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The commitment to live in a community gives monastic life a special
meaning. A nun promises to follow Christ in a particular community, a particular
monastery, a particular way of life, and she binds herself to other sisters
with whom she will have to share everything. Stability is a source of spiritual
richness, and it also helps turn the monastic community into a family where
the interpersonal relationships are stable and founded on sincere love.
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"Master, where do you live?" "Come, and you will see" (Jo 1:39)
The young women who wish to become part of the community spend a
period of prayer and general living together with the community, in order
to discern the authenticity of their life.
Once this discernment is made, she is accepted as a Postulant, and
some time later she begins her novitiate, and time of testing in which
the young woman is helped by an experienced nun to become a member of the
community and to see whether or not her character is suited to this type
of life and to the routine of the community. On the other hand, it is a
time of intense formation. During the novitiate, the young women learn
to live like nuns in prayer, work, and sisterly fellowship.
The juniorate is the period of between three and nine years that
starts with the taking of simple vows, and goes on until the profession
of solemn vows. It is still a time of learning, basically biblical and
theological studies, but it is also a time of gradual insertion into the
community. At her Solemn Profession, the
young woman recieves her nun’s habit, as a sign of her total and definite
consacration to God, and she becomes a full member of the community. Those
young women who are interested in getting to know monastic life can ask
for information at the following telephone: (973) 33.02.66. or by e-mail. E-Mail
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