Image of the vision of St. Dominic of all the Dominicans in heaven under Our Lady's mantle.

Prayer Dedicating the Order of Preachers to the Blessed Virgin Mary

Image of the vision of St. Dominic of all the Dominicans in heaven under Our Lady's mantle.

Each year on May 8th we celebrate the Patronage of the Blessed Virgin Mary over the Dominican Order. This is the consecration we recite in union with all Dominicans today:

Virgin Mother Mary, with trust we approach you. We, your preachers, fly to you who believed in the words sent from heaven and pondered them in your heart. We stand close around you, who are always present to the gathering of apostles.

In you the Word was made flesh, that same Word which we receive, contemplate, praise together and preach. Therefore, under your guidance we today devote ourselves anew to the ministry of the Word. Furthermore, we declare to you that, hearing with you the Word within ourselves and anointed by the Spirit, whose sacred vessel you preeminently are, we are consecrated in the name of Jesus Christ to the evangelization of the world.

With the eyes of your heart enlightened, you understood the mystery of the Word. Through you we, too, are able to perceive the presence of that same Word in the history of our time, so that we may finally contemplate him face to face.

Through you the Father sent his Son into the world that he might save it. Through you we will be powerful in the sight of your people, becoming witnesses of that truth which frees and of that love which unites.

To this place we have brought our needs and here we ponder them. Do you, Mother, give us strength and preserve the harmony of our family, so that what was begun by our profession may be brought to completion by our love for one another, for the salvation of the world and to the praise and glory of God. Amen.

Image of angel statue with pastel amaryllis flowers

Easter Greetings

Image of angel statue with pastel amaryllis flowers

Joyful Paschal greetings in our Risen Lord! During the forty days of Lenten prayer and preparation, growing more somber and expectant in Passiontide and Holy Week, we have journeyed with Our Lord towards the Paschal Mystery of His Death and Resurrection. Through our solemn liturgies we have entered into this mystery, at the heart of our life as Christians and especially as cloistered contemplative nuns. “For you have died, and your life is hidden with Christ in God” (Col. 3:3). “I came that they may have life, and have it to the full” (John 10:10).

We are grateful for the generosity of our friends and benefactors, and we keep all the intentions entrusted to us in our prayers before Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament through our prayer of the Rosary. During this Paschal Season, we pray that every blessing be yours in our Risen Lord.

Mother Mary of the Sacred Heart, O.P. and Sisters

Vocation Retreat – June 9-11, 2023

Did you miss this year’s retreat?  Consider coming for an individual retreat, or sign up for our bimonthly Vocation Newsletter to learn more about our Dominican life and be informed of upcoming vocation events.

Could God be calling you to become a cloistered Dominican nun?  We give ourselves to Jesus through Mary in a consecrated life of community, liturgical and private prayer, study and work, animated by zeal for souls, at the heart of the holy preaching of the Dominican Order.  Our monastery keeps Eucharistic Adoration and Perpetual Rosary, and a love for our tradition of Dominican chant in Latin. As Dominican nuns, we are devoted to keeping the Word of God in our hearts so it may bear fruit for the salvation of souls.

Who can attend: 

  • Are you a single, practicing Catholic young woman between the ages of 16 (or junior in high school) and 26? (Must be of good physical and psychological health and also a US citizen.)
  • Are you considering a religious vocation?  (Are you drawn to a life dedicated totally to God and the salvation of souls?  Are you asking, “O Lord, how can I dedicate my life to You?”)
  • Would you like to learn more about our community in particular?

When and Where:

The Vocation Retreat will run from 4:30 pm on Friday, June 9, through 11:00 am on Sunday, June 11 (Central Time) at the Dominican Monastery of St. Jude (143 County Road 20 East, Marbury, Alabama [click for map]). We can also arrange transportation from the Birmingham or Montgomery airports if needed. Deadline: Please contact us by June 1, 2023, or earlier if possible so we can plan ahead!

What:

During the retreat weekend, we try to provide an initial taste of our Dominican monastic life:

  • Monastic: Stay outside the cloister in the monastery guest house, and experience reading at meals and some other monastic practices.
  • Contemplative: Enjoy time for silent prayer, reflection, and Eucharistic Adoration.
  • Liturgical: Participate in the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, and join in chanting the Divine Office (Liturgy of the Hours) in Latin and English.
  • Marian: Take a “Half-Hour of Guard” in our daily vigil of Eucharistic Adoration and Perpetual Rosary.
  • Study of Sacred Truth: Hear conferences by a Dominican friar and the Dominican nuns on the religious life, discerning one’s vocation, and the Dominican monastic life.
  • Community: Enjoy recreation with the other retreatants, and an evening of Vocation Stories with the nuns.
  • At the Heart of the Holy Preaching: Catch a glimpse of what it means for the nuns to offer God their life of prayer for the salvation of souls, at the heart of the mystery of Christ, at the heart of the local and universal Church, and at the heart of the apostolic preaching of the Dominican Order, witnessed to especially at this retreat by the presence of one of our Dominican friars.

