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Six nuns excommunicated for remaining in heretical group

Published: September 26, 2007   
Tara Little
Msgr. J. Gaston Hebert, administrator of the Diocese of Little Rock, speaks in a press conference Sept. 26 about the excommunication of six religious sisters in Hot Springs for membership in the schismatic Army of Mary.

Six sisters from the Monastery of Our Lady of Charity and Refuge in Hot Springs were excommunicated by the Catholic Church for their involvement in a schismatic association based in Quebec, Canada.

It is believed to be the first time anyone in the Diocese of Little Rock has been formally excommunicated.

The excommunicated sisters are Mary Gerard Lalancette, Mary Thomas O'Keefe, Marietta Fecteau, Mary Anne Lalancette, Mary Theresa Dionne and Theresa Marie Lalancette.

The women have been long-time members of the Community of the Lady of All Nations, also known as the Army of Mary. On their own, the six sisters decided to join the association between 20 and 30 years ago and adopt the teachings of its founder, Marie-Paul Giguere, who believes she is the reincarnation of the Virgin Mary.

The association is no longer considered a Catholic organization because of its false teachings on the Trinity and Mary, a Vatican official said.

"The Army of Mary has clearly and publicly become a schismatic community and, as such, a non-Catholic association. Its particular teachings are false and its activities are not able to be frequented nor supported by Catholics," according to a formal declaration written July 11 by the Vatican's Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

The congregation released the declaration Sept. 12 and Msgr. J. Gaston Hebert, diocesan administrator, learned of the decision on Sept. 17.

On Sept. 18 Msgr. Hebert personally visited with the sisters and their chaplain, Father Erik Pohlmeier, also pastor of St. John and St. Mary churches in Hot Springs. After reading the declaration, Msgr. Hebert gave the eight sisters in attendance one week to prayerfully consider their decision. Msgr. Hebert said he gave them a week because he wanted the sisters to "knowingly and deliberately" make their choice between the Army of Mary and full communion with the Catholic Church.

He returned to the monastery the night of Sept. 25 and accepted the decisions of six of them to leave.

"It is a painfully historic moment in this Church," Msgr. Hebert said at a press conference Sept. 26 at St. John Center in Little Rock. "These are my friends. I have known them my whole life."

Church officials in Canada, Rome and Little Rock have talked with the association's priests, sisters and lay members for many years about their teachings, and they have failed to recant any errors. The final act happened June 3 when Father Jean-Pierre Mastropietro, an association priest, invalidly ordained six men in Canada.

Diocesan officials said Bishop J. Peter Sartain remained in dialogue with the sisters from 2001 to 2006 about their involvement in the Army of Mary, encouraging them to stop promoting the association among the laity.

Father Benedict Picard, a member of the Army of Mary, served as the order's chaplain in Hot Springs from 1998 until he returned to Canada in 2004.

"Bishop Sartain worked with Father Picard and the sisters to try to get them to disassociate with the movement," said Deacon Bo McAllister, diocesan chancellor for canonical affairs.

Three of the six sisters who chose Sept. 25 to continue their membership in the association are biological siblings. Sister Theresa Marie Lalancette, the superior, and her sisters, Mary Anne Lalancette and M. Gerard Lalancette, came to Arkansas from Quebec more than 50 years ago.

Sister Mary Thomas is director of the order's day care center and the only American-born sister to be excommunicated. She joined the order after attending St. Michael boarding school. Sisters Marietta and Mary Theresa, assistant superior, were both born in Canada.

Ten women religious are members of Our Lady of Charity and Refuge.

Sister Maria Dinh, the convent's secretary, and Sister Mary Elizabeth Dinh are originally from Vietnam and have never been associated with the Army of Mary, Msgr. Hebert said. The two sisters, who are not related, will be moving to another convent, he said.

Msgr. Hebert said the other two sisters are living in a nursing home and could not "knowingly and deliberately" choose to remain with the Army of Mary. They are Sisters Mary Olive Cote, who at around 90 years old is the order's oldest member, and Sister M. Anthony Bessette.

During the press conference, Msgr. Hebert said the sisters' decisions mean the monastery will no longer be recognized by the diocese, and laity in Garland County should not financially support the order.

"They will no longer have any sacraments. We removed (the Blessed Sacrament) from the premises last night," he said.

Although they cannot receive Communion, they are encouraged to attend Mass, he said.

Msgr. Hebert, a Hot Springs native, was the order's chaplain in 2005 and witnessed first hand some of the sisters' beliefs.

"From my childhood I have known them. They are good, good women who love God and have served the community beautifully. They have served the poor, outcasts, abused women, children who could not afford to be educated. They have done all this over the years because they love God. But somewhere along the line they fell into this Army of Mary and became entranced and deluded with this doctrine that is heretical."

Our Lady of Charity and Refuge opened in Hot Springs Sept. 27, 1908, when five French-Canadian sisters arrived at the request of Bishop John B. Morris. At one point, there were 27 sisters living at the former "mansion" on 10 acres on Malvern Avenue. Between 1910 and 1968 the order operated a girls' boarding school, trade school and laundry.

Known locally as Good Shepherd Home, the sisters operated St. Michael School for children in pre-kindergarten to sixth grade until 2001. Since the school closing, the order continues to care for infants to pre-kindergarten students. Since 2004 St. Michael Day Care Center has been certified by the Arkansas Quality Approval Certification program and received an Arkansas Better Chance grant. It is seen in the community as a quality day care, especially for low-income families.

The sisters' connection to the Hot Springs Catholic community has been strong for nearly 100 years. The Catholic community's perpetual adoration chapel and the Hot Springs Catholic Youth Center were located on the grounds. The chapel and youth center will be relocated elsewhere in the community, Msgr. Hebert said.

It was common for parishioners in Hot Springs and Hot Springs Village to raise money for the day care and assist with projects around the grounds.

The future of the order and monastery has been questioned. The order owns the property on Malvern Avenue. The order was founded based on the teachings of St. Augustine and St. John Eudes, but it is an autonomous religious order and is not connected with any other monastery outside of Arkansas.

The sisters receive financial assistance through the community and operation of the day care.

"To pay utilities, food bills and maintenance, the sisters depend on donations and bequests from former students and Hot Springs citizens as well as fundraisers sponsored by the school's support organization," according to Sept. 30, 2006, article in Arkansas Catholic.

Msgr. Hebert said he hopes all Catholics in the diocese will continue to pray for the Monastery of Our Lady of Charity and Refuge and that some day the six women will reconcile with the Catholic Church.

"Christ never turns his back on anyone and neither do we," he said.


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