Articles
Formation
The itinerary of formation
We recognise the need for an intense itinerary of formation if we are to become capable of serving God's people. In this gradual and existential process of growth our aim is to develop the various areas of the person - the human, the spiritual, the cultural. We are also duty-bound to attain a specific theological and pastoral preparation that will allow us to collaborate with laity and pastors in a responsible and effective way.
We ususally encourage that young women who are considering joining us that they have finished their tertiary education and preferably had some work experience.
There are two essential stages of formation:
The Initial formationconsists of three phases:
* Postulancy which can vary from one to two years. During this time the candidate explores her suitability for our specific vocation through accompaniment of the vocation personnel and sharing in community life.
* Novitiate is a two-year period during which the focus is specifically on the formation of the candidate at the human, theological and spiritual level. The candidate within the two years is given exposure in the actual pastoral ministry of the Congregation.
Postulancy takes place within one of our houses in Australia while the Novitiate House is in New Manila, Philippines. The first year is done in New Manila while the second year, being an apostolic year in preparation of the First Religious Profession, can be done either in the Philippines or in Australia.
* Temporary Profession which can be up to six years, the sister completes her studies, shares her life within a designated community where she has responsibilities in pastoral ministries and through on-going accompaniment discerns her vocation as a Pastorelle Sister in preparation to her perpetual profession.
The second Stage is on-going formation.
In view of our ministry within the Church as Pastorelle Sisters, there is the need for continuous updating. Beside this factor, at times we are required to specialise in a given ministry or prepare to be part of a community in another country.*********************************************
www.pastorelle.org
Sister Mary
Pastorelle Sisters
"The Lord is my Shepherd" rings gently in my heart as I attempt to share something of my story as a Pastorelle Sister, and to say something on the charism of the Pastorelle Sisters who were founded in Rome, in 1938, by Blessed James Alberione , a man who was prophetic in recognising the immense contribution the media could make to the proclamation of the Good News, and who had a great appreciation of the complementarity of men and women in mission.
The experience of first coming to know Jesus and of being guided to set out on a journey that would make Him the centre of my life, began for me as a secondary school student when, as part of our Religious Education program, we were asked to write an essay on the personality of Jesus. For the first time in my life I took and read the Gospels so that I could find the information I needed to write a good essay on Jesus.
Thus began my journey of discovery of the person of Jesus, of seeing the world in a new light, and the beginning of a sense of being attracted to a way of life that would have Jesus as the centre, and live according to his teaching. It was a transforming experience which became manifest, especially to my parents and friends, in the new interests and attitudes I was expressing, for example, going to Mass on Sunday, being very willing to help around the house without complaining and asking questions about faith, the meaning of life, the Church, the world etc.
I had a great love for my family and it was painful to have to pursue, what I believed to be my vocation, without their support. But all along I had a quiet sense in my heart that the Good Shepherd was leading me. I was also fortunate to be in conversation with a Religious Sister who understood my situation, encouraged me to pray, and accompanied me for over a year before I made the decision and was accepted by the Pastorelle Sisters. I entered the convent at the end of 1968 and forty years later, the conviction that the Lord is my Shepherd, still guiding me, in the company of the Sisters I journey with, is as strong and as alive now as when I first began.
The Sisters of Jesus Good Shepherd, commonly known as "Pastorelle Sisters", are given to making visible the compassion, the care, the forgiveness and the love of the Good Shepherd for all people; called to share in Christ's pastoral mission of building up the Christian community, in union with the pastors and lay leaders of the Church.

We live in small communities and share all things together, day by day building round the Word and the Eucharist a visible communion at the service of the kingdom.
The challenge to remain faithful, through prayer, to what we profess is on-going and we are conscious of our short comings and failures. The question of the existence of God, and the meaning of life, especially in the face of suffering and evil, is the ever present cry that can find a ray of hope in lives lived in faith, and in the shadow of the mystery of the life, death and resurrection of Jesus.
Our Story
Part of the Pauline Family founded by Bl. James Alberione
by Fr. Michael Goonan of the Society of St. Paul

Fr. James Alberione (1884-1971) apostle of the mass media and founder of the Pauline Family, was will be beatified by Pope John Paul II on Sunday, April 27.
Pope Paul VI called him 'a marvel of our age'; Pope John Paul II said he was the 'prophet of the new evangelisation'. These two expressions sum up the person and works of this remarkable figure of the 20th century.
James, from a devout farming family in the Cuneo region of Italy, saw from an early age that the 20th century would be an era of communication, and that the Church would have to make use of the mass media in all its forms to communicate the Gospel.
He recognised, too, the important role that women could play in parish life. Above all, he recognised the foundational importance of prayer.
He insisted that all members of his religious family be 'contemplatives in action' and founded one institute specifically to pray for the mission of his religious family
Four of the congregations he founded are present in Australia and New Zealand - the Society of St Paul, the Daughters of St Paul, the Sister Disciples of the Divine Master and the Sisters of Jesus Good Shepherd "Pastorelle".
