pilgrimages

A Path for Meeting Mary, Jesus, and Other People

A Path for Meeting Mary, Jesus, and Other People

In the context of the 500th anniversary of the Virgin Mary’s apparitions to Juan Diego, the “Camino of Guadalupe” arises on the mountain Pico de Orizaba, Veracruz: an initiative of the Catholic Church at the service of the poorest and most marginalized.

 

The Pico de Orizaba, the highest summit in Mexico, symbolizes the most elevated destination one can aspire to: heaven. Making the pilgrimage of the Camino of Guadalupe is a metaphor for walking with determination toward eternal life, holding the Blessed Virgin Mary’s hand.

The Camino of Guadalupe offers a choice of itinerary: you can start from the municipal trailhead or from Great Macuilacatl and make the journey of either 29 or 22 kilometers to the Garden of Guadalupe, located in the village of El Minero. The intermediate stops established so far are San Martín, La Ciénega, Chilapa, and Las Trincheras.

 

We interviewed Fr. Evaristo Sada, LC, director of “Misión MasAlto,” a promoter of the Camino of Guadalupe.

 

What does the Camino of Guadalupe consist of?
The Camino of Guadalupe was inspired by the Intercontinental Guadalupana Novena, commemorating 500 years of the apparitions of Our Lady of Guadalupe to Juan Diego, which will be celebrated in 2031. 

 

It consists of a path that crosses villages on Pico de Orizaba, with one unique feature: every five or six kilometers, you arrive at a plaza, and on each plaza is a large, beautiful image of Our Lady of Guadalupe. One is sculpted out of stone; she appears in another with Juan Diego, and another is with St. John Paul II, and with St. Rafael Guízar y Valencia in another; there is one made of iron that is five meters high—but they all share the context of the place’s beauty. The Pico de Orizaba is an extraordinarily beautiful place, a mountainous area with flowers, birds, rivers, waterfalls, and extraordinarily beautiful people, too.

 

This is the atmosphere in which a pilgrim can climb the mountain. In Sacred Scripture, the mountain is the place of encounter with God. And this is what we seek: that as they climb the mountain, holding Mary’s hand, pilgrims encounter God in an atmosphere of beauty.

 

Why beauty? Because it is how the Blessed Virgin presented herself to Juan Diego. If you remember, Tepeyac Hill is an arid region full of cacti and boulders, but suddenly, Juan Diego finds that the rocks are diamonds, the cacti are roses, and he is surrounded by a sunrise and the songs of birds, as the Nicán Mopohua expresses. Juan Diego then realizes he is in a heavenly setting, introducing him to a supernatural environment. This is the same experience that pilgrims can have.

 

What is your suggestion?
One of the things we seek is what we could somehow call “the Guadalupan method.” Our Lord wanted the evangelization of Mexico to come through Our Lady of Guadalupe. Therefore, if God already chose this path for the evangelization of Mexico, then, as the saying goes, “look no further.” Our Lady of Guadalupe and the Events of Guadalupe have countless elements of a masterful pedagogy: the pedagogy of God and Mary. May these same methods of the Blessed Virgin be how the communities of Orizaba are evangelized and, even more, become the evangelizers of our time: farmers with incredible faith, from whom we learn much and who can be a wellspring of faith for all of Mexico.

 

How does the Camino de Guadalupe relate to love for one’s neighbor?
Another key element is that prayer and action, devotion and works of Christian charity, go together. The Catechism of the Catholic Church says that charity is the seal of authenticity of the prayer life: if you are filled with God’s love, then you overflow with love; if you don’t overflow with love, then it is doubtful that there is a strong interior life.

 

Here we seek very intentionally to take hold of a path of prayer, but also a path of works of mercy, just as the Blessed Virgin cared for Juan Diego’s uncle and resolved the conflicts between the Spanish and the indigenous Mexicans, as a mother who encourages mercy and charity. 

 

We are beginning a project to build 25 houses in a village called Chilapilla with the help of the Banorte Foundation. We are implementing a system of drinking water with the Rotoplas Foundation. We are building greenhouses to grow flowers because the people in the region are extraordinary at cultivating flowers; at the moment we run 83 greenhouses that belong to high-school girls and mothers, giving them the means to support themselves and their families; and other activities aim to improve the living conditions in the area.

 

In this way, we propose that the people who do the Camino indeed grow in their love for the Blessed Virgin, but growing in love for the Blessed Virgin, they also grow in love for Christ since Mary always brings us to Jesus. Our Lady of Guadalupe presents herself as the bearer of Christ: a pregnant woman who brings us the Savior and, at the same time, the works of mercy that are the seal of the authenticity of Christian life. Thus, we hope that anyone who does this Camino ends up loving Mary, Christ, and their neighbor much more.
  
Translated from the original Spanish first published here.

