Father James Kubicki, SJ, National Director, Apostleship of Prayer , visits J. M. Morrow Memorial Nursing Home
On the first Thursday of February, 2014, The Nonco Foundation conducted its first Apostleship of Prayer meeting at J. M. Morrow Memorial Nursing Home to continue the work that Nonco Pelafigue started. It was attended by 17 of the residents. Nonco Foundation members who lead the group were: Charles Taylor, Rod Roy and Betty Roy. Other volunteers who participated were Lucy Richard Romero and Shirley Mistrot Chautin. Over the past year, Paul LaPorte, Sis LaPorte, Leonard Marks, Mavis Arnaud Fruge and Suzanne Huval Stelly have participated.
Following the guidelines of the Apostleship of Prayer, the Nonco Group prays together for the intentions which the Holy Father assigns for each month. Residents also state their personal intentions. In closing the meeting, the residents and leaders join together in praying for the next person in the group who will pass away, along with the Lord’s help in making the last years of life, the best years of life. A few months ago, the residents requested that prayers be said in English and French and that has been added.
In January, Father James Kubicki SJ, of the Apostleship of Prayer National Headquarters in Milwaukee, advised the Nonco Foundation that he wanted to meet the nursing home group and he was welcomed in Arnaudville on Thursday, January 29, 2015, by a group of 30. The group at J. Michael Morrow Memorial Nursing Home is the first nursing home group in the Apostleship of Prayer.
Father Kubicki gave some of the history of the Apostleship of Prayer. The Apostleship of Prayer began in France in 1844. At that time Fr. Francis X. Gautrelet told a group of Jesuit seminarians who were eager to work on the missions: "Be apostles now, apostles of prayer! Offer everything you are doing each day in union with the Heart of our Lord for what He wishes, the spread of the Kingdom for the salvation of souls."
In 1861, the first Messenger of the Sacred Heart was published. Besides promoting devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, this periodical also tried to develop in its readers an awareness of the needs of the Universal Church. In time the Pope himself proposed a particular monthly intention and since 1929 a specific mission intention has also been proposed to the faithful for their prayerful attention.
On its 100th anniversary in 1944, Pope Pius XII gave thanks to God for the Apostleship of Prayer, calling it "one of the most efficacious means for the salvation of souls, since it concerns prayer and prayer in common." He commended the organization for its goal: " to pray assiduously for the needs of the Church and to try to satisfy them through daily offering."
Pope John Paul II, on the occasion of its 150th anniversary in 1994, wrote: "As the dawn of the third millennium approaches a world in which many sectors have become quite pagan, it is obvious how urgent it is for members of the Apostleship of Prayer to be involved in the service of the new evangelization. For Christ has come to preach the Good News to the poor, and the Apostleship of Prayer has always considered itself a form of popular piety for the masses. As such it has performed an important service during the past hundred and fifty years by giving new life to people's awareness of how valuable their lives are to God for the building up of His Kingdom."
Truly the Apostleship of Prayer is the Pope's own "prayer group." It is, as Pope John Paul II wrote in 1985, "a precious treasure from the Pope's heart and the Heart of Christ."
By the year 2000, the Apostleship of Prayer had over 40 million members, 50 different Messengers of the Sacred Heart, and 40 other periodicals.
Pictured above is Father Kubicki in front of Nonco's little house in Arnaudville.
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