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Perpetual Adoration Chapel
Our Lady of Sorrows
3816 East State Street
Mercerville, NJ 08619 2499
At present it is open from 5AM to
11PM daily and located next to Mary's Haven.
Call Toni Prunetti 587-1167.
The Perpetual Adoration program,
which is still very active, was started in 1985. Over 800
parishioners volunteered to spend time praying in front of the
Blessed Sacrament every week. This was the single largest response
to the program nationwide to that date.

www.perpetualadoration.homestead.com/
WHAT IS PERPETUAL ADORATION?
Perpetual Adoration is a Eucharistic
devotion whereby members of a given parish (or other entity) unite
in taking hours of adoration before the Most Blessed Sacrament (in
most cases, exposed), both during the day and throughout the night,
seven days a week.
Why is exposition in the
monstrance preferred?
To see Jesus visibly present under
the appearance of the small white host is much more conducive to
intimacy than hidden away in the tabernacle. Moreover, it adds an
extra responsibility on the adorers to be sure to be faithful to the
hours they are scheduled, since the suggested norm for having Jesus
exposed in the monstrance is that there should be at least two
adorers present, and He must never be left alone. Could not these
words of our Lord be applied today: "Indeed, this is the will of My
heavenly Father, that everyone who looks upon the Son, and believes
in Him, shall have eternal life. Him I will raise up on the last
day."
What are some good reasons
for establishing Perpetual Adoration?
To provide an easy, attractive, and
practical way of rendering God adoration which is His due as our
Creator of giving Him thanks for our redemption of making reparation
for our sins and the sins of mankind; of petitioning the good God
for the constant help we need.
To show our gratitude to our Lord for
remaining among us in our tabernacles, and to make at least some
atonement for the many sacrileges, indifferences, and ingratitude
which He receives in His Sacrament of Love.
What spiritual benefits
and graces can be attributed to the establishment of a parish
Perpetual Adoration program?
- an increase in Mass attendance
and reception of the sacraments;
- return of fallen-away Catholics
and increase in the number of conversions;
- increase in religions and
priestly vocations;
- renewal of Catholic family life;
- spiritual level of the people is
raised with a resulting desire and courage to spread the "good
news" to others;
- a greater community spirit,
centered as it is on the heart of the parish, Jesus' presence in
the Blessed Sacrament.
How should one go about
establishing a Perpetual Adoration program in one's parish?
- Pray to Our Lady of the Blessed
Sacrament to obtain this great grace for your parish.
- Do everything with the knowledge
and permission of the pastor, assuring that it will not involve
more work for him. Remember it may be necessary to work
alongside the parish council and other parish committees as the
pastor advises.
- Study the organizational
procedures of other parishes with Perpetual Adoration programs.
The Franciscan Friars of Marytown will continue in the future to
have reports on such programs in their publication.
- Interest existing organizations
such as the parish council, parish prayer groups, the Holy Name
Society, Saint Vincent de Paul Society-- to support the program
by supplying leaders who will help organize and run the program.
Who is responsible for
organizing a Perpetual Adoration program?
Vatican Council II had emphasized the
importance of lay involvement in the Church's mission. It is the
team principle of laity doing the foot work, but always keeping the
pastor informed that makes an adoration program work. It is
important that from its very inception that pastors and parish
clergy be assured that it does not mean their taking on extra work
in an already busy schedule.
How is Perpetual Adoration
organized in a parish?
The parish is divided into
twenty-four groups or teams corresponding to the twenty-four hours
of the day. Each member in a particular group is scheduled for a
different day of the week. A captain or coordinator or contact
person is chosen from each of the groups to make sure that each hour
is covered throughout the week. If someone needs a substitute, they
call their coordinator who calls someone else in the group who would
be able to switch days with the person who needs the substitute.
Some parishes have divided the responsibility of filling hours to
seven day and seven night captains, the men taking the night hours
and the women the day. Regardless of how this responsibility is
filled, responsible group leaders are vital for a successful
program.
What should be the immediate
preparation in starting an adoration program?
First, sermons on the value of
Eucharistic adoration at all the Sunday Masses. After the homily, a
written invitation is passed out. Those wanting to participate fill
out a form and place it in the collection basket at the offertory.
People check which day and night period of time they would like to
make their holy hour: morning, noon, evening, or night. There is
also a space at the bottom of the invitation to be checked off for
those who would be willing to help organize the Perpetual Adoration.
A meeting is held during the week for these volunteers. During this
meeting, the twenty-four or fourteen coordinators are chosen along
with four people who would be responsible to make out the initial
schedule. It generally takes from two to three weeks to organize
Perpetual Adoration in a parish.
What is the best location for
Perpetual Adoration?
The best location for Perpetual
Adoration is a small chapel. A chapel can be kept warm economically
in the winter. It creates a greater atmosphere for quiet intimacy
with the Lord, and people generally feel more secure in a smaller
place. If the church does not have a chapel, any small room can be
converted into one such as an altar boys' sacristy, a crying room, a
room in the rectory, convent, or parish center, are all suitable
locations for a Perpetual Adoration chapel with proper security
measures taken into consideration.
How many people are needed to
have parish Perpetual Adoration?
There are one hundred and sixty-eight
hours in a week. Technically, all that is needed is one hundred and
sixty-eight people willing to make one holy hour on a weekly basis
so that these hours can be coordinated in such a way that all hours
are covered. Moreover, there is nothing to stop an adorer from
making a daily holy hour. This is to be encouraged and is more
common than one imagines. Realistically, however, it is better to
have as many as two hundred in case of illnesses, vacations, and
various situations where a person needs a substitute. There are
several small parishes in the country with only one hundred and
fifty to two hundred families that were able to have Perpetual
Adoration. These small parishes are a wonderful example to larger
ones. If they could do it, certainly others could. Our Holy Father,
Pope John Paul II, said that "our essential commitment in life is to
persevere and advance constantly in Eucharistic life and piety and
to grow spiritually in the climate of the Holy Eucharist."
How does one spend an hour
before Jesus exposed in the Blessed Sacrament?
This hour Jesus wants you to spend
with Him is spent any way you want. You may bring your own prayer
books, use the books in the chapel, read the Bible, pray the rosary,
or just sit and relax and enjoy the sweet peace that comes from
simply being in the Presence of God. You may feel that you can't
pray well. Don't let this discourage you. The mere fact that you
take time out at a specific time each week to spend an hour with
Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament pleases Him very much and is in
itself a prayer of great faith. Please remember that Perpetual
Adoration is a parish is not just for a day, a week, a month, or a
year. Rather, it is for always. It is not temporary, but ongoing,
lasting, permanent.
(The Franciscan Friars of Marytown
have devoted a special fifty-six page issue of Immaculata Magazine
to the Eucharist. It is available from the Conventual Friars of
Marytown, 1600 West Park Avenue, Libertyville IL 60048. This text is
abridged from an article which originally appeared in this issue.)
Electronic text (c) Copyright EWTN
1996. All rights reserved.
www.ewtn.com/faith/teachings/euchd3.htm
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