Rosarium Virginis Mariae Chapter 1 PDF
Rosarium Virginis Mariae Chapter 1 PDF
Rosarium Virginis Mariae Chapter 1 PDF
Study Guide to
V I RG I N I S M A R I A E
ROSARIUM VIRGINIS MARIAE
MISSION
Endow’s mission is to educate women toward a deeper, more profound
understanding of their God-given dignity and vocation as women.
Rooted in the teachings of the Catholic Church, the Endow study
program recognizes and affirms the true genius of women and responds
to our culture’s desperate need for an authentic feminine presence in
every aspect of life and society.
EN D OW G RO U P S
Endow brings women from all walks of life who are at various places on
their faith journey into small group communities that transmit the depth
of the Catholic faith. The goal of these groups is to connect women in
faith and friendship while exploring Catholic teachings, awakening the
particular genius of each woman and igniting them to uplift the culture by
knowing their Faith more fully and radiating Christ’s truths with others.
As such, Endow provides a context to learn what the Church teaches—
not for the sake of debate, but in a Spirit of genuine engagement. Endow
groups offer women to come to know and appreciate the depth of our
faith that shapes our priorities in everyday life.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Prologue v
PROLOGUE
Two decades ago, during the first year of the new millennium, Catholics
around the world celebrated the Great Jubilee. It was a year when special
graces of mercy and forgiveness were poured out on the faithful, and
God’s steadfast love, manifested in the saving sacrifice of Jesus Christ,
was preached from every pulpit.
At the end of the Jubilee, the pope, Saint John Paul II, issued an
apostolic letter, Novo Millennio Ineunte (“At the Beginning of the New
Millennium”). In it, he called the Church to “start afresh from Christ”
and “take up her evangelizing mission with fresh enthusiasm.”1 Then, a
year later, he issued a new encyclical, Rosarium Virginis Mariae (“Rosary
of the Virgin Mary”), which called for renewed devotion to the Rosary
and declared October 2002 through October 2003 “The Year of the
Rosary.”
People were . . . surprised. Many struggled to understand the
connection. Why call for a new focus on Jesus and then suddenly tell
people to pray the Rosary more? It seemed like a bait and switch. Did
the pope want people paying attention to Jesus or to Mary? Did he
want people looking forward to the future or looking back on what
many at the time felt was an outdated tradition? Was he leading the
Church of the new millennium or the Church of the old?
The Polish pope understood, however, what so many had forgotten:
there is no surer way to Jesus than through His mother, and there is no
surer way to His mother than through the Rosary. The Rosary is her
prayer, and because the entire goal of her existence, both earthly and
heavenly, is to bring people to her Son, the Rosary, from beginning to
end, is about Jesus.
To pray the Rosary, Saint John Paul II wrote, is to attend the
school of Mary. It is to sit at her feet and learn about her Son. It’s also
1 Pope John Paul II, Novo Millenio Ineunte, January 6, 2001, 29, 2.
v
SAMPLE
to learn about holiness, discipleship, and who God made us to be. In
the encyclical, the pope repeated what he had said before: the Rosary
was his favorite prayer. It was the prayer that carried him through the
loss of his parents, the tragedies of war, the dangers of seminary in a
Communist country, the even greater dangers of leading the Church in
that country, and finally the heavy burdens of the papacy. Praying the
Rosary helped make John Paul II the disciple he was, and he knew it
could do the same for all men and women.
Over the next six weeks, through the lens of Rosarium Virginis
Mariae, we’ll explore that prayer together. During the first three
weeks of this study, we’ll look at the foundation John Paul II lays
for understanding the Rosary, surveying its history and the Church’s
teachings on Mary, as well as the Catholic theology of prayer and
discipleship. During the second three weeks of the study, we’ll look
more closely at the foundational meaning of the mysteries of the
Rosary, the nature of mystery in the Christian tradition, and some of
the pope’s practical recommendations for entering more deeply into his
“favorite prayer.”
So much in our world has changed since the start of the new
millennium. The Church and today’s culture face challenges most of
us never imagined two decades ago. Each of us, in our own way, is
struggling through these challenges, trying to make our way through
a world that wants nothing more than to pull us away from Jesus.
