St. Simeon Skete, Taylorsville Kentucky USA

With St. Simeon, the God receiver, as our patron, the skete seeks to practice the ideals found in our Rule, The Thousand Day Nazareth. In simplicity and poverty, the skete embraces the struggle of inner life through the practice of the Prayer Rope.

See our website at www.nazarethhouseap.org

Donations should be addressed to: Nazareth House Apostolate, 185 Captains Cove Drive, Taylorsville, Kentucky 40071.

Important Notice: All writings, posts, graphics & photographs in this blog are the copyrighted property of (unless otherwise indicated) Nazareth House Media, a division of Nazareth House Apostolate and cannot be copied, printed or used without written permission from NHA Media, Taylorsville, KY.
Showing posts with label Rosary Pilgrimage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rosary Pilgrimage. Show all posts

Friday, April 24, 2015

TBT: Rosary Pilgrimage

On May 9th we will once again make a pilgrimage to one of the rare Archabbeys of the World, St. Meinrad's Archabbey and Seminary.  This pilgrimage will be one of the highlights of our 19th Annual NHA Rosary Convocation - May 8 thru 10th.   For Throw Back Thursday here's a video collection of our Rosary Pilgrimage in which we stop at various points to say a Mystery of the Remnant (Jesus Life Prayer) Rosary together.


Photos of previous NHA Rosary Pilgrimages in USA and Sierra Leone.  





























Saturday, April 27, 2013

17th Annual Rosary Convocation (NHA)

In 1996, Nazareth House Apostolate began its first Annual Rosary Convocation.  It was always held in October, the weekend nearest the Official Feast of the The Holy Rosary which is October 7th.



Through the years the Convocation has grown and the Pilgrimage has become a highlight of the weekend.  At the Pilgrimage we travel to area shrines, stopping along the way to say each Mystery of the Rosary.

In 1571 three Catholic powers on the continent of - Genoa, Spain and the Papal States - formed an alliance called the Holy League, to defend their Christian civilization against a Turkish invasion.  Its fleets sailed to confront the Turks near the west coast of Greece on October 7th.  Pope Pius V was moved to institute the Feast of Our Lady of the Rosary as October 7th when he was informed that all but 13 of the nearly 300 Turkish ships had been captured or sunk.  The Pope had previously asked the people to pray the Rosary on that day and since the victory was obtained it was credited to the Rosary and the Feast Day was made October 7th in honor of the defeat.  Nevertheless, people died.



There is a story, a fable, that is told about a celebration in Heaven.  The angels and saints are dancing and celebrating the exodus at which the Israelites leave Egypt and enter into their wilderness wanderings.  Having suffered greatly at the hands of Egyptians, Moses leads them out of bondage and they are freed at the crossing through the Red Sea.  Moses held out his staff, and the Red Sea was separated into two halves by God.  The Israelites walked on dry ground and crossed the sea.  Behind them came the Egyptian army.  Moses moved his staff, and the sea returned to the normal flow.  With that drowned the whole entire Egyptian army.

As the Angels celebrated this victory, they noticed that God was not there celebrating with them.  "Where is He?", the Angel Gabriel inquired.  They began to look around and soon Gabriel finds God sitting quietly in an out of the way corner, weeping.  "Why do you weep? We have victory.  The Israelites have been freed." says Gabriel to God.    Not looking up, tears flowing, God replies "Today, many of my children were drowned."



For years we have felt uncomfortable about the reason for the date of the Feast of the Rosary.  The Rosary is a holy and special devotion that is praying the LIFE of Christ.  It is about life and we felt awkward celebrating its Feast Day on a day in which people were killed - whether it was a necessary war or not, defense of an invasion or not, regardless - people were killed.

"If you want to understand the Rosary, its praying the Life of Jesus.  If you want to understand Mary its saying YES to that Life.  Hence, the Rosary is praying the Life of Jesus in union with Mary who said YES to that Life." - Seraphim OJN   (If you've spent any time at the skete  or been around Seraphim at all, you've heard him say this often).

Mary is the Messenger of Peace, Jesus the Prince of Peace (Isaiah 9:6; John 14:27; 16:33; James 1:2; Phil. 4:6-7) and therefore we want the celebration of the Rosary to be about Life and the "yes" to that life and not in celebration of a time when there was war or victory of war.


