Our Spirituality
Our Spirituality includes all the ways we meet God and God meets us:
- in prayer and silence,
- in relationships and solitude,
- in joys and struggles,
- in peak moments and ordinary routines,
- in worship and work.
Rooted
Our Charity spirituality is rooted in the Vincentian spirit that began in 17th century France, with Saints Vincent de Paul and Louise de Marillac. St. Elizabeth Ann Seton adapted Vincent and Louise’s spirituality and way of service to the early 19th century Catholic Church in America. She founded the Sisters of Charity in Emmitsburg, Maryland, in 1809 to offer “every service in their power” to meet the spiritual and material needs of the poor, in schools, orphanages, hospitals, and many other ministries.
Integrated and Focused on Mission
Our founders were people of passion. They gave us a rich spiritual heritage that integrates prayer and action, contemplation and apostolic service. “The Charity of Christ impels us!” (2 Cor. 5:14) We live an active, apostolic religious life. That means that we do not hold ourselves apart from our world, but rather we learn to find God in the midst of it, especially in the person in need. St. Vincent advised us to “leave God for God,” when the mission of charity requires.
Incarnational Spirituality
Charity Spirituality is “incarnational,” meaning practical, flesh-and-blood, expressed in concrete deeds. It emphasizes both affective and effective love, compassion and competence, prayer and service. We can only learn to see with the eyes of Christ by fostering a reflective, contemplative stance toward life. We deepen our understanding of who God is and how God acts by daily reflection on our experience of life and ministry. Our reflection, in turn, moves us to ever more courageous and creative efforts on behalf of God’s people. Prayer draws on ministry; ministry draws on prayer.
Our Spirituality Focuses on:
- God, in ordinary experience – We seek to discover God’s presence and love in every aspect of our lives, even the most ordinary.
- God’s Providence – We trust that only God can satisfy our needs and desires.
- Community – We are called to cherish each other, and seek to meet every person and every created being with respect. We welcome diversity among us and beyond us as we widen the circle of belonging, making room at God’s table for everyone.
- Our role in the Church – We desire to participate actively, with all the baptized, in the life of Christ’s Body, the Church. We are convinced that women have a significant role in the church and in our world.
- Eucharist – We look to Jesus’ model of self-giving love and presence in the Eucharist as central to our spirituality
Virtues
These virtues mark our Charity spirituality:
- Humility – We seek to live in the truth that all we have and all we are is God’s gift.
- Simplicity – We seek to live unburdened by material possessions, keeping focused on what matters most: God’s love, Christ’s mission, and the needs of our time.
- Charity – We seek to embrace every person, especially the one who is poor, as our neighbor, with a love that is “affective and effective.”
St. Vincent de Paul
Prayer
“We must pray literally without ceasing …in every occurrence of our lives, “ said St. Elizabeth Seton, “you know I mean that prayer of the heart which is independent of place or situation. It is a habit of lifting up the heart to God, as in a constant communication with him.” Elizabeth also teaches us to be attentive to “the grace of the moment,” to take care to “meet our grace” in every circumstance. Our prayer takes many forms, personally and communally. Among them are: meditation, contemplation, reading and reflection on the Scriptures and spiritual writers, communal faith sharing, the Prayer of the Church or an adapted version, praise of God’s creation, silence, song. With the whole Church, we participate regularly in the Eucharist, other liturgical prayer and the sacraments.