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Ultreia! Twelve Days and 250 Kilometers Toward Santiago and Lisbon with the Lay Consecrated Men

The word “Ultreia” is derived from the Latin word “ultra,” which means “beyond” or “farther.” In the Camino de Santiago context, “Ultreia” is a rallying cry of sorts for the pilgrims travelling along the Way of Saint James, a network of ancient pilgrimage routes leading to the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela .

Ultreia 2023 is a special Camino de Santiago experience designed by the Lay Consecrated Men of Regnum Christi for young men. Over twelve days and 250 kilometers, the participants have the opportunity to experience spiritual growth, contact with nature, sports, and friendship. The itinerary follows part of the Northern Way, the Lebaniego Way, and the Original Camino, including places such as Santander, Liébana, Mogrovejo, Lugo, and Santiago de Compostela. After reaching the goal of Santiago, those who wish can continue to Lisbon for World Youth Day.

Ultreia aims to be more than just a physical walk, encouraging spiritual growth and personal encounter with oneself, with other pilgrims, and with God. The Lay Consecrated Men of Regnum Christi are promoting fellowship, contemplation of nature, and prayer along the way. Ultreia offers the opportunity to follow in the footsteps of the Apostle James and to discover the value of community and friendship on this Way.

More than an adventure, it is a chance to reflect on one’s life, find spiritual answers, and deepen in one’s faith. Participation in World Youth Day also provides a global perspective and the possibility to connect with young Catholic from all over the world.

The Spain of Martyrs, Missionaries and Mystics

The Northern Way, also known as “The Spain of Martyrs,” consists of five stages along the northern coast, offering moments for fellowship, contemplation of nature, and reflection. The Lebaniego Way, “The Spain of Missionaries,” includes two stages through the Picos de Europa, where the pilgrims will venerate the oldest relic of the Holy Cross in existence, which is preserved in Liébana. The Original Camino, “The Spain of Mystics,” comprises four stages, bringing the pilgrims to the tomb of the Apostle James, the end of the pilgrimage.

However, the participants will also have the opportunity to join , sharing experiences with young people from all over the world and strengthening their faith through the organized events and the meeting with Pope Francis.

For more information, prices, and registration for the Ultreia pilgrimage, visit their or email [email protected].

 

Original article published in Spanish here.

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9th Annual Women’s Encounter in Magdala, Israel: “A Revelation of Woman as a Story, a Dynamism, A Vulnerability, a Force and a Spirit”

“This Encounter has revealed woman to me as a story, a dynamism, a vulnerability, a force and a spirit,” affirms Michelle Waters of Los Angeles, USA, describing the ninth Annual Women’s Encounter in Magdala, Israel.

From March 30 to April 1, 2023, about 60 women from different parts of the world gathered in Magdala to receive formation about the feminine genius.

Kathleen Nichols organized this encounter with philosophers, educators, religious leaders, businesspeople and musicians, to celebrate the feminine identity with conferences, interchange, music and prayer in the Judeo-Christian tradition, along the shore of the Sea of Galilee.

From the Holy Land, a crossroads of cultures and religions, the Magdalena Institute seeks to be a catalyst for the dignity of women. Uniting organizations and individuals to provide healing in areas of masculinity and femininity, it offers formation on women’s anthropology and sexual differences, and it contributes to the discussion on women’s role in monotheistic religions.

The first Women’s Encounter was a one-day event organized by Jennifer Ristine in 2015. Its objective was to promote women’s dignity within an interreligious atmosphere, fostering solidarity to recognize, affirm and support their initiatives as agents of positive change in society.

As the Magdalena Institute continues to develop, it works for recognition as a platform to promote women’s dignity. Marie-Claire Pret de Sète, of France, describes the recent encounter as “a transforming experience that will nourish my work and life for years to come. The Holy Spirit was with us the whole way!” She thanked the organizers, speakers and participants for taking on difficult topics in a respectful and constructive way.

The next annual encounter will take place March 21-23, 2024, preceded by a pilgrimage beginning March 13. Information will soon be available at https://www.magdala.org.

About Kathleen Nichols

In her 30 years as a Consecrated Women of Regnum Christi, Kathleen Nichols has directed and served in Catholic schools in Spain, Argentina, the United States and Italy. She currently resides in the Holy Land, on the Sea of Galilee, where she directs the Magdalena Institute, leads virtual pilgrimages and organizes events for guests at Hotel Magdala.

 

Link to original Spanish publication here.

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All Things Women Travels to the Holy Land

On a weekend getaway with friends in 2015, Eileen Wieck, a long-time member of Regnum Christi, had a vision of what she desired for women. Sitting among her close friends, she floated the idea of a large-scale way to help other women find a place to share their God-given gifts. She laid out an ambitious plan, but at that time, holding babies in arms, and just wanting a weekend of quiet, Eileen’s friends’ responses were less enthusiastic than she had been hoping! Fast forward to 2023, and each of those friends, along with countless others, now believe that God is doing something beautiful through this initiative called All Things Women.

