Monday, July 25, 2011

New General Procurator

Fr Dale Craig, SOLT, has been appointed as the General Procurator.  He has served for the past five years as the General Lay Servant and therefore has a good knowledge of the inner workings of SOLT administration.

He will have the task of helping SOLT to live their Constitutions with regard to the acquiring and administration of goods, the fiduciary care of members, of raising funds for the missions, and of balancing the books.

Congratulations Fr Dale.  Our prayers go with you.

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Novitiate House Moving to Our Lady of Corpus Christi

Retablo at the Perpetual Adoration Chapel of
Our Lady of Corpus Christi Retreat Center
The SOLT priest and brother novitiate house of the American Region is moving to Our Lady of Corpus Christi.  Here you can find a retreat center where sacred silence is the natural outgrowth of the beautiful perpetual adoration chapel that marks the campus.  The novices will undergo a year of prayer and ascesis, formation in the SOLT charism that engenders human and spiritual growth, accompanied by manual labor and a strong community life.

If you or someone you know may be interested in the vocation to priesthood or religious life, contact our vocation director.

If you are interested in an Ignatian silent retreat, or booking a retreat for your parish, school, or youth group, contact them here.

SOLT Seminarians Headed for Detroit

SOLT Sems in Rome this past Christmas
SOLT has decided to send their men in priestly formation to a seminary in the United States.  The main reason is to increase their pastoral zeal in the gift that American formation has to offer.  For the past 11 years, SOLT has sent its American Region Seminarians to Rome to the Angelicum.

After looking into a few possibilities, SOLT will send their men in priestly formation for both philosophical studies and sacred theology to Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, Michigan.  They will live in a religious house of studies at a local parish and commute to the seminary.  Undoubtedly, SOLT will continue to send particular priests to Rome for further studies, but the seminarians will go to Detroit.

One of the attractions certainly was the emphasis given to the new evangelization in the curriculum, and the attention given to faithfully proclaim the teachings of Jesus Christ promulgated by the Sacred Magisterium to today's audience.  Another reason was the generous hospitality afforded by His Excellency, Archbishop Allen Vigneron, for which the SOLT community is very grateful.

The house of studies will be staffed by SOLT formators:

-Fr Brady Williams, SOLT, who is the current rector of the SOLT seminary, has a liscentiate in sacred liturgy from the Anselmiano in Rome.

-Fr Peter Marsalek, SOLT, who has a doctorate in dogmatic theology from the Angelicum in Rome and has worked as the president of John Paul II and Bishop Gariga Middle School, and as the diocesan director of religious education and catechesis for the diocese of Corpus Christi, Texas.

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

New General Secretary

Fr Jerry Drolshagen, SOLT, has been appointed the new Secretary to the General Priest Council.  Fr Jerry has a doctorate in canon law from the Angelicum, the Pontifical University of St Thomas Aquainas, in Rome.  Besides serving at a local parish on the outskirts of Rome, he has served in the formation of our SOLT seminarians.


We are grateful for the service of Fr Derek Anderson, SOLT, for his past eight years of service in this position.


Congratulations and our prayers go with you!

Monday, July 18, 2011

Fr Rogel Rosalinas, SOLT General Priest Servant Receives Blessing from Founder


General Assembly is a Time for Kids to Learn Discipleship even through Play

The SOLT lay formation for kids teaches that as soon as a person is baptized they are called to sanctity.  We take this very seriously and teach children even as young as 4 years old about the mysteries of our faith, the Holy Eucharist, the Mass, the Blessed Mother, the Rosary, Patron Saints, how to pray, practicing virtue, and bring them at least twice a month into the presence of the Blessed Sacrament for a children's holy hour.  Be a holy child in the Child Jesus with Mary our Mother.

Here at the Assembly some consecrated men and women are teaching the children through games how to practice virtue and grow in teamwork.



Sunday, July 17, 2011

SOLT Servant-Leaders Offering their Lives and Offices to Jesus Through Mary

General Councils of Priests, Sisters, and Laity, offering
their lives and offices to Jesus through Mary
It is not easy to lead in the Church today.  It is necessary to ask God for special help, wisdom, grace, and an insight into how to serve the people of our time, that the holiness of God may be manifested in the Church in a new way, yet in keeping with the timeless tradition of our faith.  For this reason, our SOLT superiors found themselves before Our Lady the our 53rd anniversary of our founding to pray for the necessary graces to lead our community with wisdom, courage, and generous discipleship to bring forth a harvest of holiness, love, and truth.


