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Desert nuns find

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Light up your life

Light up your life

John Bering is a photographer in Buckeye, Arizona, whose goal is to capture images that glorify God. Find him online at johnberingphotography.com.

Carol Schuck Scheiber is an editor of VISION

voCation guide and HORIZON, both publications of the National Religious Vocation Conference.

Desert nuns find an oasis in sisterhood

PhotoSby Johnbering. teXtbycarol Schuck Scheiber. THE NIGHT before the investiture ceremony, Jennifer Meissonnier and other women in formation had a vigil procession and celebration, complete with a crown of flowers and even a rainbow.

The bold step of becoming a nun is nourished by tradition, ritual, symbols—and hugs.

AFTER 15 MONTHS of living among the Poor Clares of Perpetual Adora tion, Jennifer Meissonnier became a novice member in June 2015. During the investiture ceremony, she took the name Sister Augusta Mary of Our Lady of Grace, putting her a step closer to full membership with the Poor

Clares of Our Lady of Solitude Monastery in Tonopah, Arizona.

First, her sisters cut her hair, a symbol of detachment from worldliness that dates back to Saints Francis and Clare in the 800s. Her new sisters also helped

Meissonnier don the habit of the order.

Then she, her family and friends, and her new sisters emerged from the chapel into the bright light of the desert to celebrate with cake and punch.

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1.) Jennifer Meissonnier, in the section of the chapel reserved for the nuns, awaits the beginning of the investiture ceremony. 2.) Meissonnier prepares for a haircut, which is given in keeping with an 800-year-old tradition symbolizing detachment from things of the world. 3.) Meissonnier prepares to receive the habit, considered holy by the nuns. 4.) Meissonnier dons an inner veil called a guimpe. 5. ) Meissonnier receives the Franciscan crown rosary. 6.) The new novice embraces her abbess, Mother Marie Andre, P.C.P.A.

THE NEW Sister Augusta Mary of Our Lady of Grace hugs a friend.

SISTER AUGUSTA Mary poses for photos with other sisters.

“No one realizes more than women who are consecrated religious that we are signs of contradiction in a very contradictory world, but God gives meaning to our lives because he is the center of our lives,” Abbess Mother Marie Andre, P.C.P.A. recently said in an interview in The Catholic Sun.

Meissonnier first visited the community by accident. She was in Phoenix to visit an active religious congregation (one that does ministry outside the convent). Through a series of unexpected events, she stopped to pray with the Poor Clares. Stirred by the experience, she returned for several discernment retreats, all of which led her to the day in June when she took on new clothing, a new name, and a new way of life. =

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