Faith and Life - Sr. Jennifer - A Carmelite Nun in Ronda Spain Pt 2
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- Опубликовано: 28 авг 2023
- Faith and Life
See God’s love and grace in the lives of ordinary Catholics practicing their faith every day. This inspiring series profiles where they’ve come from and where God is taking them.
Sr. Jennifer from Gibraltar continues to explain how the Carmelite nuns of Ronda, Spain meet their financial needs by baking bread and cookies which are sold to the locals, and how she coped when Covid ravaged the convent leaving two nuns dead and more ill.
Sr. Jennifer details how the church is the custodian of an extremely venerated holy relic - "the incorruptible hand of St. Teresa of Ávila".
Teresa of Ávila, also known as Saint Teresa of Jesus, was a Spanish mystic, writer, and reformer in the Catholic Church. She was born on March 28, 1515, in Gotarrendura, Spain, and died on October 4, 1582, in Alba de Tormes, Spain. She is one of the most prominent figures of the Catholic Counter-Reformation and a significant contributor to Spanish literatur - Развлечения
What an interesting nun.I admire the Carmelites,I would have never had the strength .I was in an non inclosed order and couldn't make it.
God bless this woundful lady and thank you for this 🙏video
Hermana Jennifer, reza por nosotros.
What a wonderful video. Thank you!
I just wonder why some Carmelites wear the scapular over the veil, not just the wimple.
Can there be a truer daughter of Teresa 🔥✝️🕊️
It's absolutely horrible to sit with someone behind bars. DO YOU HONESTLY THINK THAT JESUS WOULD EVER WANT ANY PERSON TO SIT WITH OTHER PEOPLE AND BE BEHIND BARS?? HE WOULD NOT.
How do you know what Jesus wants?
They choose to live away from the world to devote their time to a relationship with Jesus. No one is forcing them.
Clearly you don't understand the religious life. Maybe you should learn about it before you apply your ignorance of it to it.
It’s not to keep them in. It’s to keep you and the distractions of the world , out !
The Cloistered Discalced Carmelite nuns have preserved my family with their prayers and spiritual advice over 6 decades when my mom hesitantly rang the bell at their monastery in 1947 and the Sister said “Deo Gratias!