Our prayers go with you.  May you lead the SOLT community into the green pastures of sanctity, communion, and peace.

Saturday, July 16, 2011

Perpetual Profession of Four SOLT Sisters

CONGRATULATIONS!!!
Here are the pictures from the perpetual profession of four SOLT Sisters:
Perpetually Professed SOLT Sisters R-L: Sr Mediatrix of All
Grace Patterson, SOLT, Sr Maria Giovanni Paolo dell'
Eucaristia Orsini, SOLT,  Sr Mary Aloyisius of Jesus Kim, SOLT,
Sr Mary Elisabeth of the Coronation Marks, SOLT

Prostrate before the Lamb of God
Signing the Consecration of Perpetual Vows
Offering their lives to Our Lady
The sign of peace to the newly perpetually professed
Sisters are a sign of the Perpetual Merciful Love of God

Happy Foundation Day Society of Our Lady!


Today is the 53rd anniversary of the foundation of SOLT. The Society of Our Lady was founded in 1958 in the Parish of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, located in the Sangre de Christo Mountains.  This parish was under the jurisdiction of the Archdiocese of Santa Fe, New Mexico.  Our Lady’s Society quickly spread throughout the United States, having received the status of a Pious Society on July 16, 1958, the Feast of Our Lady of Mt. Carmel. 

Fr Tony Blount - Helping to Make the Church a Hymn of Praise to the Most Holy Trinity

Fr Anthony Blount, SOLT, was newly elected to the General Priest Council.  Aside from being a great preacher and joyful disciple of Our Lady and Our Lord, he is also a great flutist.  In the Jubilee Year of 2000 he made an album with the school children of Our Lady of Mt Carmel, of which he was at the time the parish priest.  It was called "Fr Tony and the SOLT Shakers."  Below is Fr Tony playing the flute outside at a parish festival with one of the Cardinals of the Church enjoying the music and atmosphere.  Here is a sample from the album:


Lord I lift Your Name on High (Lyrics)



If you have trouble listening click here.

Even the Cardinals of the Church enjoy his flute playing
Here is another song entitled, "Madre," about Our Lady.  I believe the picture below is Fr Tony playing the song with the Ecclesial Team of priests, sisters, lay volunteers, and parish staff.

Madre (Lyrics)



If you have trouble listening click here.


Thanksgiving Day, Jubilee Year 2000

Consecrated Widows for the Church - Imitating Mary in her Widowhood

Just as the Immaculate Virgin Mary, interceded for the apostles as they preached the Gospel to all nations, and sacrificed her very life to become a living prayer of reparation, blessing, and fruitfulness for the whole Church, so these women, these widows, offer their lives consecrated to the saving Mission of Jesus Christ.




Helping a Child of God Fall Asleep in Christ to Rise with him in Glory by Fr Dennis Mary Dugan, SOLT

The following was taken from the reflections of Fr Dennis Mary Dugan, SOLT, associate pastor of Divine Mercy Parish, Belize City, Central America.

This is why we become priests …
     As I knelt beside the bed of a thirty year old dying woman, I began to read the baptismal prayers.  The gravity of what God was doing here was apparent to all present.  The loving God in His generosity was giving her the gifts of His Church, including the most supreme gift of Himself, the Eucharist.  God was present to her in her sufferings; He loved her dearly.  He was comforting her as she listened attentively to the prayers.  This is why we become priests … to share the love and generosity of God to those in most need.  Her cancer was discovered only a few months ago, now she received notice that it had spread and was in an advanced stage.  She stated that she wanted to get right with God before her death, so she summoned a priest.  Her Mother was seated at the end of her bed, her soon-to-be Godmother knelt beside me, while her father and boyfriend of ten years drew close to witness her Baptism.  She encountered Jesus in the four Sacraments that she received - Baptism, Confirmation, Anointing of the Sick, and the Eucharist.          