The power of the Rosary, however, remains as strong as ever. It is an
unbreakable chain that binds us to Jesus and His mother.
Here at Endow, we pray that this study helps you hold tightly to
that chain as you journey through this “valley of tears,” allowing it to
safely guide you to your true home in Heaven.
vi
SAMPLE
CHAPTER 1
FROM DOMINIC TO JOHN PAUL II:
THE ROSARY IN HISTORY AND TODAY
Opening Prayer
1
SAMPLE
“The Rosary is a prayer that always accompanies
me; it is also the prayer of the ordinary people
and the saints . . . it is a prayer from my heart.”
Pope Francis
2
SAMPLE
The Rosary of the Virgin Mary, which gradually took form in the
second millennium under the guidance of the Spirit of God, is a
prayer loved by countless Saints and encouraged by the Magisterium.
Simple yet profound, it still remains, at the dawn of this third
millennium, a prayer of great significance, destined to bring forth a
harvest of holiness. It blends easily into the spiritual journey of the
Christian life, which, after two thousand years, has lost none of the
freshness of its beginnings and feels drawn by the Spirit of God to “set
out into the deep” (duc in altum!) in order once more to proclaim,
and even cry out, before the world that Jesus Christ is Lord and
Saviour, “the way, and the truth and the life,” “the goal of human
history and the point on which the desires of history and civilization
turn.”
The Rosary, though clearly Marian in character, is at heart
a Christocentric prayer. In the sobriety of its elements, it has all
the depth of the Gospel message in its entirety, of which it can be
said to be a compendium. It is an echo of the prayer of Mary, her
perennial Magnificat for the work of the redemptive Incarnation
which began in her virginal womb. With the Rosary, the Christian
people sits at the school of Mary and is led to contemplate the
beauty on the face of Christ and to experience the depths of his love.
Through the Rosary the faithful receive abundant grace, as though
from the very hands of the Mother of the Redeemer.
2 For the remainder of the references to our central document, we will refer to the
paragraph number but just indicate the number. If you are interested in following
along, see the Vatican’s website for a complete copy of this marvelous letter. It can also
be purchased in booklet form from a bookstore.
http://www.vatican.va/content/john-paul-ii/en/apost_letters/2002/documents/hf_
jp-ii_apl_20021016_rosarium-virginis-mariae.html.
3
SAMPLE
Key Points
4
SAMPLE
what the word of the preacher was unable to do, the sweet prayer of the
Hail Mary did for their hearts. As Mary promised, it proved to be a
most fruitful form of preaching.3
3 Reginald Garrigou-LaGrange, Mother of Our Savior and Our Interior Life (Char-
lotte, NC: TAN Books, 1948), 297.
4 Mark Miravalle, Introduction to Mary: The Heart of Marian Doctrine and Devotion
(Santa Barbara, Calif.: Queenship Publishing, 1993), 90.
5
SAMPLE
apostolic constitution Consueverunt Romani Pontifices, which formalized
how Christians should pray the Rosary. In it, he emphasized the
importance of using the Rosary to integrate both vocal and meditative
prayer and limited the mysteries upon which people were to meditate
to fifteen: five Joyful Mysteries related to the Incarnation, five Sorrowful
Mysteries related to Christ’s Passion and death, and five Glorious
Mysteries related to the Resurrection and the life to come.
Today, with one significant exception, the heart of the Rosary prayer
remains what it was in 1569, when Pope Pius promoted the prayer to
the universal Church. As we meditate on each mystery, the Church calls
us to pray one Our Father and ten Hail Marys. Those two prayers are
the only prayers absolutely required by papal teaching on the Rosary.
Through the centuries, however, different regions and cultures
have made the Rosary their own by including additional prayers. In
the United States and much of Western Europe, Catholics begin the
Rosary by praying the Apostles’ Creed, saying an Our Father for the
Pope’s intentions, and then saying three Hail Marys for an increase in
faith, hope, and charity. In many Spanish-speaking countries, people
instead end the Rosary with those prayers. Elsewhere, Catholics begin
the Rosary with the opening words of Psalm 70: “O God, come to my
aid; O Lord, make haste to help me.”