Once moving to St. Simeon Skete, where the Rosary is the current or flow of our day, it was natural for us to move the Feast of Our Lady of the Holy Rosary to the Second Sunday of May.


May is the traditional month of the Blessed Virgin Mary and the second Sunday is appropriately, Mother's Day.

We understand the importance of the victory of the battle against the Turks in 1571, and we are not saying that moving the Feast of the Rosary is the best thing to do for everyone.  It does, however, best work for us at St. Simeon Skete and that is why we made the change.




The 17th Annual NHA Rosary Convocation begins at St. Simeon Skete on Thursday May 9th, with arrival, orientation and lectures at 1:30 and ends on Sunday May 12th following Mass at the Chapel and a Community Meal at Anna House.


The Pilgrimage to area Shrines: (St. Augustine, Leopold, IN, St. Joseph's Shrine, Our Lady of Monte Cassino and The Archabbey of St. Meinrad in St. Meinrad, IN) will be on Saturday, May 11th beginning at 9 AM.  The pilgrimage will be a car caravan of pilgrims traveling to the shrines.  Make sure your car is gassed up and ready for the trip upon arrival to the Skete that morning.


We have a very limited amount of rooms available at a first come, first serve basis if you are coming from out of town and would like to join us for the weekend.  Several rooms have already been reserved.  (I have been told that Southwest is holding some good fares to and from the Louisville Airport (SDF) right now, however, be sure to check with us on room availability before booking a flight - unless you wish to stay at a nearby hotel.)  For information and to check availability please email me through the contact page of our website:
http://www.nazarethhouseap.org/contact-us/







The schedule for those accommodating at Anna House is as follows.  (Local Residents you are invited to please join us where and when you can).

Schedule:

Thursday  May 9th (Ascension Day)
Arrival, orientation, lecture (1:30 pm)

Friday May 10th (in addition to the regular Vigils, Mass & Prayer Offices of the Skete)

  • 10 AM Lecture - Joyful Mysteries
  • 11:40 AM Stations of the Cross
  • 12:30 Lunch
  • 1:30 PM Luminous Mysteries
  • 3:00 PM Stations of the Cross
    • Lecture: Sorrowful Mysteries
  • 4:00 PM Lecture - Glorious Mysteries
  • 5:00 PM Vespers & Chaplet
  • 6:30 PM Supper
  • 7:30 PM Compline
Saturday, May 11th
  • 9AM: Pilgrimage begins with prayer
  • Picnic Lunch at Monte Cassino Shrine
  • Return to Skete for Mass 
    • The Mass follows the Pilgrimage (Lk. 24:30-31) the Emmaus Road ... traveled all day with Him and then we find Him in the "breaking of the bread". 
Sunday, May 12th
  • 11 AM: The Feast of the Holy Rosary Mass
  • Following Mass: Community Potluck Meal at Anna House 
We realize that many will have plans for Mother's Day, however, you are invited to bring your Mother and celebrate her as we celebrate the Mother of our Lord in one joyous day of fellowship.  




Saturday, October 17, 2009

The NHA Rosary Convocation 2009



"There shall be an holy convocation"
- Ex. 12:16


Nazareth House Apostolate offers "A Holy Rosary Convocation" each year on the Thursday, Friday and Saturday nearest to the Feast of the Holy Rosary (7th October).


Thursday: Teaching
Friday: Rosary Street Retreat
Saturday: Rosary Pilgrimage


Using the Nazareth Bede Rosary, where the emphasis is praying the Life of Christ, pilgrims gather for the Annual Rosary Pilgrimage...



which is held on the Saturday of the Convocation week.


Nazareth House Apostolate Passports are stamped at each stop on the Pilgrimage journey.


Prior to the Convocation, booklets were handed out with October Intentions (prayer intentions for each day of the month of October).