     She was made who God called her to be … a child of God, an heir to God's Kingdom, a new creation in Christ.  She was welcomed into the family of God, in communion with all Christians.  The original sin was cleansed from her soul, all her actual sins were forgiven her and all punishment due to these sins were removed.  Through His sanctifying grace she became a participant in the divine life of the Trinity.  In obedience to His heavenly Father, Jesus was lead by the Holy Spirit, through His suffering and death to His glorious resurrection.  She, too, was being lead through suffering and death to her glory in God.  She heard that her life was lived in union with Jesus.  The Lord had lived, suffered, died and rose and so shall she.  She was entrusted to follow Him and His life.  To live in Jesus, is her life.  Though weakened by her illness, she was now strengthened by the outpouring of the Holy Spirit and empowered with His supernatural gifts and virtues.  She was made ready to be received by God, if He took her to Himself.  Through His real, true and substantial Presence she became the temple of the God.  He indeed lived in her and she truly lived in Him.  In her sickness she was ever conformed into the likeness of the suffering Jesus.  Now she was animated by the God who did not abandon her on her cross.  He desired to unite Himself to her in her suffering.  And with His strength and grace, through her cross God was leading her to her salvation.        

     The Lord in His goodness had one more gift for her.  She was told that we Catholics believe that the Blessed Virgin Mary, the Mother of Our Savior Jesus - was given to all as our spiritual mother, by Jesus on His cross.  Jesus gave to His Mother the parting gift of His faithful disciple John, "Woman, behold your son."  And Jesus gave to John His dear Mother in the words, "Behold your Mother."  In this last gift of God, Jesus gave to all mankind Mary as our spiritual Mother.  Mary desires to have a relationship with all her children and to help them in their needs.  This newest Catholic was given a homemade string rosary, with a Miraculous Medal on it blessed by our Holy Father, Pope Benedict XVI.  She listened how the Rosary is a prayer from the Gospels, and that we pray it  in union with Our Mother Mary.  While we meditate on the mysteries of Christ life, contemplating His face, Mary's help us to know and love God more.  May we, her spiritual children, be worthy of so noble a Mother.  She kissed the cross and the image of Mary on the Miraculous Medal and the Rosary was put around her neck.  She expressed gratitude for all that she received and we praised the Lord together for His generosity.   We parted ways with smiles and tears.  I told her I would soon return for a visit, and she told me to come again anytime.  God is great !  Now and forever !  

Friday, July 15, 2011

Pictures from Four SOLT Sisters' First Profession

Here are some pictures from the First Profession of Four New SOLT Sisters:

Receiving the Profession Cross

Profession First Vows of Chastity, Poverty, and Obedience
Congratulations Sisters!
Singing to Our Lady after Profession
Sr Maria Hostia and her family

Hymn to Our Lady of the Most Holy Trinity

At a SOLT Assembly, you are bound to hear sung at different times the hymn to Our Lady of the Most Holy Trinity.  The words of the is hymn were written by SOLT Founder, Fr James Flanagan.  The actual melody was written by Fr Rogel Rosalinas, SOLT, the current General Priest Servant.

Here is a recording from the 2006 General Chapter:



You can download the musical score here.

You can listen a most beautiful rendition, recorded by some young choral singers from Boston here.

What are the types of Lay Membership in SOLT?

New Lay Members Making Public Commitment in SOLT

Membership

A
s Catholics, we are all called to be missionaries. While some are called to undertake apostolic works in foreign mission fields, others are called to become missionaries by praying for those whom God has sent "to make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit..." Lay membership levels in Our Lady's Society reflect these individual differences in callings, age, and family circumstances. The Society offers different types of membership ranging from Definitive Members who leave home to serve on SOLT Ecclesial Teams to Missionaries of Mercy who remain at home and offer their sufferings and prayers for the mission of Our Lady’s Society. Specific Membership Types include:

MISSIONARIES OF MERCY are those persons who expressly offer their sufferings and prayers for the mission of Our Lady’s Society and particularly the Priests who are both Priest and victim.


VOLUNTEERS are those persons who answer the call of God to gift themselves voluntarily and freely to serve for a period of time. While they only associate themselves with a particular mission for a period of time, they enjoy the family relationship and friendship that our community offers. To volunteer at a SOLT mission visit this page.