In most countries (but not all), Catholics also now end each
decade of the Rosary with the Glory Be, a prayer of praise based upon
the prayers of the angels and saints in the Book of Revelation and
the doxologies in the letters of St. Paul. This prayer also maintains the
original link between the Rosary and the prayers of Christian monks, as
the Glory Be is an important part of the Divine Office (the daily cycle
of readings and prayers prayed by the Church’s priests and religious).
Other prayers and practices, including adding Hail Holy Queen, the
St. Michael Prayer, and Fatima prayers, abound.
The only significant change to the Rosary since 1569 was made
in this encyclical that we’re now reading. As we’ll discuss in our fourth
week, Saint John Paul II introduced a new set of mysteries in Rosarium
Virginis Mariae, the Luminous Mysteries, which recall the events of
Jesus’ public ministry. Accordingly, the full Rosary now consists of 200
Hail Marys instead of the original 150.
6
SAMPLE
Bringing It Home
When Saint Dominic began using the style of preaching that would
gradually grow into what we call the Rosary, he had one goal: to call
men and women to follow Jesus. His call went out to the Cathars, who
were following a false Christ. And his call went out to those who called
themselves Christians, but whose faith was weak and poorly formed.
Through preaching and prayer, Dominic put the real Jesus before the
crowds and called his listeners to follow Him.
In the centuries since, the Rosary has issued the same call to all
who have prayed it. The mysteries upon which we meditate put Jesus
ever before our eyes. In the midst of our own busy days, filled with
babies, bills, deadlines, laundry, and meetings, the Rosary fixes our eyes
on Jesus. It asks us to think about who He was, what He did for us, and
what humanity did to Him.
It’s not Saint Dominic who issues that call, though. Nor is it the
Church. It’s Mary, Jesus’ mother. Mary was the first person to fix her
eyes on Jesus. Mary was the first person to meditate on the events
of His life; she “kept all these things, pondering them in her heart”
(Luke 2:19). She was His first follower, His first disciple, and from the
beginning of His public ministry, she has been calling others to join
her. “Do whatever he tells you,” she told the servants in Cana in John
2:5. In the Rosary, she says the same to us.
Discussion Questions
1. What does your mother know about you that nobody else knows?
What do you know about your children that nobody else knows?
Why is this kind of knowledge possible for a mother?
2. Do you see any similarities between the Cathars and our culture?
Why or why not?
3. How well do you feel you know Jesus? What else about Him would
you like to know?
7
SAMPLE
8
SAMPLE
9
SAMPLE
Key Points
After Vatican II, many came to see the Rosary as an outdated prayer.
10
SAMPLE
introduced to it. Throughout his papacy, however—and most notably
in this encyclical—John Paul II attempted to reverse course. Re-igniting
devotion to the Rosary, he believed, was key to helping the work of
the Second Vatican Council bear fruit in the world and helping all
Catholics enter more fully into the worship of Christ in the Mass.
Others object to the Rosary because they believe it gives too much
attention to Mary.
11
SAMPLE
angel’s announcement and of the greeting of the mother of John the
Baptist: “Blessed is the fruit of your womb.” 6
From the outside, the Rosary can seem like an unchallenging prayer:
the same prayers are repeated, over and over again, seemingly flying in
the face of Jesus’ warning to “not heap up empty phrases as the Gentiles
do” (Mt 6:7). Even from the inside, it can be difficult to pray. Lasting
anywhere from fifteen to twenty-five minutes, the Rosary requires focused
attention, which doesn’t always come naturally to even the saints among
us. In her autobiography, Story of a Soul, Saint Thérèse confessed:
The same elements of the Rosary that can make it difficult for
some to pray, however, are the very elements that can make it so
helpful for those who struggle with it. Because the Rosary combines
both vocal and meditative prayer—saying the Our Fathers and Hail
Marys while thinking about the life of Christ—and because it calls us
to do so while slowly fingering beads, it is a profoundly incarnational
prayer. It calls the whole person—body and soul—into the presence
of God. Through the repetition of the words and the movement of
the fingers, the body is able to relax, similar to what happens with
knitting or other busy work often employed in the therapy of those
struggling with post-traumatic stress.