 

All Things Women is an apostolate for women who want to discover their unique identity in Christ while building authentic sisterhood with others. A woman who is secure in Christ’s love is confident, mature, and focused on rising by lifting up others. All Things Women started in San Jose, California and offers retreats, formative events, classes, mentorship, spiritual direction, and pilgrimage experiences while creating a platform for each woman to share her gifts.

 

All Things Women was launched through prayer with an original core group of 11 women who decided to journey together through The Forty Weeks Program, started by Fr. Bill Watson, SJ, based on the spiritual practices of St. Ignatius of Loyola, and aimed at teaching the examen prayer through a week-by-week process over 40 weeks. Over the last four years, All Things Women has launched over 25 Forty Weeks groups of men and women throughout the United States and Canada.

 

In November of 2022, All Things Women organized a small group of women to journey to the Holy Land, including Magdala, the birthplace of the apostolate’s patroness, Mary Magdalene. This group of 14 women was led by a team consisting of Fr. Brian Shininger, LC; Fr. Thomas Vendetti, LC; Consecrated Woman of Regnum Christi, Lisa Small, and Eileen herself. The goal of the pilgrimage – inner healing for women.

 

“When I first envisioned the Holy Land pilgrimage, I wanted to create an experience based on Fr. Eamon’s Sunrise Stroll and Chat,” says Eileen, who was inspired by the daily series by Legionary priest, Fr. Eamon Kelly, filmed out of Magdala. “I felt the peace of the nature surrounding Galilee and Mount Arbel through Fr. Eamon’s daily posts, and it seemed so different from the feedback I’d received from returning pilgrims, who would often say that their Holy Land experience was saturated, packed, and even a bit overwhelming.” Imagining a different experience for herself and for future pilgrims, one of quieter days, sunrise strolls, and peaceful walks along Galilee, Eileen set out to create something new for pilgrims. Although there is plenty of work still to be done to continue to tailor the pilgrimage experience to the desired vision, the feedback from this first pilgrimage that to the Holy Land that All Things Women led was very positive.

 

“What a blessing to be called upon as chaplain for this pilgrimage and this group in particular,” shared Fr. Thomas Vendetti, LC, the current program director for Our Lady of Santa Clara Retreat Center in San Jose. “Most of us already shared a deep bond in the Lord, and to experience the Holy Land together just took us to another level and accomplished the goals of All Things Women: identity and friendship in Christ.”

 

Lisa Small, long-time member and advisor of All Things Women shared:

 

“All Things Women is a beautiful apostolate for women to enter into an encounter with others, God, and themselves, to discover their true beauty and vocation of becoming a gift of self to all. Our trip to the Holy Land impressed me deeply – the women were so in love with the Lord, who continually blessed us in many creative and personal ways.”

 

The Holy Land pilgrimage included a four-night stay at the Magdala guesthouse, which is run by Legionary priests Fr. Juan Solano, Fr. Eamon Kelly, and Fr. Guillermo Garcia, as well as Consecrated Woman of Regnum Christi, Kathleen Nichols, and David Delgado. The group also spent six nights at the Notre Dame Center in Jerusalem.

 

For many of the women on the pilgrimage, one of the favorite moments was visiting the place of the Visitation, where Mary was greeted by Elizabeth. “We were reminded that women are called to be sisters, to be Mary and Elizabeth for each other,” says Lisa, “and that we can indeed find women in our lives who receive us just as we are, who build us up, and strengthen us.”

 

Besides being the founder of All Things Women, Eileen is a spiritual director, having served in this role within Regnum Christi for 28 years. She is committed to helping women grow in both self-knowledge and understanding of their identity in Jesus Christ. This understanding, along with an ever-deepening and personal prayer life, is what Eileen feels will ultimately lead women to the freedom and harmony they seek. Originally from Alberta, Canada, Eileen now lives in the San Francisco Bay Area with her husband Vincent and her six beautiful children, where she enjoys spending time with her family in nature, having coffee with good friends, and gathering people together in ways that uplift and build community.

 

All Things Women works closely with Our Lady of Santa Clara Retreat Center in Cupertino, California for its retreats, and this partnership has been a great support to the apostolate. There are several upcoming events designed to nourish the body, mind, and soul:

 

The Restore our Hearts retreat will be held on March 17-19th, 2023. (This weekend retreat may be attended in an overnight, commuter, or virtual format.)

The Mother-Daughter Let Your Light Shine overnight retreat will be held on May 12-13th, 2023.

 

And save the date for upcoming events: the Replenish retreat on October 6-8, 2023 and the next Holy Land Pilgrimage in November of 2024! Registration for both events will be coming soon.

You can find out more about All Things Women online at www.allthingswomen.org or follow them @allthingswomen_ on Instagram. For more information, email [email protected].

 

You can also check out their beautiful photo gallery, including pictures of their Holy Land pilgrimage here!