ASSOCIATE are those
  1. who offer prayer for the works of Our Lady’s Society;
  2. who are helping the missions of Our Lady’s Society financially and on a limited voluntary basis;
  3. who support the work of Our Lady’s Society;
  4. who receive spiritual nourishment from Our Lady’s Society.

COMMITTED MEMBERS are those:
  1. who have undergone formation programs prescribed for this form of membership;
  2. who have consecrated themselves to Our Lady and contracted themselves for one year to Our Lady’s Society (renewable for another one year);
  3. who, by the contract, promise to live, abide and uphold the Statutes of the Public Clerical Association of the Faithful and its ideals;
  4. who have the right to attend deliberations on Society matters and vote on decisions of the Association;
  5. who give their lives, according to their state, to the mission of Our Lady’s Society;
  6. who seek to gift themselves to the Spiritual, community and apostolic life of Our Lady’s Society while embracing Family Ecclesial Teams.
  7. who gift themselves financially according to ability.

CORPORATE MEMBERS
 are those:
  1. who have undergone formation prescribed for this form of membership;
  2. who expressly contribute part of their time, effort and capabilities for the work of Our Lady’s Society;
  3. who, in their community and work place, live the mission, charism and spirituality of Our Lady’s Society;
  4. who attend the Society’s functions as possible
  5. who join deliberations about Society works through designated representatives.

DEFINITIVE MEMBERS are those:
  1. who have undergone formation programs prescribed for this form of membership;
  2. who have consecrated themselves to Our Lady and contracted themselves for three years to Our Lady’s Society (renewable for another three years / and some for life upon discernment);
  3. who, by the contract, promise to live, abide and uphold the Statutes of the Public Clerical Association of the Faithful and its ideals;
  4. who have the right to attend deliberations on Society matters and vote on decisions of the Association;
  5. who give their lives, according to their state, to the mission of Our Lady’s Society;
  6. who seek to gift themselves to the Spiritual, community and apostolic life of Our Lady’s Society while embracing Family Ecclesial Teams;
  7. who gift themselves financially according to ability.

Four New Sisters for the Church - SOLT Sisters Make their First Profession

On July 14, 2011, four women made temporary vows of chastity, poverty, and obedience as SOLT Sisters.  The words of their first profession are:

"God, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit through Your love shared in the mystery of the Trinity and for Your honor and glory, and in honor of Our Lady of the Most Holy Trinity, I do vow to You in the presence of the Sister Servant, Chastity, Poverty, and Obedience for one year according to the Constitutions of the Sisters of the Society of Our Lady of the Most Holy Trinity."

Here are a few pictures:




All the Sisters give the newly professed the sign of peace


Four Newly Professed Receive Fr Flanagan's Blessing

Thursday, July 14, 2011

SOLT's Charism Explained in Light of the Trinitarian Communion Protected by Canon Law

This is a reprinting of an article in the publication of the BAHANDI, the official publication of the SOLT seminarians of the Asia-Pacific Region by Fr Samuel Medley, SOLT.



The Image of the Most Holy Trinity

God, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are a communion of relationships, or a communio personarum (Communion of Persons),  in which the three divine Persons eternally gift themselves to one another in love.  When the triune Creator allowed his perfection to overflow out of himself in establishing the universe, he imprinted and endowed it with his own image, by which all things live in a communio vitae, caritatis, et veritatis (communion of live, charity, and truth).   God’s relationships in himself and this vestigia Trinitatis (trace of the Trinity) that is found in all creation is the divine law, in which all other law finds its legitimacy.  Once a person begins to know the master pattern of the Trinity, he will not be able to cease finding the semblance and image of God woven in the fabric of all being; it is full of generic communions with specific individuated beings, i.e. genus and species.  The most prominent image of the Trinity is man himself, who was created to live in a communion of persons—a family—and perhaps the most sublime family is the Church, the family of God and imago Trinitatis (Image of the Trinity), which “shines forth as ‘a people made one in the unity of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit’” (Lumen Gentium 9). 
Canon law has practical usefulness when it comes to living the relationships of the Church.  Its letter and spirit shines as a light to illumine these relationships, a blueprint that reveals their constitution and structure, a compass to guide us in living them well, a defense against the enemy of God who frequently attacks them, but most of all, it serves to bring the People of God to be “one unceasing hymn of praise to the Most Holy Trinity.”  When read in this light, canon law says to the Church, “Family of God, Become what you are!” (Familiaris Consortio 17).
One Divine Calling, Three States of Life



