ‘religious community of diocesan right,’” Mother Mary Clare explained. To gain that distinction — “a religious community of diocesan right” — there are typically at least 40 members in a community and over half of them should be in perpetual vows, she said. “The Church wants to see that you are growing, that you are strong with good membership before that would happen,” Mother Mary Clare said. “For most communities, that would be about 20 to 25 years into their life, depending on how they grow. We aren’t there yet because part of what the Church does is she says, ‘Give it a try. Let us walk with you and then in time, if it is right, it will be more formally established.’” In 2018, the Handmaids expanded by establishing a house in Duluth, where four sisters currently reside. The Handmaids’ New Ulm motherhouse includes 17 sisters, and the Hopkins house has 12 sisters, including five postulants, who are women discerning becoming Handmaids. If after a year they want to continue that discernment process, they will enter the novitiate program in New Ulm. From the rural farmlands of New Ulm to the lakeside environs of Duluth to the urban life of Hopkins, the Handmaids feel called to live in an imitation of Mary as spiritual mothers in a parish family, engaging the new evangelization

UST alumna’s were Pro Ecc Sancta’s first in the U.S.

DAVE HRBACEK | THE CATHOLIC SPIRIT

Sister Mary Pieta of the Handmaids of the Heart of Jesus teaches seventh graders Oct. 29 at Holy Family Academy in St. Louis Park. as diocesan sisters. Quite simply, they are spiritual mothers who are complementing the fatherhood of diocesan priests. “Where you see a priest in a diocesan parish working and serving a parish family, we would work alongside of him, complementing him in our consecrated lives and helping the parish become a family of faith,” Mother Mary Clare said. The sisters had begun to renovate a building on the campus of the Cathedral of St. Paul in St. Paul in 2017, but a series of delays and construction and permit-related red tape impeded that effort, and a year later the Handmaids decided to look for another, more suitable building. The Handmaids began their journey to downtown Hopkins in 2019, when sisters began working with volunteers to help renovate a convent. The following year, four sisters moved into the empty rectory next to St. Gabriel’s St. Joseph campus as renovation on the convent continued. The remaining sisters moved in August 2021, when the renovations were complete. “It was a real homecoming when we finally came back and established the house,” Mother Mary Clare said. “It is a fulfillment of God’s goodness. And it is where the original charism and grace was received, and so what a joy it is for us to finally come home.” The Handmaids’ apostolate differs according to the needs of the local Church in which they serve. Hopkins provides an opportunity for the Handmaids to express their charism in different ways, including at St. Gabriel and, next door, Chesterton Academy in Hopkins, as well as nearby Holy Family Academy in St. Louis Park, the University of Minnesota’s Newman Center and St. Lawrence parish in Minneapolis, and St. John Vianney College Seminary in St. Paul. Sister Mary Joseph Evans, postulant directress at the Handmaids of the Heart of Jesus’ house in Hopkins, has been a member of the community for 12 years. She has lived most of those years in New Ulm, before moving to Duluth three years ago, and finally residing in

the new house in Hopkins. “It is such a great joy for our community to have a convent in the archdiocese and to be serving here. Many of our sisters are from the archdiocese, and it’s part of our diocesan charism to serve at home,” said Sister Mary Joseph, who grew up as a member of St. Joseph in West St. Paul. “To be back serving among the priests and the families and be able to be spiritual mothers is such a great joy and something we’ve been looking forward to for many years. It has been a great gift to have our postulants here in Hopkins, and it allows them to get a good experience of the different ways in which we serve and the richness of life here.” Mother Mary Clare said she is thankful for the tremendous support of Archbishop Bernard Hebda, Bishop LeVoir and Bishop Andrew Cozzens, auxiliary bishop of the archdiocese who Dec. 6 will be installed as the eighth bishop of Crookston, as the Handmaids’ community has continued to grow. “After receiving the founding grace for our community, I had approached Bishop Cozzens and asked if he would consider helping us in our formation of our sisters and he agreed generously. From that day on, he has been very generous in teaching our sisters on such things as prayer, the spiritual life, vows and he directs our sisters (on) an eight-day silent retreat every year,” Mother Mary Clare said. “He has been a spiritual father to us and a friend. Although he’s heading up to Crookston, there will be a little bit more distance, but he will always be a part of our family.” She said that being part of the archdiocese offers beautiful ways in which the Handmaids can express the elements of their charism and live out their “spiritual maternity” because of its variety of schools and its two seminaries. “Our hope and our mission is to help people discover the joys of living their Catholic faith and having a personal relationship with Jesus,” Mother Mary Clare said. “As we do that together as a family, it will continue to enrich our lives together as we continue to seek him.”

s a young Cat in the norther metro, Sister M didn’t know any So, she attributes the fact t one only to God’s grace an “I’m very happy,” said S professed first vows Oct. 1 Ecclesia Sancta. Her tempo first a woman has taken ou where PES is based. Being able to profess vo Cities meant that she was family and friends who m able to travel to Lima — an opportunity for them to s many Catholics never per the life of the Church. The day brimmed with emotion,” said Sister Madd alumna of the University o St. Paul. The superior of PE Mother Naeko Matayoshi, Sister Maddie’s vows. She p during a Mass presided by Cozzens, bishop-designate St. Mark in St. Paul, a paris priests and sisters serve. Co two of her relatives, both p Archdiocese of St. Paul and uncle Father John Floeder Seminary and her cousin F Floeder, associate pastor of Faribault. Frankie Floeder, cousin and a seminarian, s “It was a beautiful mom profess my vows before th promise him to live and tr by living out the evangelic which are poverty, chastit Sister Maddie said. “That w beautiful and intimate mo and the Lord.” Sister Maddie’s white ve she’s taken temporary vow take final or permanent vo years. She is the second wo Twin Cities to take first vo Laura Holupchinski took h 2018. She is also the fourth take first vows — two othe Luecke and Sister Lynn Lu biological sisters from Ced Sister Maddie grew up a in Ham Lake, and she was until she entered Blaine H PES sisters were the first re Sister Maddie got to know she was somewhat surpris had fun with them, and th but dull. She met them wh meetings of a Catholic wo group her sophomore year She was studying seconda education, and she picture as a math teacher, married However, the PES sisters w loved to laugh, and she wa their mission to serve the devotion to the Sacred He That year she got seriou life, dedicating more and m she described as conversat She began by committing


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