At the same time, through the contemplation of the mysteries,
the mind is encouraged to focus and discover new depths to the words
being repeated. We tell our husbands, children, and parents “I love
you,” countless times. But those words, so often repeated, take on
different shades of meaning when paired with different memories,
thoughts, and actions about that person. The same is true with Jesus
and Mary. The more we meditate upon the mysteries of the Rosary,
12
SAMPLE
the more meaning the vocal prayers acquire. All this, says Garrigou-
Lagrange, makes the Rosary:
Bringing It Home
Saint Thérèse possibly never committed a mortal sin in her life. She was
canonized and declared a Doctor of the Church within a century of her
death. Yet she found it difficult to pray the Rosary. If she struggled—in
a cloister, without children or deadlines or a smartphone to distract her
from the prayers—how are the rest of us supposed to manage? Finding
time to pray it, let alone have the presence of mind to focus on the
mysteries, seems like an impossible challenge.
But the very things that make it so difficult for many of us to pray
the Rosary are the very reason we need it. In a world that works hard
to fracture our attention, the Rosary offers us a daily opportunity to
practice focus. In a world of noise, the Rosary calls us, for just fifteen
minutes, into silence. In a world that is always demanding something
new of us—to be more, do more, achieve more—the Rosary offers
us the comfort of familiar words and a set pattern of prayer. And in a
world that wants us to look away from God and toward ourselves, the
Rosary offers us the opportunity to deliberately and methodically shift
our gaze to Jesus and the story of His life and death.
For some, entering into both the spirit and prayers of the Rosary
comes easily. For others, it takes time and effort. It takes repetition.
It takes meditation upon what the Rosary offers, as well as on the
mysteries. But the more time and effort we put into it, the more we find
the antidote to the problems that keep us from praying it. The Rosary
is, in a sense, its own answer.
13
SAMPLE
Discussion Questions
1. Did your family pray the Rosary when you were growing up? What
did you think about the Rosary when you were younger?
2. Have your attitudes toward the Rosary changed though the years?
If so, how?
3. Do you and your family pray the Rosary now? Why or why not?
14
SAMPLE
Many signs indicate that still today the Blessed Virgin desires to
exercise through this same prayer that maternal concern to which the
dying Redeemer entrusted, in the person of the beloved disciple, all
the sons and daughters of the Church: “Woman, behold your son!”
Well-known are the occasions in the nineteenth and the twentieth
centuries on which the Mother of Christ made her presence felt and
her voice heard, in order to exhort the People of God to this form of
contemplative prayer. I would mention in particular, on account of
their great influence on the lives of Christians and the authoritative
recognition they have received from the Church, the apparitions of
Lourdes and of Fatima; these shrines continue to be visited by great
numbers of pilgrims seeking comfort and hope.
It would be impossible to name all the many Saints who
discovered in the Rosary a genuine path to growth in holiness. We
need but mention Saint Louis Marie Grignion de Montfort, the
author of an excellent work on the Rosary, and, closer to ourselves,
Padre Pio of Pietrelcina, whom I recently had the joy of canonizing.
As a true apostle of the Rosary, Blessed Bartolo Longo had a special
charism. His path to holiness rested on an inspiration heard in the
depths of his heart: “Whoever spreads the Rosary is saved!”
Key Points
The Church believes that Mary has encouraged Catholics to pray the
Rosary through private revelation.
The Catholic Church believes there are two types of revelation: public
and private.
15
SAMPLE
Public revelation is what God has done in salvation history,
making Himself known to the Israelites and then to the world through
Jesus Christ. This revelation—which consists of all the divine truths
necessary for our salvation—has been handed down through Sacred
Scripture and Sacred Tradition and is safeguarded by the Church’s
Magisterium. Catholics are called to assent to all the truths given to us
through public revelation.
The Church also teaches, however, that while public revelation
ended with the death of the last Apostle—Saint John the Evangelist—
God has continued to speak to His people through private revelations.