“By virtue of their rebirth in Christ, all the faithful share a common dignity; all are called to holiness; all cooperate in the building up of the one Body of Christ, each in accordance with the proper vocation and gift which he or she has received from the Spirit (Rom 12:3-8)” (Lumen Gentium 32, CIC c.208).   The Church, modeled after the Triune God, has three fundamental states of life that share one divine calling.  The Most Holy Trinity is the key to understanding their unity and diversity, equality and complementarity, in what ways they are the same and what ways they are not.  “Every Christian’s identity has its source in the Most Holy Trinity.” (Pastores Dabo Vobis 12)  Just as in the Trinity there is only one divine essence, being, intellect, will, and act so in the Church there is only one people of God, one mission, one priesthood, one consecration, one family “called to exercise the mission which God has entrusted to the Church to fulfill in the world, in accord with the condition proper to each” (CIC), can. 204 § 1).  Canon law speaks of three states of life that mirror the three divine Persons: 
“By divine institution, there are among the Christian faithful in the Church sacred ministers  who in law are also called clerics; the other members of the Christian faithful are called lay persons.
§2. There are members of the Christian faithful from both these groups who, through the profession of the evangelical counsels by means of vows or other sacred bonds recognized and sanctioned by the Church, are consecrated to God in their own special way and contribute to the salvific mission of the Church.” (CIC, canon 207 § 1-2). 
If we examine each state of life according to cannon law, we can see that there is strikingly close resemblance between each state and a divine Person.  If we understand each divine Personality, or how it relates to the other Persons, we will be given a very special insight into the nature of each state of life.  
In Place of God the Father
   The priesthood most resembles the Father, that is why we call them by that name.  The priest, configured to Christ by the Sacrament of Holy Orders, “is seen by the assembly of the faithful as the one who presides in loco Dei Patris” (Pastores Gregis 7; St. Ignatius of Antioch) and from the most ancient of times has been seen in the Church as “in persona Dei Patris”  (Pastores Gregis 34)  Priests serve in the joyful generosity of God the Father giving Jesus in the Eucharist to the Church, which is at the heart of their paternal fruitfulness.  Like the Father they have been entrusted with the sacred power to forgive sins.  Yet it must always be remembered that, while they are fathers, they ever remain sons, for there is only one Father who has no Father, origin or principle; and only one therefore who is truly worthy of the name “Father” (Mt 23:9), by whom all other fathers receive their name (Eph 3:14-15).  Humbled by this reality, a priest must never lord his fatherhood over the children of the Church, because he too is an evangelical child of God, and therefore ought not ever to fall prey to clericalism, or a domineering, self-serving spirit.  Just as the Eternal Father would not exist without the Eternal Son, so the priest must remember that he exists for the children of the Church.  His fatherhood can never leave the context of brotherhood, for he is also a son of God with the rest of the faithful.  Here also lies the special value of the vocation to consecrated brotherhood, which reveals to all Christians the brotherhood of Christ.
Alter Christus – the Person of God the Son
   Laity have the vocation that most closely resembles the divine Personality of God the Son, who is eternally begotten and proceeds from the Father.  Priests are the usual celebrants in the very act by which the lay vocation is born, Baptism,  by which they become sons in the Son.  For the past few centuries, priests have been spoken of using the radical term of St. Augustine, “alter Christus,” other Christ, yet we ought not forget that he used this term originally to refer to all Christians, (In Iohannis evangelium tractatus, tr. 21, 8)  who must work in the world as the fragrance, aroma, leaven, light, salt, savor, and presence of the Incarnate Son of God, bringing the temporal order to be patterned in Jesus Christ the Lord.  God desires that this filiation not remain merely inchoate, abstract, or ephemeral, but be solidly grounded and incarnated in ecclesial filiation as well, one that is regulated by canon law.  This sonship is lived out in filial love and obedience to the Church and her pastors that the faithful may become “holy as God is holy” (1 Pt 1:16) answering the call they have received in Baptism.  
The Person-Love, The Holy Spirit
“I consecrated myself so that you may be consecrated.”  Consecrated life, known as the status perfectionis, or state of perfection, has a particular concentration on the call to holiness.  “By the profession of the evangelical counsels the characteristic features of Jesus — the chaste, poor and obedient one — are made constantly ‘visible’ in the midst of the world and the eyes of the faithful” (Vita Consecrata 1)  Now a person does not become “consecrated” by means of a sacrament, and for this reason some have erroneously said that it is not a real state of life.  They supposedly interpret the Council’s statement in that way, “From the point of view of the divine and hierarchical structure of the Church, the religious state of life is not an intermediate state between the clerical and lay state.” (LG 33) Yet canon law protects the unique personality of this vocation from being absorbed: “By its very nature, the state of consecrated life is neither clerical nor lay.” (c.588 §1) “The profession of the evangelical counsels indisputably belongs to the life and holiness of the Church. This means that the consecrated life, present in the Church from the beginning, can never fail to be one of her essential and characteristic elements.” (Vita Consecrata 29) Consecrated life is constituted in the Church as a sacramental.  “Sacramentals are sacred signs by which effects, especially spiritual effects, are signified in some imitation of the sacraments and are obtained through the intercession of the Church” (CIC c.1166)  Sacramentals are intended to dispose a person for the sacraments.  Consecrated life is a special gift to dispose a person for the sacraments of Baptism or Holy Orders.  We ought not try to understand this gift to the Church unless we look to the Most Holy Trinity.  