Posted on 10/16/2011 1:38:30 PM PDT by NYer
.- As young girls, Anastasia Kenney and her little sister played Mass. They cloaked their heads in a white curtain, draped accordingly as a bridal veil or a nuns habit, and served crackers and grape juice to each other as they pretended to receive Holy Communion.
Some 30 years later, Kenney is moving into a convent and aspiring to wear a white habit in earnest.
The religious vocation startled even her.
I was horrified! I was the least nunnish person I knew, said Kenney, 35, of her initial inclination. I thought the last group of sisters Id be living with was my sorority sisters.
Now shes settling in with the Dominican Sisters of Immaculate Conception, a Polish community that began accepting Americans five years ago.
Working in the world
The background on Kenneys iPhone screen features three Dominican nuns in full white habits bounding across the Justice, Ill., campus where they operate ministries involving teaching, retreats and care of the elderly. In order to pay off $65,000 in student loans, Kenney will work outside the convent for a year before officially beginning formation as a religious sister.
After graduating from the University of Idaho with a bachelors degree in psychology and completing masters courses in social work and community mental health, she mounted a diverse career in social services. She has been youth director at Holy Family Cathedral, a volunteer political campaign organizer, teacher at Holy Rosary Academy, advocate for the homeless, child protective services specialist, missionary volunteer doing hospice in Kenya and a pregnancy support counselor.
Shes been drawn to jobs that deal with really intense suffering, said Kenneys friend Tiffany Borges, who wrote a letter of recommendation for Kenneys application. The way she handles it is to bring it to [eucharistic] adoration. Ive been impressed that her response is simply prayer and bringing it to God.
Growing up in the faith
But Kenney had much to experience and overcome before heeding the call to serve as a religious sister.
Raised in several states and Europe by Catholic parents who settled in Anchorage with the Air Force in 1987, Kenney felt expected to attend a Catholic college. She chose Loyola University because it was farthest from home. She was an inactive Catholic and self-described materialistic sorority girl with a free-spirited lifestyle. Within a year, however, New Orleans became too crazy for Kenney, and in 2000 she followed love to Idaho. She was planning to get married when a messy breakup left her venting on the phone to her mom. Her mother suggested she attend Mass to feel better.
I was thinking, What is that going to do? but I took her advice, Kenney said. I went to the Newman Center and met such active, vibrant young people there. To this day Im still very good friends with the people I met there.
With renewed faith Kenney enrolled in the Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults (RCIA) and received the sacrament of confirmation. She joined her family in Anchorage in 2001 and there discovered a rich community of faith centered around Holy Family Cathedral, both with the resident Dominican friars and in the young adult scene. She immersed herself in Catholicism, meeting with a close circle of friends to devour papal encyclicals and collaborate on the establishment of a lecture and discussion series known today as Theology & Brew.
We were just so hungry to have our faith fed, Kenney said. That helped us deepen our faith and develop such a love for it.
Need for healing
Kenney first explored a religious vocation in 2002. Overriding her parents objections that she wasnt ready, she participated in an inquiry at a Dominican convent.
When I came back, I thought I didnt have that calling, Kenney said. A call can be authentic and get thwarted the first time around. I didnt have the maturity I needed and the healing I needed. God had to heal me of a lot of things first.
Healing was critical. Kenney estimates she was 10 or 11 when she developed destructive eating habits that rapidly mutated into acute anorexia and bulimia. Despite two hospitalizations with therapy plus fervent prayer and support from loved ones, she could not overcome the affliction. It took an act of God.
Kenney finally found peace through a healing Mass by Father Santan Pinto, a priest whose mission is to form laity as disciples. Her roommate and best friend, Kate Collins, persuaded her to see him during a stop in Anchorage in 2010. Kenneys parents accompanied her.
As Father Pinto laid hands on her head, It was awesome in the true sense of awe, marveled Kenneys father, Matthew Kenney. She cried out in anguish and kind of collapsed. Then she stood up, bewildered, and ran off. When she came back, she was changed.
She went home and prayed earnestly. And then, she ate. As Kenney ate her first real meal in over three months, Collins entered and wept at the sight.
I tend to be very objective and analytical. Im the kind of person where God needs to hit me on the side of the head with a 2×4, Matthew Kenney said. Seeing something so manifest and physical occur there was no way to explain, physically, what I saw. It was a purely spiritual event.
The Gospel came alive for me in such a profound way, said Kenney, who now enjoys a primarily vegetarian diet. Healing is possible. It shouldnt seem supernatural to us. We have the Eucharist. We have the sacraments. The Gospels are rich with stories of healing and being made whole.
As instantly as the healing eliminated her eating disorders, it also quelled any lingering doubts as to her religious calling.
God meets us in our brokenness and suffering, and his love and his healing of a soul witnesses to his power, she said. A lot of us have different forms of brokenness to surrender to the Lord and to overcome with his grace. It doesnt mean that were not able to serve God.
A vocation emerges
In fact, Kenney believes her struggles and recovery will enable her to even better serve as a religious sister.
Ive always had the heart for it. Ive always been drawn to prayer and to people who were really in need and needed someone to care for them and help them and give them a sense of hope, she said. The key to conversion is to love people where theyre at. Find Christ in everyone, and meet them where they are.
So shes packing up all that love with a cherished relic of Saint Gemma Galgani and many photos of a well-traveled life, leaving her golden retriever Henry to her parents and shipping her Ford F-150 to a convent outside Chicago. She will miss Alaskas outdoors, especially the ski slopes and her special prayer spot at Beluga Point, and shell miss swimming, as the Dominican Sisters of Immaculate Conception wear their habits perpetually. Shell also miss her family.
Today Kenney laughs heartily regaling the pretend Masses of her childhood. One of her two younger sisters is married, and she anticipates the other also will serve in the married vocation. As for Kenney, her bridal veil and nuns habit will be one and the same. She is impassioned to be the bride of Christ.
I feel like the Lord has wooed my heart. That love is so firing, I cant imagine not responding, she said. This is a profound and beautiful love relationship. Its a love story.
Official Web Site - Dominican Sisters of Immaculate Conception
Ping for future perusal........
Nice picture, nice story. How we played nuns and priests as kids! My mother making the habits out of sheets or old white towels and using the thinnest crackers to pass for the Host.
Hey Nyer i hear of this convent when my uncle and i were living in Anchorage in month we sometime see some of “Sisters” at mass there smalll Cathoic church outside Anchorage that really old school country type something out of Little House on Prairie I am serious LOL!
Brings back so many memories! When my daughter was in still quite young, she would cut small circles of white bread, make a cross in the center, and bring it with her to Sunday mass.
My grade school teachers were Dominicans; a wonderful order and great teachers.
She had to have her communion, too. How fascinated children are with the lovely rituals of the Catholic Church.
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