ELKIN — Several parishioners in the Diocese of Charlotte are elevating their faith by sharing in the charitable service and mission of a women’s religious order that traces its roots back to 17th century France.
Eight men and women have become “Associates in Mission” with the Sisters of St. Joseph of Philadelphia – committing to live out their charism of being “joyful courageous witnesses to the Gospel’s imperative of active, inclusive love.”
Becky Dursee, a member of St. Stephen Mission in Elkin, became the newest associate of the order through a “Rite of Welcome” initiation ceremony at the parish Oct. 15. She joins Debbie Parrish and other associates from Elkin and Charlotte.
“What really resonated with me,” Parrish said, “was that being an associate wasn’t about completing specific projects or tasks, it was about living the mission of unity and reconciliation.”
“You live out the mission wherever your feet are at the moment,” she said. “You perceive how your neighbor needs you – whether it’s a smile or an encouraging word for someone, taking a meal to someone, welcoming a refugee or an immigrant…For me, living the mission has helped me understand what God wants of me.”
Parrish and her husband Phillip discovered the order’s associates program after meeting some sisters from the order’s motherhouse in Philadelphia. Afterward, they decided to inquire about becoming associates and met with St. Joseph Sister Janis McQuade for an orientation.
“It’s a great honor to journey with other men and women who want to join us in living our charism of inclusive love,” said Sister Janis, a member since 1965. “They live our mission wherever they are – in their daily lives, relationships and experiences. They show the inclusive love and unity of the sisters through their chosen vocation.”
About 600 men and women nationwide serve as associates of the Sisters of St. Joseph, said Sister Janis McQuade, who also serves as pastoral associate at St. Stephen Mission.
Sister Janis is one of several Sisters of St. Joseph serving in the Charlotte diocese. Others are Sister Geri Rogers, principal of Our Lady of Mercy School in Winston-Salem, and Sister Joan Pearson, who works in the diocesan Hispanic Ministry Office.
The order that became today’s Sisters of St. Joseph was founded in 1650 in war-ravaged LePuy, France, by six women who wanted to practice spiritual and corporal works of mercy under the patronage of St. Joseph. The first Sisters of St. Joseph who came to the U.S. arrived in St. Louis in 1836 and then moved to Philadelphia in 1847.
People interested in becoming Sisters of St. Joseph associates attend multiple orientation sessions to learn about the sisters, their history and values, then go through a Rite of Welcome ceremony.
Associates participate in retreats, community gatherings and celebrations, and some volunteer at ministries sponsored by the order or serve on committees and boards for the order. But their most important role, Sister Janis said, is to actively seek to show Christian love to all they meet in their daily lives.
Debbie Parrish said the associates in the Elkin area get together monthly for prayer, spiritual reading and talks, and to share a meal together. Her decision to join, she said, is “probably the most significant choice I have made since I got married and had my children.”
Associates in Elkin also include Kathy Jenkins, Ronnie Krakovsky and Phillip and Debbie Parrish, Patricia Topper from Mount Holly, and Diane and Skip Whitman of Charlotte.
— Christina Lee Knauss
Consecrated religious and associates/affiliates of an order are called to the same charism or mission, but they live out that call differently. Consecrated take religious vows, do not marry, and live in community governed by a Rule. Associates are lay men and women, married or unmarried, who formally partner and participate with an order but live independently. Many orders, including the Sisters of Mercy, Sisters of St. Joseph, Sisters of Charity and Congregation of Notre Dame, have growing associates or affiliates programs here in the Diocese of Charlotte.