 

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A Weekend in New Orleans with Lumen and St. Michael Special School

St. Michael Special School in New Orleans, Louisiana is dedicated to providing a unique Catholic education to students aged six through adulthood with mild to moderate intellectual and developmental disabilities, including autism, ADHD, developmental delay, Down Syndrome, traumatic brain injury, multiple disabilities, and other health impairments. Opened in 1965, the school is a leader in Special Education, providing integral formation of the whole child – a balance of academic, physical, emotional, and spiritual development that helps all students grow in their faith and reach their full potential. Besides daily prayer and religion classes, students attend weekly Mass in the St. Teresa Chapel, and also have the opportunity to prepare for and receive their sacraments during the school year.

As Head of School since July of 2020, Dr. Cissy Laforge is responsible for everything from facilities to finance and development, as well as daily contact with staff and faculty. And she is particularly passionate about Catholic education and the children she serves. “The students, hands down, are my favourite thing about working at St. Michael,” says Cissy. “They are a true reflection of all things good in our world – they are joyful, kind, authentic, sincere, sweet, loving… you name any good quality, and they have an abundance of it!”

And at St. Michael, it’s these students who set the tone: one of complete joy. Everything is celebrated with delight and gratitude: the new vending machine has its own ribbon-cutting, and the baseball pep rally ends with a jubilant rendition of “Take Me Out to the Ballgame.” Cissy shares one particular story that illustrates the attitude encouragement and joy that reigns at St. Michael School:

“At St. Michael, we celebrate small things and big things – we enjoy each other and life in general, and the kids delight in each other’s accomplishments. For example, I was in a class one day and the teacher asked a question, and student after student did not have the correct answer. When one student answered correctly, his friend turned to him and said, ‘You did great! I am so proud of you for knowing that!’ They were 16-year-old boys!”

St. Michael Special School is a unique educational experience in a world where inclusion of those with developmental disabilities into a normative setting is the trend. Instead, St. Michael takes the opposite approach – students are encouraged to be front and center in a space designed especially for them. This unique methodology is a response to the needs of the families who, Cissy explains, come to the school often in a state of hopelessness, and even despair. “These families have typically experienced so much trauma – their kids have been neglected or pushed to the side. St. Michael is a community: a learning community for the students, and a welcoming community for the parents. Our students experience everything they would in a typical school, but here, they are encouraged to hold all the positions – they are student council reps, on teams, in clubs, and on stage. We help our students become as independent as possible and build their confidence so that they can become the people God intended them to be.”

St. Michael Special School only charges a fraction of what it costs to educate a child. Each student’s tuition is subsidized about $10,000 per year, and the school fundraises 1.6-1.8 million dollars a year just to keep the facility running and the staff and faculty paid.

This is where the Legionary priests and Lumen members and family from a variety of communities come in. Every year for the past ten years, the group travels to New Orleans to take on projects on campus that the school has neither the funds nor the personnel to complete. This year, at the end of October, 15 missionaries from Calgary joined 20 others from Chicago, Tulsa, and Washington, DC, including Legionary priests Fr. Michael Sliney, Fr. Michael O’Connor, and Fr. Daniel Wilson, organized by Lumen member, Kent Wang.

The weekend mission began with dinner on Thursday night. Organizers always order much more food than is necessary, so that there is plenty left over to be boxed up as meals and distributed immediately to people experiencing homelessness in New Orleans’ French Quarter. (You can watch Lumen family member, Daisy Overmyer, explain the supper mission on YouTube here.) Friday began at St. Michael Special School with Mass. This was followed by a tour of the school, including the bedroom where St. Teresa of Calcutta herself spent the night when the school was still a convent! Then, the dads got to work to complete the projects the school had lined up for them, while the daughters spent the day in the classrooms and on the playground with the students. In the evening, the school families joined the group for jambalaya that they had prepared and both the school parents and missionaries shared testimonies about their experiences at St. Michael School, which is always one of the highlights of the weekend, says Cissy: “The dinner and conversation is a time for our families to enjoy the company and interacting with people who are genuinely interested in their stories – the Lumen families talk about their experiences with our students, and the St. Michael families talk about life with intellectual and developmental disabilities and what the school means to them. It’s beautiful because people talk from their hearts.”

On Saturday, the missionaries partnered with the New Orleans Mission to bring a pop-up grocery store to an impoverished neighborhood, setting up tables with 10,000 lbs of groceries to come and get for free. The daughters accompanied the shoppers, and the dads and daughters even helped the residents carry their groceries home. When it suddenly started raining and the line-up of customers thinned, the group packed up the groceries and went door-to-door delivering them to the housing projects. The rain ended up being a blessing, as the missionaries were able to visit and deliver food to people who were shut-ins and too elderly or disabled to make it out to the pop-up grocery store. Lumen member, Fouad Arbid, explains the “pop up” grocery market here

The weekend mission ended with a closing Mass and a celebration Dinner Cruise on a steamboat.