The retreat also includes an opportunity for sacramental Confession, and a chance to be enrolled in the Angelic Warfare Confraternity (dedicated to chastity according to one’s state in life).

If you know someone who may be interested, please share! May Our Lady guide you and keep you!


How to get to know our community better right now:

Look over our Daily Life page and explore our website.
Listen to us sing Dominican chant; or learn about the Stages in Formation in becoming a Dominican Nun.
Read our fictional Vocation Letters Series.

Collection of Lenten Posts

As we observe this holy season, here are some of our posts from past years concerning Lenten prayers, practices, and devotions.  During Lent we intensify the work of conversion, metanoia, turning from self to God, which is common to all the seasons of our monastic life.  We pray that you receive many graces during this Lent.

Parce Days: Making Reparation — on the three days before Lent

St. Dominic prays at the foot of the Cross with his arms like a crossThe three days leading up to Ash Wednesday we call the “Parce Days” (pronounced PAR-chay, for those unfamiliar with ecclesiastical Latin). These are days are observed as days of special penance in reparation for the excesses of Mardi Gras, going back to at least the 13th century. During the Parce Days, we pray special prayers of reparation, most notably by dropping our other employments and …
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Reparation Prayer for Lent — prayed daily at 3:00 pm

Painting by Fra Angelico, Crucifixion with St. DominicI adore You, O loving Savior, Jesus Christ, Who died on the Cross for me. I very humbly thank You and ask pardon for all my sins through the merits of Your Passion and Death. I ask the grace to live and to die holily. Courage, my soul, time in flying, death will come, eternity is nigh. O my God, grant me the favor to pass this hour and every one of my life as …
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Video: Canticle of the Passion — a devotion for the Fridays of Lent

The Canticle of the Passion, or the “Passion Verses” as we say, is a specifically Dominican devotion traditionally sung on the Fridays of Lent.  A compilation of texts from Sacred Scripture relating to the sufferings of Our Lord Jesus Christ, this devotion was revealed by the Blessed Virgin Mary to St. Catherine de Ricci, a cloistered Dominican Tertiary of the 16th century, after the Saint experienced the first of her many ecstasies sharing Our Lord’s Passion. “Our Lady is said to have desired … Continue reading

Vocation Letters: Living Lent — a glimpse of our life

Vocation Letters cartoon of Dominican nuns living the liturgical season of Lent with their traditional practices of receiving Ashes, praying before Jesus on the cross, and covering statues with purple drapes for Passiontide.

Dear Mom and Dad, Prayerful Lenten greetings from Marbury–as it will certainly be Lent by the time you receive this! Since we don’t receive social visits during Lent, you’ve never been able to get a glimpse of how we live out this season at the monastery. I would love to share it with you—I’ve been looking forward to Lent since the end of the Christmas season. . .Continue reading →

Vocation Letters cartoon showing Dominican nuns with a secret project and a puzzled postulant.

Vocation Letters: A Surprising Tradition

This letter to her sister continues our Vocation Letter series on our Dominican monastic life by our fictional novice, Sister Mary Rosaria.

Vocation Letters cartoon showing Dominican nuns with a secret project and a puzzled postulant.

Ave + Maria

Dear Tessa,

Happy (belated) feast of the Presentation and Purification! This feast is traditionally the end of the extended Christmas season. Yesterday we said goodbye to all the poinsettias decorating the church, and brought in all the candles to be blessed during the special procession that begins Mass. This feast is traditionally called “Candlemas” for that reason, as we celebrate Jesus’ Presentation in the Temple, and Simeon calling Him the “light of the nations.”

During Advent and Christmas this year, I was thinking about how dear to our hearts all our community traditions are. We have a new postulant this year, and so all our celebrations are even more festive and exciting, since one of our favorite traditions is actually surprising new members! I remember the first year I came, whenever during recreation one of the Sisters would be delighting in telling some story from past years, if she came too close to revealing some as-yet-secret future tradition, everyone else would jump in, “SShhh!!” with knowing looks to remind her not to let the secret slip before its time. Now, as a Sister in temporary vows, I often get to be one of the ones who is “in on the secret” and helps arrange things ahead of time. Our Sister Postulant really enjoys being surprised, too, which makes it all the more delightful!

