POPE JOHN PAUL II ON THE CONTEMPLATIVE VOCATION
Our modern world needs lives which silently proclaim the primacy of God. We need people who treat the Lord as Lord, who freely devote all their energies to adoring Him, who immerse themselves in His mystery with no thought of human reward, but solely to affirm that He is the Absolute.
The Dominican nun offers her life for the glory and praise of God and intercedes for the salvation of all her brothers and sisters throughout the world.

The cloister brings mind that space in the heart where every person is called to union with the Lord. Accepted as a gift and chosen as a free response of love, the cloister is the place of spiritual communion with God and with every person – the place where we become more acutely aware of the need of God’s mercy for ourselves and for our broken and restless world.
Even in the simplicity of their life, cloistered communities, visibly represent the goal towards which the entire community of the Church travels. As an expression of pure love which is worth more than any work, the contemplative life generates an extraordinary apostolic and missionary effectiveness. (cf Vita Consecrata)
Monastery of St Catherine of Siena
The Twenties,
Drogheda,
Co. Louth,
Ireland.
A92 KR84
Charities Registration No: 20010300