After ten years, the students and staff of St. Michael Special School know Lumen well, and the students love having the group back year after year, and the group is already planning to go back October 19-22, 2023. To find out more about St. Michael Special School, visit their website at St. Michael Special School – New Orleans, LA. St. Michael depends on the generosity of others to fulfill its mission: you can give to St. Michael Special School through their website link found here .

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Out of Your Comfort Zone With God

Interested in seeking God at the end of the world? A group of young adults made their way to the Kyrgyz high mountains with “Adventure & Faith” in August. Fr. Clemens Gutberlet, LC, shares what they found.

With a flight via Istanbul to Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan this past August, the eleven participants began their journey into adventure. The first leg of the journey was a five-hour minibus ride to Karakol near Lake Issyk-Kul, one of the largest lakes in the world. But why go through all of this?

The best version of yourself

The idea behind Regnum Christi’s apostolic project “Adventure & Faith” is to inspire and empower people through adventures and community experiences in nature to become the “best version” of themselves and, motivated by these experiences, to have a positive impact on their environment in everyday life. Once outside their usual environment and everyday worries, the participants are be able to discover completely new sides of themselves. Challenges and unexpected situations lead them to cross boundaries, and they experience what it means to grow in inner freedom.

Fr. Clemens Gutberlet, LC, accompanied the participants as chaplain, and shares the planning, the challenges, and moving moments.

***

Fr. Clemens, this year you were with “Adventure & Faith” in the high mountains of Kyrgyzstan. Why did you make such a long journey to seek God? Is God only to be found beyond our borders (comfort zones)?

Fr. Clemens: Of course God is very close to us and does not need to be sought in the distance, but it is about experiencing an adventure, treading on unknown terrain, even untouched land. This creates a special ambience and openness to God. Going to our limits makes us realize our neediness, our dependence on the group and, ultimately, on God. The request for the blessing for the day then comes naturally. I myself was surprised where I found limits of my comfort zones everywhere, not so much in the physical sense, but in the interpersonal and, for example, in the dependence on my will. Of course, God is not only where we are uncomfortable, but the willingness to carry one’s own cross means that we are detached from life,  and more open to let God’s love lead us out of our comfort zone and thus become like Jesus.

How did you plan the route? What did you have to take into consideration?

Fr. Clemens: One of our participants went to Kyrgyzstan last year to explore the local conditions and to better plan routes. We wanted to hike from Karakol for six days in the high mountains and spend two and a half days on horseback. Due to adverse circumstances, we shortened the high-altitude tour to five days. From Lake Issyk-Kul, which is located at 1800m above sea level near Karakol, several parallel valleys go south into the Kyrgyz high mountains. We started the expedition in the valley of the Turgan Aksuu glacier and crossed three mountain ranges from east to west. In this way, each of the valleys could serve as a possible route. We searched online maps for feasible transitions over the mountain ridges that were not marked as paths, but also noted down already known paths for safety. On the second day, for example, we decided to resort to one that was well known because we considered the climb to the ridge over a scree field to be too dangerous.

How did you take care of yourself in the high mountains?

Fr. Clemens:  We carried the food for the hike with us, about 4.5 kg of dry food per person, everything packed in small plastic bags beforehand: an oatmeal mixture with milk powder, which we mixed with hot water for breakfast, a bag of instant coffee, two sausages and a few cookies for lunch. For dinner, a ready-made pasta dish to boil. We had four small gas cookers, with which we cooked the hot water and pasta for everyone every day. In addition, one energy bar per person per day. We also had tents, sleeping bags and the most necessary clothes. The participants’ backpacks weighed on average 17 to over 20 kg.

What was the daily routine like?

Fr. Clemens: We got up at dawn, and our tents and any objects left outside were white from hoarfrost in the morning. The actual time we were moving averaged in total only three hours a day, but we usually spent six to seven total hours on a hike, often taking breaks because of the effort expended due to the weight of our backpacks and the thin air. In the high mountains we moved in the open terrain, mostly without paths, between 2,600m – 3,700m above sea level. During the first break on the daily hike we took time for a daily liturgy. We celebrated Holy Mass daily in the open air, spontaneously and in a beautiful place, usually a large stone served as an altar.

How many kilometers did you cover?

Fr. Clemens: With the minibus we covered a total of about 1,000 km, on foot only 56 km but at 3,200 meters in altitude, on horseback we travelled 52 km at 1,800 meters in altitude.

What experiences can you share with those who weren’t there?

Fr. Clemens: In the group we shared our experiences several times along the way: highs, lows and “God moments.” A special moment was when we erected a cross made of stones on the ground at the highest point of the excursion (3700m). In a moment of prayer, I said a prayer of blessing for the Muslim country and its people, a moment that deeply moved many in the group. The prayer flowed through me, almost without my intervention. I felt God using me as an instrument. Afterwards we held the liturgy for the day at the same place. I couldn’t remember the thoughts I had prepared, but God animated me with the thought “my grace is enough for you.”