Maybe you wouldn’t guess what is one of the biggest surprises in the monastery. It’s not that one thing (ssshh!!) that we do for that special feast day, or how we (Sshh!!) prepare for that (SSHH!) other special occasion which I can’t mention!

No, truly Tessa, it’s Jesus, and His deep and personal love for me in particular. How could this be a surprise, since after all, didn’t I enter the monastery because I loved Him and was responding to His call? But there it is. Maybe this never ceases to amaze: His love, His incredible love!

May Jesus also surprise you with His love!

With love and prayers in Our Lady,

Sister Mary Rosaria, O.P.

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Photo of sun breaking through clouds over monastery chapel steeple.

Weather Update: All Is Well

For all our friends and family who have been watching the weather and worrying about us, thank you for your prayers! We received the tornado warnings and took shelter, but the tornado passed us by when it went through Marbury — how close we don’t know yet, but we are grateful to be spared and continue to pray for those affected by this storm. Thank you again!

Photo of sun breaking through clouds over monastery chapel steeple.
Christmas Newsletter 2022 Header, with photos of Christmas altar, Mother and Child, and Christmas lights.

Christmas Newsletter 2022

Christmas Newsletter 2022 Header, with photos of Christmas altar, Mother and Child, and Christmas lights.

Throughout the beautiful days of the Alabama autumn, we have celebrated many solemn liturgical feastdays, planted pansies, visited with family members coming from afar, and carried on the many duties of our daily life.  If you were listening hard enough, off and on, you would hear a whirring and snipping sound coming from the sewing room.  There, in the glow of the fluorescent lights, the Sisters have been slowly but consistently at work sewing new habits.  The Dominican habit that we wear marks us as daughters of St. Dominic and spouses of Christ.  As one Sisters loves to say, “This is our wedding dress that we get to wear every day of our lives!”  When the final seam has been sewn and the final thread snipped, we will gather the new habits to be washed, ironed and made ready to wear for Christmas. “Behold, the Bridegroom cometh!”

Photo of Dominican nun sewing.

On June 10th, we had the great joy of celebrating the Diamond Jubilee of the entrance anniversary of our Sister Mary Joseph of the Infant Jesus, O.P.  Sister grew up in Nashville, the “Athens of the South,” and was taught by the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament, founded by St. Katharine Drexel.  Sister remembers how she and the other school children wrote a letter each year, thanking Mother Katharine for the wonderful education they were receiving.  She also remembers gathering the other little girls at recess time to “play nun.”  After graduating from high school, she won a full scholarship to Xavier University, but even the lively college social life could not drown out the Lord’s invitation to be His spouse.  She stopped by our recently founded monastery in Marbury on her spring break, and was immediately charmed by the holiness and gentleness of our Foundress, Mother Mary Dominic of the Rosary.  Sister returned to enter on June 10th, 1947, and over the past 75 years has served the community in many capacities: as chantress, bursar, novice mistress, photographer, plumber, electrician helper, and as prioress and sub-prioress. Her gracious and lovely notes are legendary.

Photo of Sister Mary Joseph celebrating her 75th Jubilee.

Sister’s cousin, Bishop Joseph Perry, and her sister and niece came to offer Sister their congratulations on July 22nd.  In his homily for the Jubilee Mass, Bishop Perry reflected on how beautiful and honorable is Sister’s life-long fidelity to her vocation.  Sister Mary Joseph is a wonderful example to each of us of the value and joy of a life dedicated unreservedly to God. (You can also read this well-done article about Sister’s Jubilee in the Tennessee Register.)

As nuns devoted to the Perpetual Rosary, we were especially delighted to receive a visit this October from Father Lawrence Lew, O.P., who is the Promoter of the Rosary for the whole Order of Preachers.  What a joy to have Father celebrate Holy Mass and to speak with him about his work in the Order and the Church, and especially to hear how the Rosary continues to bear abundant fruit worldwide.  He presented us with a copy of his recent book, Praying the Rosary with Sacred Art: Mysteries Made Visible, which blends Father’s beautiful photography with his meditations on the mysteries.  We appreciate and share his zeal for preaching the Holy Rosary.  May praying Our Lady’s decades may bring many souls to God in these troubled times.