The union of lay faithful, the Pauline Co-operators, has also been established in Australia.
Besides these institutes, Fr James (pictured below) founded the Queen of Apostles Sisters who work in vocation discernment and three aggregated institutes: for diocesan clergy, laymen and laywomen.
What is the secret of this man who Pope Paul VI spoke of in 1968 as "humble, silent, tireless, contained in his thoughts, which flows from prayer to work, always ready to read the signs of the times"?
How did James Alberione impart to so many people his desire to communicate the Gospel to the men and women of the 20th century with the latest technology of modern communications?
Central to his life was a great love for the Eucharist. He often said to his sons and daughters: "You were born from the tabernacle."
A foundational episode occurred during his period of studies in the seminary of Alba.
On the night of December 31, 1900, James joined the other seminarians in prayer before the Blessed Sacrament in the cathedral.
At a certain point, as he himself describes it using the third person, "he felt deeply obliged to prepare himself and to do something for the Lord and for the men and women with whom he would spend his life …
"Not long before there had been a congress (the first one he had attended); he had fully grasped (the sociologist) Toniolo's calm but fascinating speech. He had read Leo XIII's invitation to pray for the coming century.
"Both spoke of the Church's needs, of the new means of evil, of the duty to combat press with press, organisation with organisation, of the need to communicate the Gospel message to the masses ... Projecting himself mentally into the future he felt that in the new century generous people would experience what he was feeling; and that teamed up into an organisation they could bring about what Toniolo kept on repeating: 'Unite: if the enemy finds us alone he will defeat us one by one'."
On that night James Alberione spent at least four hours in intense prayer before the Blessed Sacrament. He had entered the cathedral a mere boy of 16 but left it a man with a mission.
He had received a light from the tabernacle that gave him a mission to serve humanity in a special way in the 20th century.
Preaching from the pulpit and teaching in the classroom had been Christianity's tried and true method of keeping the faith alive and spreading it to others since the beginning.
Now, faced with the industrial revolution and rapid changes in European and world culture, Fr Alberione believed that the Church had to use technology to respond to the evil that was being spread through the newspapers and the press of the late 19th century.
Fr James initially had in mind an organisation of lay specialists working in the media.
However, guided by the Spirit, he chose to develop a number of religious congregations and aggregated institutes, each of which would communicate Christ in their own way.
He founded the Society of St Paul in 1914 and the Daughters of St Paul a year later to communicate Christ through the printing and diffusion of religious books and magazines, especially the Bible.
In time their apostolic works were broadened to include ministry in radio, film, television, video and, more recently, electronic communication.
In Australia the priests and brothers of the Society of St Paul are involved in a publishing apostolate through St Pauls Publications, Sydney, and operate St Pauls Book Centre in Brisbane.
The Daughters of St Paul operate Pauline Books and Media in Sydney, Melbourne and Adelaide and have recently commenced publishing Echoing the Word, an on-line magazine for catechists.
Fr James formed the Sister Disciples of the Divine Master in 1924 with a special ministry of prayer. In Sydney, Melbourne and Auckland, New Zealand, they are dedicated to the Eucharistic, priestly and liturgical ministry.
The Sisters of Jesus Good Shepherd "Pastorelle" were founded in 1938 to collaborate with priests in pastoral ministry. In Australia they serve in a number of parishes in Melbourne and Adelaide.
Fr James wanted the members of his congregations to reach out to people of today with the same zeal, flexibility and intelligence that St Paul did in the first century.
In fact, he insisted always that it was St Paul who should be considered the true founder of the Pauline Family.
The priest's gift was to recognise that utilising the discoveries of science and technology in the field of communication would be an important way of reaching out to people in the 20th century.
In describing the Pauline Family in its various congregations and institutes, Fr James said a "close relationship exists among them, because they were all born from the tabernacle. Only one spirit reigns: to live Jesus Christ and serve the Church.
"There are those who represent all of them, interceding for all before the tabernacle; there are those who diffuse, as from above, the doctrine of Jesus Christ; and there are those who come into contact with individual souls."
Fr James realised that the pulpits of the Pauline Family would reach beyond the churches and schools and touch countless people who would never think of entering a church or seeking out a priest or religious for advice.
Today members of the Pauline family are present in 63 countries, reaching into homes and market places through the media, promoting human values and helping people to know Jesus, the way, the truth and the life.
Supplementing their media presence is personal contact in parishes and in book and media centres, plus unceasing prayer.
As the world becomes ever smaller thanks to mass communications, the mission of Fr Alberione's sons and daughters continues to be of paramount importance in ensuring that the voice of Christ is heard in the century that has just begun.
The former Archbishop of Sydney, Cardinal Edward Bede Clancy, presided at a Mass of Thanksgiving for the beatification of Fr James Alberione in St Martha's Church, Strathfield on Sunday, April 27. (Fr Michael Goonan ssp)