For, just as the Holy Spirit is only the Spirit of the Father and the Son, so consecrated life only exists of Baptism or Holy Orders, yet it is its own unique status vitae, incommunicable and distinct from the others, having its own unique personality in the Church.  The uniqueness of this state of life can be seen in light then of the holiness of the Holy Spirit.  The holiness of God is present in this state, for “the holiness of the Church is fostered in a special way by the observance of the counsels proposed in the Gospel by Our Lord to His disciples.”   St. Thérèse of the Child Jesus knew very clearly the distinct personality of her consecration, “In the heart of my mother the Church, I shall be love.”   The Holy Spirit is the Person-Love who is the uncreated Gift of the Father and the Son.  A consecrated person is to live and act in the Church in persona Spiritus Sanctus, i.e. in persona amoris, in the person of Love.  This love is not abstract, but something made visible.  This is why consecrated persons make public vows or promises, why they live in a community, why they wear a habit, why they serve those most in need of seeing God, the poor, the anawim, those in greatest apostolic need.  So that this form of life be stable and protected by the Church: “It is for the competent authority of the Church to interpret the evangelical counsels, to direct their practice by laws, and by canonical approbation to establish the stable forms of living deriving from them, and also, for its part, to take care that the institutes grow and flourish according to the spirit of the founders and sound traditions” (CIC c.576).
Attribution or Antonomasia
We must also see the way these vocations relate to one another and what reality they hold in common.  For we can truly say that the entire Church are all priests, whether ministerial or baptismal;  they are all faithful, all sons and daughters of God, all baptized into divine filiation; they are all religious, consecrated, totally gifting themselves to God, called to the perfection of charity, all are called to live the spirit of the evangelical counsels, yet God desires each state in life to embody the particular attribute of the Trinity in order to fully reveal the beauty and harmony that the complementarity and interplay of these elements brings when living in ordered movement.  We must look here to St. Thomas Aquinas’ genius for precise articulation.  When describing religious life, he tells us that “religion is that virtue whereby a man or woman offers something to the service and worship of God.  Therefore, those are called religious by antonomasia, who consecrate themselves totally to the divine service” (STh II-II q 186 a 1, Pope JPII, 10-26-94).   Antonomasia, like the word attribution, is a word that denotes an exemplary relationship that reveals the quality of a thing yet not its exclusivity.  This is the same thing we do when we call God the Father as Creator, yet the Son and the Holy Spirit create just as fully.  When we understand this antonomasia in the Trinity, we can then fully be conscious of it in the Church, but also even in canon law.  We are all called to obedience.  Yet a priest is called to an exemplary obedience, and obedience is the word that most typifies his vocation (This is developed at length in the Directory for the Life and Ministry of Priests, Congregation of the Clergy),  and it is obedience that many think of when they think of “Father” or “Head” to which the priest is configured.  The priest however is called to obey the laity and the religious in a special way, yet he does this as a father and head obeys children and members.  Similarly the Second Vatican Council “expressly mentions the consecrated chastity before the other two vows” when speaking of religious” (PJII, 11-16-94; Perfecte Caritatis 12, 13, 14, LG43).  Likewise the laity have a special antonomastic relationship to poverty, an evangelical counsel which helps to order relationships to temporal goods.
Unity and Diversity
We see the beautiful way in which the Lord, the Most Holy Trinity, endowed his People to exhibit both his oneness and this threeness, his unity and diversity, his being and personality, and that he wills that this image be regulated by law.  Whenever there is oneness or personhood, similarity or dissimilarity, unity or diversity, in the Church there is law to protect and order it to the oneness and personhood of the Blessed Trinity.  That is why priests, religious, and lay, all must keep their own juridical personality, to reflect the personality of their state, yet this is ultimately guided by the priests whose personality it is to be head.  They must always keep their own superiors and hierarchy yet be subject to the hierarchical priesthood.  Also, the personality of male and female, single, celibate, married, widowed, and even the presence of children, ought to be regulated by law also, because these are differences willed by God to reflect the Trinitarian communion.  We cannot ignore or confuse the sexual differences present in humanity and think that we will be progressing in a new Church movement.  This is why mixed congregations of men and women usually had different structures that would more faithfully respect their sexual difference.  We also cannot ignore the beautiful complementarity and unity of cultures and nations, willed  by  God.  This is why we have regions, provinces, national hierarchies, and local adaptations. 
Marian-Trinitarian Consecration
Although a person canonically becomes a SOLT member by incardination, public profession of the evangelical counsels according to SOLT constitutions, or by signing a covenant contract, there is a much deeper act that determines a person as a SOLT.  It is the Solemn Act of Consecration to Our Lady, followed by imitatio Mariae in her way of relating to the Most Holy Trinity.  The importance of this foundational act cannot be underestimated.  This Marian-Trinitarian Consecration brings each person first to the fullness of Trinitarian life, but also to the fullness of the ecclesial relationships that are modeled after the life of the Trinity lived out in Ecclesial Teams. As the founder, Fr. Jim Flanagan said, “Mary is our foundation. We have to maintain a real relationship with her. Without her, there is no SOLT. We have to keep her in our relationships. If she is not there, the foundation falls apart.” (June 6, 2002, Vignola, Italy).  It is only through Mary, with Mary, in Mary, for Mary, and by Mary, that our Trinitarian relationships of priests religious, and lay can become a hymn of praise to the Mosty Holy Trinity. 