Photo of Dominican Nuns visiting with Dominican friar

Although this year’s garden didn’t amount to much, last year’s butter­nut squash seeds thrown on the compost pile grew into several plants which produced a bountiful harvest—at least 30 large squash.  Just as the Sisters were eyeing these and imagining the possibilities for monastic meals, our workman brought us (literally) a wheelbarrow full of large orange pumpkins and acorn squash.  What to do with two 20-lb French pumpkins?  Roast them whole (or nearly) and turn them into gallons of pumpkin soup and a giant Thanksgiving pumpkin pie!  No Pilgrims were more thankful than we for all the blessings, squash and otherwise, that the Lord showers on us in so many different ways.

One of our Advent hymns begins: Wake, awake, for night is flying, / The watchmen on the heights are crying; / Awake, Jerusalem, arise!  The joyful tone of this penitential season of Advent is no reason to forget that Jesus came that the “valleys may be exalted and every mountain and hill shall be made low.”  In this season when we beg the Prince of Peace for the conversion of hearts in order to bring peace to this world, we want to remember that the “waking” of our own conversion begins first in our own hearts. 

May our gracious Infant King grant you many blessings and peace of heart this Christmas and always.

Mother Mary of the Precious Blood, O.P. and Sisters

Video: The Libera Procession

One of the most beautiful chants in our Dominican tradition is the Libera Procession.  As Dominicans, prayer for the souls in Purgatory is a regular part of our daily life, in short invocations and longer Psalms that we say as a community throughout the day.  Every week we have the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass offered for the repose of the souls of the faithful departed.  The Libera Procession traditionally follows immediately after this Mass.

The weekly procession takes place in the choir (the nuns’ part of the chapel), while the longer form, with the verses “Quid ego miserrimus?” and “Nunc, Christe,” is prayed on November 2, All Souls Day, as we process down to our monastic cemetery.  It is this All Souls Day version of the Libera which we present in the recording above.  In addition to All Souls Day, we also process to the cemetery singing the shorter version of the Libera on the Anniversary of the Deceased Brothers and Sisters of the Order (“All Dominican Souls Day”) on November 8, and for the octave after a nun’s funeral.

Putting the video together made us vividly aware of the compelling imagery of the Last Judgment, and how bringing the Four Last Things to mind and praying for the holy souls regularly is formative for our Christian and monastic life.  It is a great blessing for us to be able to continue our Dominican tradition and intercede for the faithful departed in this way. May the souls of the faithful departed, through the mercy of God, rest in peace.

Photos of many favorite rosary meditation booklets.

Our Recommended Rosary Booklets

Most blessed feast of Our Lady of the Rosary! Today we need the power and support of prayer more than ever, and Our Lady’s Rosary is both simple and deep in its power to strengthen our faith and unite us to God. A helpful way to enter more deeply into the graces of the Rosary is to pray the Rosary with constancy and attention. Praying the Rosary regularly provides the opportunity enter more deeply into the rhythm of this form of prayer; praying the Rosary in moments of stillness and attentiveness, rather than distraction, helps focus on the mysteries and ultimately through them on the Lord.

Photos of many favorite rosary meditation booklets.

Rosary Booklets help one pray with attention

One of the best helps for many people in starting to pray the Rosary with attention is to use a booklet of Rosary meditations. This helps fix your attention on the mystery, sometimes even Hail Mary by Hail Mary, and also helps stock your mind with holy images and considerations of all aspects of these mysteries in the lives of Jesus and Mary.

As Dominican nuns dedicated to praying the Perpetual Rosary, we keep our Rosary stall in the monastery choir well supplied with many, many Rosary meditation booklets. We have chosen a few of our favorites to share with you, making sure to choose ones that are still in print.

Meditations on the Mysteries of the Rosary by the Dominican Sisters of St. Cecilia

Illustrated with images from the stained glass windows in the Motherhouse chapel at Nashville, this booklet offers meditations based first on the Word of God, then on the writings of Saint Thomas Aquinas and Saint Catherine of Siena. The themes for the mysteries are chosen from the theological and cardinal virtues, and the gifts and fruits of the Holy Spirit.

Behold Thy Mother: An English/Latin Scriptural Rosary

This hardbound book, arranged in a style reminiscent of medieval illuminations, includes beautiful art, inspiring quotes from saints and others, and Scripture verses for every Hail Mary in both Latin and English. The “illuminated” format draws you into meditation in a unique way.

Image of nun praying the Rosary

From the Rose Garden of Our Lady

This pocket-sized booklet is a reprint of a very old Rosary booklet we have from the 1920’s. Each of the 15 mysteries is illustrated by an old-fashioned engraving, followed by Scripture from the Douay-Rheims, and ten short considerations, one for each Hail Mary (or use one or two for the whole mystery).

