Posted on 11/05/2009 2:45:21 PM PST by NYer

Sr. Verónica Berzosa
.- A 43 year-old prioresses has revolutionized an old Poor Clares convent in Spain, turning it onto a magnet for dozens of young professional women.
Sister Veronica joined the Poor Clares Convent of the Ascension founded in 1604 in Lerma (Spain) at at time when it was going through a vocations crisis. It was January 22, 1984, and Marijose Berzosa - Sr. Veronica's name prior to entering the convent - decided, at age 18, to leave behind a career in medicine, friends, nightlife and baketball.
"Nobody understood me. There were bets that it would not last, but they did not feel the force of the hurricane that drew me in," says Sr. Veronica. "I was a classic teenager looking for a way out ... and I made a decision in just 15 days."
Sr. Veronica joined the convent which had not seen a new vocation in nearly 23 years.
Sr. Pureza de Maria Lubian, 70, now abbess of the convent in Burgos, was her formation director and remembers her Sr. Veronica as "a lovely girl.
Very noble and very good, recalls Sr. Puerza de Maria. Sr. Vernoica was 18 and had a future. She left everything. She followed the call of God. She had a rich personality. She was always a leader. And, spiritually, she had a great vocation.
Sr. Puerza de Maria also notes that though Sr. Veronica faced many struggles and difficulties, she perservered and submitted to God's plan for her life.
The Spanish daily El Pais, one of the newspapers most sympathetic to the current Socialist governments campaign against the Catholic Church in Spain, could not resist publishing an extensive report on Sr. Veronica. According to the newspaper, she has become the biggest phenomenon in the Church since Teresa of Calcutta, as she has made the old convent of Lerma into an attractive recruiting banner for female vocations, with 135 professional women with a median age of 35 and 100 more on a waiting list. The paper adds that Sr. Vernoica has also opened a house in the town of La Aguilera, 24 miles from Lerma, at a huge monastery donated by her Franciscan brothers."
"It is an unexpected boom in vocations when the Jesuits have just 20 novices in all of Spain, the Franciscans, five, and the Vincentians, two. And its happening at a time when nuns are being imported from India, Kenya or Paraguay to prevent the closure of convents inhabited by elderly nuns, and when most of our priests are above the age of 60," the report indicated.
On weekends the convent welcomes hundreds of pilgrims: families, young members of ecclesial movements and church groups arrive in buses to attend the prayers, theatrical plays and talks on fully living the Christian life.
According to El Pais, the majority of the young sisters who have been attracted to the cloister "have been in relationships and had careers. The women are strong in their knowledge of theology, and are urban and educated.
In addition, None are immigrants. There are five sisters from the same family, eleven pairs of blood sisters and a few twins. Most are from the middle class. And they have college degrees. This community offers a complete roster of lawyers, economists, physicists and chemists, roadway engineers, industrial workers, agricultural workers and aeronautics engineers, architects, doctors, pharmacists, biologists and physical therapists, librarians, philologists, teachers and photographers.
One of the sisters in the community interviewed by El Pais defines the cloister as "an house open to those who knock on our door. We want to share our faith, to make known what is happening to us. And if they see Jesus in us, go ahead. Spain is so pagan that we need to share our faith, not live it alone. It is time to act."
The growth of the cloister since the arrival of Sister Veronica has been explosive: in 1994, when she was appointed mistress of novices at the age of 28, nearly 30 sisters entered. In 2002 there were 72, in 2004, there were 92. In 2005, the number rose to 105. Late last September there were 134.
Originally in a 16th century convent built to accommodate 32, the sisters are being leased the monastery of La Aguliera by the Franciscan Friars of Lerma. It is located adjacent to the sanctuary and the tomb of St. Peter Regalado.
The monastery is quickly being renovated to provide a modern, functional and well-lit space, with energy obtained through solar panels.
The new monastery has 100 cells, each with bed, table and kneeler, while a parlor with a capacity of 400, a hospice, bathrooms for visitors, and a new chapel are currently being constructed.
Recently, Father Raniero Cantalamessa, Preacher of the Papal Household, preached to 140 Poor Clares in Lerma. The visit by the Italian Capuchin was broadcast by the RAI network (Italian Radio and Television) in prime time in Italy.
I am immediately reminded of the words of our Lord to St. Faustina.
Chosen souls are, in My hand, lights which I cast into the darkness of the world and with which I illumine it. As stars illumine the night, so chosen souls illumine the earth. And the more perfect a soul is, the stronger and the more far-reaching is the light shed by it. It can be hidden and unknown, even to those closest to it, and yet its holiness is reflected in souls even to the most distant extremities of the world. (1601)
Unfortunately, that's the truth. I sometimes read Spanish newspapers on-line and it makes me want to cry when I feel the hatred that a large number of Spaniards feel towards God and organized religion. Growing up in Catholic Spain, I used to hear that the country was "the spiritual reserve of the western world". I can't believe how much the country has changed! Actually my own family has turned against the Lord. It is a burden that I don't know how to deal with. Please, Freepers, pray for the people of Spain because they are LOST!
It's much the same in France and Italy. And also in many South American countries that were once considered 'catholic'.
I am a native NYer, grew up in Queens, then moved to Long Island, and eventually upstate. NEVER in all these years have I met so many secular families. I have spent many hours pondering this phenomenon. What happened? And when did it happen? In the process, I have drawn some obvious conclusions, the number 1 offender being television which poses such a strong attraction to true life. Too often, viewers interpret what they see as being real life. TV is like a magnet, drawing in elderly and lonely women to purchase things they don't need, simply because they are bored. It just goes downhill from there.
The other aspect is the growth in "christian" denominations which poses a conundrum for the average american. Which one has the truth? They throw their hands up in the air and stop attending church. You see where all of this leads. Not sure if any or all of this is pertinent but that is my read on things.
“...with 135 professional women with a median age of 35 and 100 more on a waiting list.”
Wow!
***...with 135 professional women with a median age of 35 and 100 more on a waiting list.
Wow!***
Compare these religious women with the Wiccan lesbian sojourning nuns over here that consider Karl Marx too far to the right.
Also compare them to the Presbyterian and Anglican and Lutheran priestesses running their churches. The Presbyterian Presbyter (bishop) of the area that my house is in is a priestess as well.
Spain spent 600 years under Islam; they gained and lost their faith in the next 500 years, perhaps the Church can guide them back to it in the next century or so.
Best wishes to these daughters of St. Teresa. My Hispanic ministry leader is American-born, but lived 40 years in Spain, and she is terribly saddened by what has happened in Spain in these years. I’ll send her the article.
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