Mary MacKillop goes to Scotland

To celebrate 150 years since Mary MacKillop embarked on her first overseas journey (March 1873 – December 1874), the Sisters of Saint Joseph share reflections and details from Mary’s travels to and from Europe – sourced from Mary’s letters and Congregational Archives.

When Mary MacKillop went to Rome to seek Papal approval for the Congregation of the Sisters of Saint Joseph, she also spent time in the United Kingdom. During her stay there, the idea was mooted that she should visit Scotland – the homeland of her parents and many Scottish relatives and friends now resident in Australia. Mary, however, felt that her emotional link to Scotland was not sufficient reason for her to go there.

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Saint Mary MacKillop Prayer

Statue by artist Louis Laumen located outside of St Patrick’s Cathedral, Melbourne.

We invite you to pray with St Mary MacKillop – a prayer written by our Irish Sisters of Saint Joseph…

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World Youth Day 2023

Elizabeth with her cousins wearing specially designed St Mary MacKillop t-shirts by Jane Maisey rsj (designjane)

World Youth Day (WYD) is an international event for young Catholics. This year, WYD took place in Lisbon, Portugal from 1-6 August.

I was blessed to be one of the estimated 1.5 million pilgrims who gathered for the event. I travelled to WYD with the Sydney Archdiocese, and then completed most of the pilgrimage with the Maronite Catholic Youth.

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Saint Mary MacKillop Feast Day 2023

A Message from Sr Monica Cavanagh, Congregational Leader, Sisters of Saint Joseph.

Let us rejoice in the gift of Mary MacKillop to our Church and our world as we celebrate her feast day.

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The Other Mary

Brisbane Archdiocesan image of Mary MacKillop as Patron

In the Gospel of Matthew, we are told that “towards dawn on the first day of the week, Mary Magdalene and the other Mary went to see the tomb.” (28:1) Earlier we had been told that, after Joseph of Arimathea had placed the body of Jesus in a new tomb and sealed it, “Mary Magdalene and the other Mary were there, sitting opposite the tomb”. (27:61)

Now, there are so many Marys in the Gospels that one scholar even suggested that Mary was not a name but a title given to a number of women in the New Testament, signifying a particular function in the early Christian community. Whatever about that, there is a certain mystery about “the other Mary” who figures at the end of Matthew’s Gospel.

By metaphoric leap and midrashic application, I want to apply it to St Mary MacKillop, since we begin to understand her if we see that she, like any other of the saints, is a saint precisely because she is a witness of the Resurrection; she was and is a woman who sat and sits “opposite the tomb”, a woman who went and still goes “to see the tomb”.

In going to see the tomb, we are told, the two Marys meet an angel who says to them, “Do not be afraid; for I know that you seek Jesus who was crucified. He is not here; for he has risen, as he said. Come, see the place where he lay. Then go quickly and tell his disciples that he has risen from the dead, and that he is going before you to Galilee; there you will see him.”

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Mary MacKillop, An Example and Inspiration

Alma Cottage today located at Mary MacKillop Place, North Sydney where Mary MacKillop passed away.
I consider I have this day assisted at the deathbed of a Saint. [1]
Cardinal Moran 1909

We know that a saint is someone whose life is lived in intimate union with God, and for God, accepting God’s will in all events of life. (One’s life is examined to be considered worthy by the Church to be honoured and imitated). This is what Mary tried to do throughout her 67 years of life, and she also urged her mother Flora to be a saint.[2]  Living holy lives would seem to be in the DNA of the MacKillop family, as their lived history demonstrates.

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Mary MacKillop’s Virtues, Values and Time in Arrowtown, Aotearoa New Zealand

Mary MacKillop Cottage signs in Arrowtown

How do Mary MacKillop’s virtues and values inspire the happenings of everyday life?

Sr Margaret Mary Sexton wrote:

When the time came for Mother Mary MacKillop to begin her visitation of the other houses, she feared her little Arrow community would be very lonely so far away from all the other convents.Sr Margaret Mary Sexton, Memories of Mary by those who knew her – Sisters of St. Joseph 1925-1926

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Mary MacKillop’s Example of Charitable Speech

Statue by sculptor Judith Rolevink, located outside the Mary MacKillop Memorial Chapel at Mary MacKillop Place, North Sydney NSW.
I did think she [Mary MacKillop] was very patient and showed us all the love and welcome a mother could when we joined the Sydney sisterhood. One thing that struck me particularly was her charity in speaking to others.
Sr Isidore Dunning 1925

In our world of instant news and information, we are constantly confronted by stories that judge other people. Our media, including social media, gives us conclusions without much examination of facts.

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