In SOLT All People Gift Themselves to the Trinity through Our Lady in Various Commitments

"That the Church may shine forth as a people made one in the unity of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit." 
(St Cyrpian in his commentary of the Our Father, quoted by Vatican II - the mystery of the Church)

The following are a collection of pictures from different vocations gifting themselves to God in different ways.  The sisters and brothers renew their temporary vows or promises to God of chastity, poverty, and obedience, which after 5 years may become perpetual.  The laity either become committed members for one year or definitive commitment to live the SOLT way of life for the rest of their lives.

Sisters renew their vows
Brothers renew their promises
Becoming a Committed Member of SOLT as a sing or married
lay family means living for one year our charism according
to your state in life
Different families enter into a SOLT lay commitment for the
first time: the Segovia's, Sena's, and the Henderson's, also
there were some new lay commitments as well
New SOLT Lay Definitive Members: Francis and Conrad
Gonzalez, and Mary Hanrahan

New General Servant of the Laity and Councillors

The General Lay Chapter elects three names of SOLT priests and submits them to the General Priest Servant for him to select the new General Servant of the Laity.


The new General Lay Servant is Fr Zachary Shallow of the Mother of God, SOLT. He has served for many years as the formator for the laity and, with the SOLT founder, was heavily involved in developing the new lay formation program, Our Lady Loves You, which he has shared on EWTN.


Here are the new members of the General Lay Council:


Blair Burton
First Assistant
Tom and Susan George
Second Assistants
Jim DesPres
Third Assistants