About “Adventure & Faith”

It all started in 2015 in Schladming (Austria). The website recounts, “Somehow we knew something new was emerging today.”  The team, which in addition to Father George Elsbett, LC, includes men and women with very different biographies and extraordinary professional experience. “We all shared the intuition that having shared challenging experiences, shared adventures in nature, have enormous potential. They can be a kind of gymnasium to prepare for what Pope Francis had in mind when he once said: ‘Authentic faith always brings with it the desire to change the world.’ We were also aware that this had to do with the willingness to leave one’s comfort zone.” Adventure & Faith began as a kind of “start-up experiment” and considers the Regnum Christi John Paul II Center in Vienna, Austria, its base. The program offers challenging and intensive events for women and men several times a year.

► Information about “Adventure & Faith”  ( in German) can be found on the website here.

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The Magdala Experience: Providing the Time, Space, and Silence to Encounter Christ on the Shores of Galilee

Three years ago, when Consecrated Woman of Regnum Christi, Kathleen Nichols, began her six-year assignment in Magdala – the hometown of Mary Magdalene on the shores of Galilee – she had no idea of the immense challenges and changes that she was about to encounter. But it’s no wonder, since Magdala itself is a place founded on God’s mysterious and surprising generosity.

First Century Synagogue with the Magdala stone center-right in site.

In 2009, construction began on a retreat center under the direction of Fr. Juan María Solana, LC. As the papal appointee in charge of Notre Dame of Jerusalem Center – a pilgrimage guest house in the heart of Jerusalem entrusted to the care of the Legionaries of Christ by the Holy See- Fr. Juan felt called to build a space that would provide comfortable accommodations to pilgrims seeking an encounter with Christ in the place where he had walked, taught, and preached in the synagogues, right there in Galilee. As the workers began digging the foundation for the retreat house, they unexpectedly unearthed a first century synagogue and, in the center of it, the Magdala Stone, one of the most significant recent archaeological finds in the Holy Land. Although only 10% of the area has been excavated to date, archaeologists have already discovered an entire first century Jewish town, complete with a marketplace, baths, villas and houses, and fishermen’s work area, warehouse, and wharf. Ten years after construction began, in November of 2019, the Magdala guest house was inaugurated.

However, the guest house hadn’t been open long before the pandemic forced it to close its doors to guests. Without the ability to host guests in person, Fr. Juan and Consecrated Woman of Regnum Christi, Paola Trevino, came up with the idea of offering virtual pilgrimages that would bring the richness of a pilgrimage experience to those who could not travel to the Holy Land. With the help of many people, including Adam Pangan, a volunteer from the United States, the Magdala team began offering virtual pilgrimages, Fr. Juan conducting them in Spanish and Kathleen in English. Every day, online pilgrims received virtual visits to significant holy sites, including daily meditations and supplemental material helpful for prayer.

Although the pandemic forced pilgrimages to move online, it also provided a unique opportunity for Kathleen and the Magdala team, which consists of several Legionary priests, Consecrated Women, and lay people, to experience these sites in a way they normally wouldn’t be afforded, as Kathleen explains:

“We have been so blessed to be able to have visited, and continue to visit, so many different sites all around the Holy Land, but we were also able to see them in a time when everything else was closed. We had to ask permission to have the sites opened so that we could come in and film, so places like the Holy Sepulchre, which is normally packed, were completely quiet. In the grotto in Bethlehem, in the church, in the shepherds’ field, or here on the Sea of Galilee, there was no one, and the only thing you heard was nature. It was unreal, and such a golden opportunity – it was incredible the things we were able to do and see.”

For many people, particularly at the beginning of the pandemic when most were locked down in their homes, the virtual pilgrimages, still available on YouTube, were a lifeline that provided spiritual nourishment in a time when the sacraments were inaccessible. One couple who had not been practising their faith for many years but found themselves suddenly experiencing loneliness and anxiety were encouraged by their daughter to attend the virtual pilgrimage. Although it was their first time accessing YouTube and social media, the couple devoured the virtual resources, including all the supplementary material, and have returned with gusto to the sacraments. “We’re not just Holy Land pilgrims, or virtual pilgrims,” say the couple, “we are pilgrims making our way to the Lord.”

Sea of Galilee

Halfway through her six-year position at Magdala, and especially now that pilgrims have begun to return in-person, Kathleen has begun a new role focused on the Magdala Experience for guests. In this role, she is responsible for facilitating unique experiences for overnight guests of the retreat house, all designed to provide the time, the space, and the silence to fully encounter Christ in Galilee. Guests might choose a “Sunrise Stroll and Chat” experience with Fr. Eamon Kelly, LC, as the sun rises above the Sea of Galilee, or participate in the “Morning Catch” to learn how first century fishermen cast their nets while reading about their encounters with Jesus in the Gospel. The “Walking on Water” tour has guests paddleboarding at sunrise out from the port in Magdala and sometimes all the way to Capernaum, stopping at times to rest with their feet in the water and listen to scripture about the Sea of Galilee. Guests can also climb the nearby Mount Arbel for the “Sunrise Ascent”, to a place where Jesus could have gone and prayed at night. Other opportunities include going out onto the sea in a small fishing boat, similar to the ones the apostles would have used, to celebrate Mass or join together in a time of Eucharistic adoration. Kathleen also helps as a spiritual leader for small groups of guests staying at Magdala, so they can enjoy prayerful visits to important holy sites in Galilee such as Nazareth, Capernaum, or Kursi, where Jesus cured the man afflicted with a legion of demons. Depending on the time of year, guests can go on one of the “Wildflower Photography Hikes” (in mid-February to mid-April), go birding in the Hula Valley during the migratory seasons (in late fall and early spring), help in the archaeological dig (in summer), or participate in the Magdala olive or date harvests (in August and November).

