Chapter Commitments

The Congregation Chapter is the highest decision-making body in the congregation. In this event we celebrate our unity, renew our life and spirit, reflect together on the call of the gospel, and make decisions in fidelity to our charism.

— Constitution 100

A general Chapter is the gathering of the Congregation, usually every six years, to elect new leadership and to commit to a direction for the next six years; that commitment is known as the Chapter Call. It is a commitment in spirit, thought, word and deed developed after much prayer, discussion, discernment and reading the signs of the times.

2022 - 23rd Congregation Chapter

Chapter Theme - The Time is Now: Embracing the Future with Gratitude and Hope

Teaneck, New Jersey

  • “The year 2020 looms large as we embark on a new decade of life, and especially a new decade in the life of the Congregation. What will the new decade ask of us? How will it gift us? How will it surprise us? How will it break our hearts?”

    – Sheila Lemieux, CSJP

    January 2020 Letter Convoking the 23rd Congregation Chapter

    NOW …

    There has been plenty to break our hearts: the global pandemic, racism, war and violence, the mass migration of people, political polarization, and environmental destruction. But we have been gifted and surprised, too. Disturbed again and again by the Spirit – by, for example, the gift of Laudato Si’, the Black Lives Matter movement, our Church’s call to synodality, and the challenge of the global pandemic still with us for this concluding session of the 23rd Chapter – the reality of our interconnection and interdependence is undeniable. We are committed to respond to the challenge of Laudato Si’. We are truly one family of God and Earth is our common home.

    Each Chapter faces new challenges and, in light of our charism, the objectives of former Chapters still remain relevant to us. Yet we find ourselves at a place we’ve never been, at the edge of tomorrow, the dawn of our reCreation. These new times demand a change of heart: to be, think, and act differently. Our spiritual lives require deep re-examination and transformation; our outward actions must confront privilege and power in ourselves and society.

    Urged by a burning desire to speak and act boldly with open, loving and adventurous hearts, and in collaboration with others, we now commit to:

    Cultivating and practicing peace through justice by the intentional living of interculturality, anti-racism, and inclusion

    Addressing, healing, and being present to the wounds and broken relationships among ourselves and all of God’s Creation

    Resisting every form of war and violence

    Making a place for everyone at the table where all are welcomed and gifts are honored

    It is time to be who we have always said we are. It is time to live our words. We embrace these promptings of the Spirit with courage, humility, hope and trust.

2014 - 22nd Congregation Chapter

Chapter Theme - Deeper and Wider, The Challenge of Peace

Seattle, Washington

  • At the 22nd Congregation Chapter, held in 2014 the following Chapter Call was approved.

    “Disturbed by the Spirit,
    we recommit ourselvs to
    Jesus' way of radical hospitality.

    We are called to a deeper and wider
    living of community for mission
    in company with poor and
    marginalized people.

    Our contemplative discernment
    pushes us, individually and as
    Congregation, to action;
    deeper mutual support enables us
    to take risks for justice, peace and
    the integrity of creation.

    As disciples of Jesus, we respond anew
    to the call of Mother Clare
    to be "brave, noble, large-minded
    and courageous souls."

2008 - 21st Congregation Chapter

Chapter Theme - The Crossing Place

Monmouth, New Jersey

  • Context
    The challenge to live our Constitutions was a refrain echoing throughout the Chapter, heard in one form or another from Sheila Lemieux, CSJP, in her introductory remarks, from Nancy Sylvester, IHM, and from John Dear, SJ. We are people of peace, open to the liberating power of God (Constitution 28), committed to live and proclaim Christ's gospel of peace (Constitution 20), experiencing our own need for continuing conversion (Constitution 10), and willing to become peacemakers in the spirit of the beatitudes (Constitution 39). Our vows and covenants commit us to walk in the way of peace (Constitution 40), our history has set a direction, and our experience of contemporary society compels us forward.

    Today we stand at a new crossing place. We live in a society marked strongly by the violence of war, violence to people through poverty and a sense of powerlessness and alienation, violence to earth, sea, and sky – violence that is truly cosmic. In response we commit ourselves to grow more deeply toward a nonviolent way of being and acting as peacemakers.