Mysteries Made Visible: Praying the Rosary with Sacred Art by Fr. Lawrence Lew, O.P.

Illustrated by Father’s beautiful photography, this book includes accompanying meditations which he calls “visio divina,” like lectio divina but pondering the Word as depicted in sacred art.

Dominican Rosary Meditations

Those familiar with our website already know of this booklet that we published during the recent 800th Jubilee of our Dominican Order. It contains a beautiful set of Rosary meditations taken from the writings of Dominican Saints, along with sacred art by Dominican artists – Preachers both with words and with images.

Click here or on the image for the PDF file; a print version of this booklet is also available.  A $5 donation covers the cost of the booklet and shipping; we do not run a gift shop, but may be able to send some booklets out as time allows.  Contact us here.

Books on the Rosary (including meditations)

While the books above focus on Rosary meditations, the following three books are treasuries of different kinds of writing about the Rosary itself, although they also include meditations on the mysteries.

The Riches of the Rosary by Fr. Gabriel Harty, O.P.

With the lilt of the Irish, Fr. Gabriel Harty shares out of his contemplative love and apostolic experience of many decades of promoting the Rosary. History, prayers, healing, devotion, all are an encouragement to persevere in allowing the Rosary to unite us to God.

Champions of the Rosary by Fr. Donald Calloway, MIC

With unabashed enthusiasm, Fr. Calloway shares a compelling account of the origins, significance, and saints of this “spiritual weapon” given us by Our Lady. Extensive and inspiring.

The Rosary: “The Little Summa” by Robert Feeney

Mr. Feeney, a Lay Dominican, also shares papal teaching and tradition, saints of the Rosary, especially John Paul II, and inspiring incentives to pray the Rosary. The last third of the book consists of meditations on the mysteries.

There are many, many other Rosary booklets that we have found helpful over the years, but we cannot list them all here! As we celebrate today’s feast, we encourage you to persevere in praying the Rosary with constancy and with attention, so that meditation on these mysteries of Jesus and Mary can continue to draw you into ever closer union with God.


You may also want to visit our Rosary Resources Page for more about the Rosary.

Cartoon on Dominican nuns eating in the refectory

Vocation Letters: My Favorite Graces

With this letter to her little sister, we continue our Vocation Letter series by our fictional novice, Sister Mary Rosaria.

Ave + Maria

Dear Tessa,

Greetings in Jesus and Mary!  I hope you are doing well.  I wanted to share with you one of my favorite parts of our life in the monastery.  This is not one of the most important elements of our life, such as community or liturgy, but it is something we do several times every day, it ties various elements together, and it gives me great joy each time we do it.  Can you guess what it is? . . . Maybe you will find this surprising, but I am thinking of our monastic graces at meals!

At home you say grace before and after meals—you know, “Bless us, O Lord, and these, Thy gifts . . .”  and then, “We give Thee thanks, Almighty God . . .”  We also have graces before and after meals here in the monastery, but they are much more elaborate.  First of all, they are processional; after praying the De Profundis (the Psalm said for the souls in purgatory), we process two by two into the refectory (our monastic “dining room”).  Making a procession reminds us that our earthly life, with our food to sustain us, is a journey towards heaven.

The graces are also liturgical: once at our places, we pray some verses from the Psalms, with other liturgical elements, each Sister taking her part just as she does in the liturgical prayers in Choir.  My favorite is the verse we pray every day before supper: “The poor will eat and receive their fill. / Those who seek the Lord will praise Him and will live forever.”  How true that we are poor and needy before God, who lovingly supplies for us every day!  We love Him, seek Him, and the praise we begin even now will continue in everlasting life. This liturgical element of our refectory graces reminds us that Our Lord provides this nourishment for our body, as He also provides Himself in the Eucharist as nourishment for our souls.  After dinner each day, we even process back to the chapel and finish our graces there!

Of course, the way we spend our mealtime in the refectory is also different from at home: St. Augustine says in his Rule that we should keep silence in the refectory while listening to holy reading, “so that not only their bodies may be refreshed with food, but their minds also may be strengthened with the word of God.”  Before and after each meal, our monastic graces draw even our “daily bread” into our life of liturgical and Eucharistic praise.

And where is Our Lady is all this?  Can’t you see her, before each Sister’s place in the refectory?

With my love and prayers in Our Lady,

Sister Mary Rosaria, O.P.


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Interested in learning more about a contemplative Dominican vocation?  Contact the Vocation Directress.