It is no surprise at a pilgrimage site devoted to one of the most important women in the Gospel that the women who visit would also have a special place in this holy space. The church on site, fittingly named Duc in Altum (Latin for “put out into the deep”) consists of six chapels, three of which highlight images of Gospel women: Mary Magdalene, the hemorrhaging woman, and the daughter of Jairus. (The main chapel aptly features a boat-shaped altar.) In the Women’s Atrium, there is a column for each of the female followers of Jesus who, as it says in the Gospel, “served him from their substance.” Starting in mid 2023, to honor the special role that women play in the Church, each woman who comes to Magdala will receive a small vial of olive oil from the trees in Magdala mixed with nard, to symbolize the oil Mary Magdalene took to the tomb to anoint Jesus’ body. All the guests to Magdala will also receive a small bottle that they can fill with water, sand, or small shells from the Sea of Galilee as a holy souvenir.

This is just the beginning of the unique activities that will be offered beginning this fall as part of the Magdala Experience. But for Kathleen, living and working right on the shores of Galilee is a blessed experience all on its own. “I am right here, in the first century hometown of Mary Magdalene, where Jesus walked with her and the apostles. I can just walk outside through ancient Magdala and look at the synagogue that our Lord preached in. I can walk right down to the beach and wade in the Sea of Galilee. What an extraordinary blessing!”

To find out more about the Magdala guest house and grounds, visit their website at magdala.org. You can also read some of Kathleen’s blogs about Magdala on the website, or access all past virtual pilgrimages and their supplemental material for free. You can follow Magdala Media productions at Experience Magdala on YouTube, and follow the activities at Experience Magdala on Facebook and Instagram. If you would like to help promote the Magdala pilgrimage ministry, consider making an online donation or sponsoring a tile in the Magdala Mosaic, or sign up to become a full-time volunteer for one month or longer!

The Magdala Experience: Providing the Time, Space, and Silence to Encounter Christ on the Shores of Galilee Read More »

On the “Camino de Jésus” Pilgrims Encounter the Living God

Fr. Arturo Díaz, LC organizes the “Camino de Jésus,” or in English, the “Way of Jesus” every year, a pilgrimage through the Holy Land that passes through the principal sites where Jesus preached, beginning in Cana of Galilee and ending in Jerusalem. This year, the pilgrimage will begin Sunday, April 3rd and will end on Monday of Holy Week April 11th. María Linares from Spain has made this pilgrimage on several occasions and wanted to share her experience in order to make know this initiative. In her testimony she tells us that she was able to discover “a living God” in the Holy Land.

Although with time Maria has discovered that God is in the tabernacle, in adoration, living next door, “you can’t forget your first love.” For her, the Way of Jesus contains “all the ingredients to produce this profound encounter.” “It is a group of people, some of whom you know and others that you see for the first time, who come together to walk the same paths and places where Jesus walked, with boots and a backpack with everything you need. And accompanied by Fr. Arturo Diaz, LC,” she explained.

For Maria, the scene could not be better – the lake of Tiberias, the Sea of Galilee, the desert, Jerusalem, Bethlehem, Nazareth. Although they are places that you have heard of your whole life and where you know that Jesus lived, when you live “a mass in the middle of the desert or on a boat in the midst of the lake, when you see the sunrise during a meditation on the shores of the Sea of Galilee, when you have adoration in Nazareth or when you confess your sins and your sins are forgiven by the mercy of God,” there is nothing left to do but “fall to your knees at his feet.”

She has also been able to see this same experience with other people who have accompanied her on this pilgrimage. “Through them I saw that God was became more and more alive, and I could see how God acted in each one of them,” she explained. Maria especially remembers one pilgrim who didn’t want to go on the trip and that, after two days on the pilgrimage, everyone witnessed the miracle that took place in his life and the radical change that occurred: “I was a witness with my own eyes what God was able to do. It’s something that I return to every time my faith becomes weak,” she said.

“I think that every Christian should have the opportunity to travel to the Holy Land. I would almost say they have the duty, if they can, to seek out this opportunity,” she pointed out in her testimony. On this Way, Maria has recognized that “you live the land, you walk on it and feel it with Jesus. Though it’s possible not to visit all the holy places, the ones that you do, you live intensely.

