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One of the advantages of living at school is that the day doesn't end when the last bell rings. The campus is your neighborhood, a place where everyone you pass says hello, and everyone very quickly knows your name. Your neighbors are your friends and classmates, but also your houseparents and teachers. We help each other become the best versions of ourselves by learning from one another. Before long, the friendships you make here will make your new neighborhood feel like home. Our House system lies at both the heart of our mission and the boarding school tradition. You and your fellow classmates live, study, and sleep in your House, and together you will continue traditions - and invent new ones - that are the fabric of our School life. Sacramental LifeThe celebration of mass is the primary way to God. On Sundays and Holy Days of Obligation, students and faculty gather in the Church to enter into the one ineffable mystery: the Eucharist. At school masses, students serve as lectors, singers, gift-bearers, and altar-servers. Throughout the year, the monks offer house masses as well. The intimacy and familiarity of house masses serves as a reminder that “God comes to us,” right here in their “school home.” Confessions are heard every Friday during conference periods. Once a term there is also a schoolwide reconciliation service. Eucharistic Adoration is offered in the Church every Monday night. |
Lectio-DivinaLectio Divina, or “Divine Reading,” refers to the monastic practice of reading the Bible. Unlike Bible studies which focus on analysis and study, in lectio, the person takes a more receptive disposition to God’s word. To put it differently, in lectio, we let God speak to us. Here at the Abbey, we are blessed to be associated with the Manquehue Apostolic Movement, an officially recognized “Private Association of Lay Faithful” whose aim is to promote the Benedictine tradition of lectio divina. Our lectio groups are student-led and meet by house. Students gather to meditate on the Sunday scriptures, share prayer intentions, and grow in friendship and joy.
In addition to members of the Manquehue visiting our school and becoming a part of our community during our Winter Term each year, a group of Abbey students and faculty spend 10 days in Santiago and in the surrounding region in the summer. While there, they tour the area and complete a community service project by constructing a home for a local family. |
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RCIA and Confirmation ProgramThe Abbey offers RCIA (Rite of Christian Initiation for Adults) and Confirmation classes. Students sign up at the beginning of the year and meet weekly to prepare for baptism, first communion, and/or confirmation. Students who receive all sacraments of initiation do so at the Easter Vigil. In May, there is a separate mass for those only receiving confirmation. |
The Lourdes PilgrimageAbbey students are in the privileged position to have the opportunity to travel to Lourdes, France, to volunteer in helping the pilgrims, or malades, who seek healing to fully benefit from their time in this historic and holy place. The students also have the chance to savor the day-to-day life of the town, and enjoy their own spiritual retreat. The late Hugh Markey '40 sponsored the pilgrimage, as he did for decades, for students to go with Ampleforth Abbey in England on a week-long trip that has been taking place for over a century. Since the mid-1990s, Joe Michaud '90 has organized and led the Portsmouth Abbey students each year. The volunteer activities at Lourdes change, and so the experience is a very individual one, varying from year to year, pilgrimage from pilgrimage, and person to person. This could mean responsibilities include meeting the malades at the train station, helping them into rickshaws, transporting them to the Holy Shrines, or offering assistance as needed. |
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The Grotto & Candlelight ProcessionThe School has a Marian grotto, modeled on the grotto of Lourdes, which has provided a focal point of prayer for the school community. The grotto has served as the point of origin for candlelight procession that accentuate the beautiful surroundings of the Abbey campus. The School community marked the first Friday in May -- the month the Catholic Church devotes to the Virgin Mary -- to dedicate the Grotto of Our Lady of Lourdes in 2012. The generous gift of an alumnus who has spent considerable time at Lourdes, in the south of France, the School's outdoor shrine was constructed to pay homage to the Virgin Mary. The massive stones -- some weighing as much as 11,000 to 12,000 pounds each -- used for the Grotto were harvested from fields on School property. The statue of the Virgin Mary, enshrined in the side of the Grotto, was made from Carrara marble and was specially sculpted in Italy for the Grotto. A candle rack for devotional candles, marked with the same Cross Moline that is over the front door of the Church of St. Gregory the Great, was fabricated and donated by Billy Mac (Mac Marine), of Tiverton. The large granite bench placed in front of the Grotto is from a Newport estate and has been in storage on campus for years. |
The faculty and the entire student body, arranged according to their residential houses, process—lit candles in hand— from the Grotto to the lower road, then to the south and east of St. Martin's House and then along the west side of the "Holy Lawn," which they circumambulate in two circuits. Finally, everyone ascends the main stairway into the Church. Meanwhile, on the raised platform immediately in front of the Church, student instrumentalists and singers provide music and lead the community in prayer.
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