“It’s not often that we are able to share this joyful announcement,” the Rev. Joseph Verespy told the congregation at Our Lady of Fatima Parish in Wilkes-Barre…
CATONSVILLE, Md. (CNS) The All Saints Sisters of the Poor have carried out a wide array of surprisingly diverse ministries over the course of their 150 years in Baltimore.
They ve helped children of former slaves, worked with children with special needs and provided homes for poverty-stricken children and seniors.
They ve offered space for laypeople to make religious retreats, cared for the environment, tended to injured animals, promoted beekeepingĀ and maintained a scriptorium where they
CATONSVILLE, Md. (CNS) With an apron protecting her long, black religious habit, Sister Deborah Rose Rosado marveled at the steady stream of thick, golden goo she poured into a small glass jar.
Careful to stop the current as the sticky substance reached the container s one-pint capacity, Sister Deborah Rose screwed on a metal cap before one of her fellow All Saints Sisters of the Poor attached a label. Produced by bees-in-residence at the All Saints Sisters of the Poor Convent, the label
The All Saints Sisters of the Poor in Catonsville, Maryland, first became involved in cultivating bee colonies three years ago when two of their neighbors, both amateur beekeepers, asked if they could establish hives on the nuns' property.