    Commitment
    "The very name Sisters of Peace will, it is hoped, inspire the desire of peace and a love for it." Mother Clare in the original 1884 Constitutions.

    As people of peace, we commit ourselves:

    to nonviolence grounded in contemplative prayer and reflection

    to nonviolence practiced in our daily lives and ministries

    to nonviolence in the protection of all life

    to active nonviolence as we resist the reality of evil

    Sowing the Seeds of Peace
    "You will hope, if God blesses your work, to sow the seeds of peace in modern society." - Bishop Bagshawe at the profession of the first Sisters of Peace, January 7, 1884

    The lens of nonviolence brings new insights and commitments to all aspects of our lives together. We commit to look with eyes of compassion, to relate with openness and hospitality, and to act from a center of contemplative prayer, peace and passion. Our prayer and study lead us to actions which "make our own the concerns of the human family ... especially those who are poor and oppressed." (Constitution 55).

    We call ourselves to prayer.

    Congregational weekly peace prayer

    Examination of Consciousness related to nonviolence

    Regular reflection on the Beatitudes/Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5-7) and Constitutions

    We call ourselves to study.

    History and people of nonviolence

    Constitutions and writings of Margaret Anna Cusack and community members, read through the lens of nonviolence

    Contemporary resources for practice of nonviolence

    We call ourselves to action.

    Practice nonviolence in all relationships, with self, one another, Earth, and Cosmos

    Stand in solidarity with those who are poor and respond to injustice with creativity, passion and nonviolence

    Practice nonviolence in communication, reconciliation and forgiveness

    Live nonviolence in our choices as citizens and consumers

    Practice nonviolence in collaboration with others to heal the violence in our world

    As individuals, we will discern if we are called to take a vow of nonviolence

    Practical guides for prayer, study and action will be developed and shared throughout the Congregation.

  • Each flower in the field of gorse contributes to the beauty of the whole ... each has its own beauty which enhances the beauty of the rest. ~ Mother Clare, The Spouse of Christ

    The ancient forests have been hewn down with little profit to the spoiler and to the injury in many ways of the native ... The Country which was in 'God's keeping' then has but little improved since it came into the keeping of man." ~ Mother Clare, The History of Ireland

    Context
    Earth is a revelation of God and the sustainer of all life. We recognize that the exploitation and destruction of Earth's air, water, soil and species is a sacrilege. We are committed to a spirituality of peacemaking which compels us to live in right relationship with the entire community of life. In this way, "we engage in the struggle against the reality of evil and continue the work of establishing God's reign of justice and peace."(Constitution 2)

    Our history calls us to a special love of those who are poor. (Constitution 21)

    In her own time, Margaret Anna Cusack (Mother Clare) made the connection between the devastation of earth and the victims of famine. Failure to care for creation also threatened family life, the wellbeing of women and children was a cause of emigration. Recognizing the interdependence of all life, we count among those who are poor all Earth's creatures whose lives are threatened or diminished. We experience a call to live our stance of contemplative, nonviolent peacemaking in regard to creation. It is faithfulness to this charism in our own time that compels us to respond to the crisis of climate change/global warming.

    We believe in a sustainable world, yet we see Earth's life-giving resources weakened by human choices and actions. Climate change, especially global warming, is already affecting peoples and biological systems throughout the world. War and nuclear proliferation post a particular threat to the integrity of Earth.

    Commitment
    We commit ourselves, personally and communally, to:

    Deepen our spirituality of peace regarding care of creation

    Identify and reduce our carbon footprint in our communities, ministries and institutions

    Pray, study and act to promote a sustainable lifestyle

    Participate in legislative efforts to support the integrity of creation

    Stand in solidarity and act in justice with marginalized people whose lives are already affected by the devastation of Earth

    Collaborate with others, including interfaith and civic groups, who are addressing climate change.

    Practical guides for prayer, study and action will be developed and shared throughout the Congregation.