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August 19-25, 2007 Issue |
Posted 8/14/07 at 1:59 PM
If there’s one thing Pope Benedict XVI can count on whether
he knows it or not, it’s daily prayer and weekly Eucharistic adoration offered
on his behalf by an international club for girls.
While they’re at it, the members of Ancora chapters also
pray for vocations — and then, not just for vocations in general but also for
specific individuals discerning a possible or existing calling. Priests, nuns,
religious and seminarians are brought before God by name as Ancora members ask
God to strengthen them with perseverance and fidelity.
Whenever the girls can, they ask priests and consecrated
souls to personally sign Ancora signature cards so they can pray for each with
special focus.
Meanwhile, when they’re not praying, the 11-to-17-year-olds
are looking for ways to make good on their commitment to apostolic action.
Carleen Spratt, a 15-year-old member from Alberta, Canada,
remembers the reactions from dozens of priests after this year’s Chrism Mass in
the Diocese of Providence, R.I., when she and 122 other Ancora members rushed
up to ask them to add their names to their signature prayer cards. The girls
attended as part of their Ancora Holy Week Convention in nearby Wakefield, R.I.
“The priests were so happy and so consoled that people
wanted to pray for their vocations,” beams Spratt. “It moved me to see how much
vocations need prayers.”
Father John Halloran, pastor of St. Thomas More Church in
Narragansett, R.I., finds great consolation and joy knowing these girls are
praying for him.
“I know in my heart of hearts,” he says, “that there is no
power greater in this world than the power of prayer.”
Sometimes windows open dramatically for the girls to see how
their prayers are actually providing spiritual aid. April Pickett from Chicago
points to the time an Ancora group was doing an outreach mission in a parish.
They were wearing Ancora T-shirts with the message, “Got happiness? Follow your
vocation!” None knew that the non-member girl helping them out was struggling
with her vocation, trying to hear God’s voice as she considered joining the
Carmelites.
“When she saw the T-shirt,” says Pickett, “right away she
knew to follow the path God has chosen for her if she really wants happiness.
She decided then to join the Carmelite order.”
Formation Station
Ancora was born five years ago in the United States at the
Regnum Christi Youth and Family Encounter in Baltimore and in Canada during the
World Youth Day in Toronto. The club is a response to the Holy Father’s call to
help the Church, explains Cecelia Ramirez, a Regnum Christi consecrated woman
who serves as Ancora coordinator for the United States and Canada.
In that short time, she notes, Ancora has drawn 570 members
from across the United States, Canada and Australia. Ancora formed in Mexico at
the same time and, recently, started chapters in Brazil, Chile and Europe.
Every year U.S. Ancora members have a chance to attend a number of conventions,
each organized around a different theme.
“Through these conventions we try to get the girls to know
and love the Holy Father, and we try to form them in leadership skills,” says
Ramirez. Everything is organized by the teens, who leave inspired and
better-equipped to witness Christ wherever they go.
Most of the U.S. gatherings are held at Immaculate
Conception Academy in Wakefield, R.I., a high school for girls discerning a
possible call to consecrated life in the Regnum Christi movement. But this past
year, two Ancora conventions were also organized by members in the Baltimore
and Cincinnati areas.
Ramirez finds that, when many of the girls ask their parish
priest to expose the Blessed Sacrament for adoration, prayer time usually
becomes much longer than the dutiful 15 minutes because they invite all
interested people. In effect, some girls end up helping launch adoration in
their home parishes.
The students of Immaculate Conception Academy can fulfill
their commitment by arriving 15 minutes early at Sunday Mass to pray before
Christ reserved in the tabernacle, or they can pray before Christ exposed in a
monstrance in the school chapel.
Parish Pep
Apostolic action gets the spotlight during Rhode Island
conventions, when the girls become door-to-door missionaries for local
parishes. During Holy Week this year, they visited more than 500 families,
inviting them back to church. They also cheered up residents of nursing homes.
There are success stories. April Pickett knocked on a door
opened by a woman with a young child. She had just moved into the area.
“As soon as we gave her the invitation, she was really happy
and said, ‘Yes, I’ll come to Easter Mass,’” says Pickett. “She was open; she
just needed an invitation.”
The girls “understood what the commitment to the Lord Jesus
means, and the witness home-to-home had a wonderful impact in the lives of the
people they visited,” explains Father Halloran of the work Ancora members did
at St. Thomas More Church. “They could see the hunger and love for Christ from
these young ladies and could see in the presence of the girls the witness not
just in words but in joy of life in response to God’s gentle invitation to
follow him.”
This witness continues during the year as girls from
Immaculate Conception Academy bring hope, joy and enthusiasm to live and act in
the Lord during the parish’s weekly religious-education program.
Not surprisingly, the Ancora girls themselves benefit in
many ways. Just ask 17-year-old Elizabeth Fahy of Louisville, Ky. Besides
looking forward to bringing her signature cards to Sunday Mass and praying
afterwards, she gave a presentation of Ancora at a parish other than her own.
“I was shy at the time,” she says, “but [I knew] people
needed to love the Holy Father as a father.”
Then there’s another blessing for both the members and the
Church.
“Ancora opens girls’ minds to a vocation because they pray
for vocations,” says the club’s 18-year-old president, Paulette Cameron.
Hailing from Calgary, Alberta, she’s now in Rhode Island as a candidate for the
Regnum Christi consecrated women’s life. She explains that the girls see the
beauty of a vocation and respond.
“The biggest fruit in my own life was the love of the Holy
Father,” says 17-year-old Hannah Wilder. “One moment when watching a video on
John Paul II it clicked — he was my Holy Father.” She then wanted to do much
more for the Church.
In this and other ways, Ancora — whose name comes from the
anchor symbol the earliest Christians used in catacombs — is fulfilling its
motto: “Anchored in Christ, anchored in the Church, anchored in the Pope.”
Staff writer Joseph Pronechen writes
from Trumbull, Connecticut.
Information
The Ancora.org website will launch later this year. Until
then, contact .
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