The Convocations Intentions for October
The following intentions, based on the teachings of the Apostolate’s “Thousand Day Nazareth”, are suggested, one for each day of the month.
  1. May I be obedient, doing exactly what God says, immediately, with the right heart attitude. Acts 5:29; Rom. 1:5; Heb. 5:9
  2. May I continue to grow through deepening The Prayer. Psalm 42:7; 64:6
  3. May I have stability in place and vocation. Ps.16:8; ICor. 7:20
  4. May I relinquish doubt and embrace faith. Rom.4:20-25; 14:23.
  5. May I relinquish certitude and embrace paradox. Rom.8:28,29.
  6. May I relinquish apathy and embrace fidelity. Jms. 4:17; 2Cor. 5:15
  7. May I relinquish power and embrace vulnerability. Lk 18:9; Prov. 3:5,6. Ps. 78:7
  8. May I relinquish prestige and embrace humility. Prov.6:16, 17; Jms 4:6
  9. May I relinquish possessions and embrace poverty. Mt.5:3; Lk.1:53
  10. May I relinquish the old self and embrace the new self. Eph. 4:22-24; Col. 3:9-10.
  11. May I be salt in a savorless world. Mt.5:13
  12. May I be light in a darkened world. Mt. 5:14; Jn 1:5
  13. May I be leaven in a flattened world. Mt.13:33
  14. May I be branch in a barren world. Jn 15:5
  15. May I be pulled from my comfort zones to suffer the world’s sufferings. Col. 1:24; 1Cor12:26; Heb 11:25; 13:3.
  16. May I walk the path I pray and pray the path I walk. Lk. 18:1; 1Tim2:8; Mt.4:19
  17. May I become a World Christian by ceasing to be a worldly one. Mk 16:15; Acts1:8; 1Jn 2:15
  18. May I bear my cross, realizing it is made up of all the crosses that are refused to be carried, mine and theirs. Mk 10:21
  19. May I come to realize and experience that God is perfectly hidden and perfectly revealed in each moment. Mt. 28:10b, 20b.
  20. May I be flung out to the furthest places by a centrifugal Love. Mk 16:15
  21. May I be pulled into the center by his centripetal Love. Lk 17:21; Acts 17:28; Mt. 11:28.
  22. May Jesus be revealed in and through my life. Mt.5:16.
  23. May I seek not so much to be stimulated as to trust the ordinariness of the present moment. Mt. 6:19-21; Phil. 3:8.
  24. May I trust my life, surrendered to Him, to be enough for God to do what He desires. 2Cor. 10:12,13.
  25. May I embrace that for which there is no substitute. Lk. 10:38-42; Acts 4:12; Ps. 84:3a
  26. May I find that being deprived of prayer is more painful than being deprived of the answer to prayer. Jer.33:3
  27. May I let go, let God and let be.Prov. 3:5,6.
  28. May I understand fully the question that makes Jesus the answer. Phil. 2:5
  29. May I be more for Jesus than I am against something. Mt. 6:33
  30. May He increase and I decrease. Jn 3:30
  31. May I love everybody; love without limits. Jn 13:34,35; Jn 3:16; Mt 5:43-46.

The Rosary Pilgrimage takes us on a journey though wooded lands, country roads, ...

we travel to say each set of mysteries of the Rosary at a different specific destination.



The Autumn air, the turning of the Fall leaves, it is a beautiful route to the area shrines.


Beginning at the Ohio River, we say the Introduction to the Rosary...

Journeying on, we stop at Leopold, IN to say the first set of mysteries at St. Augustine Church. Then its on to our favorite little chapel of Our Lady of Monte Cassino. Where we say a set of mysteries and then have lunch
.

The picnic grounds of Monte Cassino are perfect.


After Lunch we travel on to St. Meinrad Archabbey of St. Meinrad, Indiana. We say the final set of mysteries there. A quick visit to the gift shop and we journey back home. A day spent in prayer and fellowship. Perfect!


This year "the Sixth Decade" was given: (i.e.) an additional decade prayed on the rosary for a special intention using an appropriate episode from the Life of Christ.


For example: We are in prayer for a little 2 year old girl with leukemia named Chloe. We use the mystery of the Lady with the blood disorder (since Leukemia is a blood disorder). This story is also known as the "Woman with the Issue of blood" -Pushing through the crowd to touch His garment to receive healing.

Click on the following link to see photos and videos of the Rosary Pilgrimage. The slide show option is the better form of viewing.



Unfortunately this year, we were unable due to flooding to make our stop at the St. Joseph Shrine as we have in the past. Maybe next year... we missed not saying a set of mysteries here...