Religious of the Assumption
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Religious of the Assumption were founded by Saint Marie Eugénie Milleret in Paris in 1839. Her vision was of transforming society through education. She taught that faith in Jesus impels one to love the world and all its peoples.
Marie Eugenie believed that all action should flow from a life of love and prayer and tasked the Assumption Sisters with responding to the urgent needs of their times.
From the first community of five young women, the congregation quickly spread throughout the world. The Religious of the Assumption today is an international congregation of 1300+ Sisters of over 40 nationalities, responding to the challenges and calls of society in 35 countries.
Assumption Sisters are called to live and love according to the Gospel. Their communities are committed to effecting change in society through prayer and education.
They are a diverse group of women from many countries who live together in close-knit, joyful communities. Prayer, the heart of their life, is how they come to know and love Jesus, and with Him, love the world and its people. It is also at the heart of their educational mission.
In the Assumption, education is understood as a process by which the human person is freed and society transformed. That freedom marks their life together in community, as well their work for the coming of the Kingdom of God.
In the United States they can be found in the inner city and the suburbs, in the rural southwest and the urban Northeast. They teach in colleges and run after-school programs for children; they advocate for immigrants and teach English as a Second Language; they work in parishes and offer faith formation programs.
Their communities are in Madrid, Mexico City , Queretaro, Rwanda, Paris , Worcester, MA; Philadelphia, PA; Lansdale, PA; Chaparral, NM; Manila, Philippines; Bangkok, Thailand, etc.
The Mother House is located in Paris, France.
[edit] External links
- Religious of the Assumption - Official Site
- "Sisters of the Assumption". Catholic Encyclopedia. (1913). New York: Robert Appleton Company.