For Maria, the high point of this way was arriving to Jerusalem.  “It is incredible to arrive singing, ‘Our feet are crossing your threshold, Jerusalem,’ and to have the chance to spend a few hours in the Holy Sepulchre alone with just a small group of people,” she said. It is also a privilege to stand quietly in the empty tomb, the place where they laid the body of Jesus. “It is amazing to be aware that it really is empty, because he truly rose and is alive!”

Translated from Spanish Original

 

On the “Camino de Jésus” Pilgrims Encounter the Living God Read More »

Matt Maher, Sr. Miriam Hideland and Others Collaborate with Magdala in New Online Pilgrimage of Healing & Hope

Magdala is a unique Holy Land site on the shores of the Sea of Galilee.

Magdala invites you to join us on our third virtual pilgrimage through the Holy Land this October, themed, “A Virtual Pilgrimage of Healing & Hope with Mary Magdalene.” We will begin in Galilee, in the hometown of Mary Magdalene, whose personal loss and suffering were transformed by Jesus into wholeness. She will “accompany us” throughout the month of October as we travel around the Holy Land.
This Virtual Pilgrimage of Healing and Hope will be led by Kathleen Nichols, Magdala Inspiration Director and Consecrated Woman of Regnum Christi. On site visits will be transmitted Mondays through Saturdays at 3:30pm Israel Daylight Time (1:30pm London, 8:30am New York, 5:30am Los Angeles, 8:30pm Manila, 10:30pm Melbourne, 12:30 midnight Auckland). Kathleen has directed two previous virtual pilgrimages through the Holy Land, available here. Father Eamon Kelly, LC, Chaplain at Magdala, will be offering a Daily Eucharistic directly after Kathleen’s visits at 4:00PM IDT.

 

Dr. Bob Schuchts and Sister Miriam James Hideland of the John Paul II Healing Center will be accompanying us.  Matt Maher will be providing the musical content for our pilgrimage, along with songs by the RC Music Collective and Consecrated Woman Jill Swallow. The unique artwork of Chilean artist Daniel Cariola will be featured as well.

Magdala will lead you on this pilgrimage through the entire month of October, beginning September 28th and finishing November 2nd.

Please share this opportunity to encounter healing with your friends and family. Join this great crowd that followed Jesus through Galilee. Show Him your wounds, and witness His healing.

Register here and allow Mary Magdalene to take you by the hand as we embark on this virtual Holy Land pilgrimage.

Providentially uncovered in 2009, archaeological discoveries indicate the presence of an observant Jewish Community, as is evidenced in its First Century Synagogue. Magdala was an active fishing city where Jesus likely taught the multitudes and healed the afflicted including a woman who made her hometown famous, Mary Magdalene.

“Jesus went throughout Galilee, teaching in their synagogues, proclaiming the good news of the kingdom, and healing every disease and sickness among the people… people brought to him all who were ill with various diseases, those suffering severe pain, the demon-possessed, those having seizures, and the paralyzed; and he healed them.” (Matthew 4:23-24)

With only 10% of the archaeology uncovered, the hometown of Mary Magdalene already provides pilgrims an authentic location to walk where Jesus taught and to connect with the first century life of Jesus’ followers. Learn more about Magdala here.

Matt Maher, Sr. Miriam Hideland and Others Collaborate with Magdala in New Online Pilgrimage of Healing & Hope Read More »

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Alex Kucera

Atlanta

Alex Kucera has lived in Atlanta, GA, for the last 46 years. He is one of 9 children, married to his wife Karmen, and has 3 girls, one grandson, and a granddaughter on the way. Alex joined Regnum Christi in 2007. Out of the gate, he joined the Helping Hands Medical Missions apostolate and is still participating today with the Ghana Friendship Mission.

In 2009, Alex was asked to be the Atlanta RC Renewal Coordinator for the Atlanta Locality to help the RC members with the RC renewal process. Alex became a Group Leader in 2012 for four of the Atlanta Men’s Section Teams and continues today. Running in parallel, in 2013, Alex became a Team Leader and shepherded a large team of good men.

Alex was honored to be the Atlanta Mission Coordinator between 2010 to 2022 (12 years), coordinating 5-8 Holy Week Mission teams across Georgia. He also created and coordinated missions at a parish in Athens, GA, for 9 years. Alex continues to coordinate Holy Week Missions, Advent Missions, and Monthly missions at Good Shepherd Catholic Church in Cumming, GA.

From 2016 to 2022, Alex also served as the Men’s Section Assistant in Atlanta. He loved working with the Men’s Section Director, the Legionaries, Consecrated, and Women’s Section leadership teams.

Alex is exceptionally grateful to the Legionaries, Consecrated, and many RC members who he’s journeyed shoulder to shoulder, growing his relationship with Christ and others along the way. He knows that there is only one way, that’s Christ’s Way, with others!