These revelations do not belong to the deposit of faith, nor do they
contain any “new” teachings. As the Catechism explains: “It is not
[private revelation’s] role to improve or complete Christ’s definitive
Revelation, but to help live more fully by it in a certain period of
history” (CCC, 66–67). That is to say, private revelation is intended
to help particular individuals or groups live what we all believe in the
context of the particular challenges of their time and place.
In order to determine whether a private revelation is authentic, the
Church asks three questions:
Most Marian apparitions have urged the faithful to pray the Rosary.
Over the past two hundred years, dozens of people around the world
have reported receiving private revelations from Mary, the Mother of
God. While many of these apparitions have been disproved by the
16
SAMPLE
Church, nine have been officially recognized, which is more than the
Church recognized in the eighteen centuries prior. For this reason,
this time in Catholic history has often been referred to as the “Age
of Mary.”
Of the nine recognized apparitions, two in particular have garnered
attention worldwide: the apparitions at Lourdes and Fatima.
On February 11, 1858, the Virgin Mary appeared to fourteen-
year-old Bernadette Soubirous in the French mountain town of
Lourdes. Over the next eight months, Mary would appear to
Bernadette eighteen times. Although she remained silent at first,
Mary eventually began speaking to Bernadette, communicating to
her the urgency of praying for those in sin and doing penance, both
for their conversion and her own. Mary also confirmed the truth of
the dogma of the Immaculate Conception, defined four years earlier
by Pope Pius IX, and, as proof of the truth of her message, directed
Bernadette to dig up a previously unknown mountain spring and
build a great chapel there. In the years since, those waters have been
the instrumental cause of multiple confirmed miracles and even more
unconfirmed ones.
Almost seventy years later, in 1917, the Virgin Mary again appeared
to three children in Fatima, Portugal: Lucia (age ten), Jacinta (age
seven), and Francesco (age eight). Between May 13 and October 13,
she spoke to the children six times, stressing the urgency of prayer and
devotion to her Immaculate Heart, with the stated goals of preventing
further bloodshed in World War I (which was raging at the time) and
bringing about the conversion of Russia. Multiple signs accompanied
her words—most notably, the “miracle of the sun,” on October 13,
1917, in which the sun spun like a disk, put on a light show, and
then plunged to the earth before righting itself once more. Over one
hundred thousand people witnessed the miracle.
At both Lourdes and Fatima, the Rosary figured prominently.
At Lourdes, Mary herself held a Rosary and fingered the beads in
silent prayer. Inspired by Our Lady, Bernadette prayed a Rosary at the
beginning and end of each apparition. As more spectators joined her,
they also prayed a Rosary. At Fatima, Mary referred to herself multiple
times as “Our Lady of the Rosary” and called for the daily praying of
the Rosary by the faithful “in order to obtain peace for the world and
the end of the war.” She also instructed the children to add a new prayer
at the end of each decade: “O my Jesus, forgive us our sins; save us from
the fires of hell. Lead all souls to heaven, especially those in most need
17
SAMPLE
of thy mercy.” Called the Fatima Prayer, it remains widely prayed as
part of the Rosary today.9
Of all the saints who have prayed the Rosary and promoted praying the
Rosary, none have been quite so transformed by it as Blessed Bartolo
Longo.
Born in 1841, Longo grew up in southern Italy, where his wealthy
Catholic parents were known for their devout faith. Longo, however,
lost that faith soon after he arrived at the University of Naples’s law
school. There, the nationalist, anti-Catholic politics of the day spilled
over into the classroom, and Longo quickly got caught up in the anti-
clerical, anti-papal rhetoric of his professors. At the same time, he
developed an interest in spiritualism and the occult, which was then
on the rise both in Italy and across Europe. Eventually, seeking out the
guidance of mediums wasn’t enough for Longo; he longed for more
direct contact with the spirits. So, he underwent rigorous training to
become a Satanist priest.
Not surprisingly, instead of bringing him peace, his “ordination”
resulted in an almost immediate descent into mental illness. Hounded
by a demon who he called his “angel,” Longo battled depression,
anxiety, and paranoia. He grew so thin and haggard that his family
barely recognized him. They began looking for help and found it in one
of the last remaining Catholic professors at the University of Naples.
His professor, in turn, introduced Longo to a Dominican priest, who
met with Longo every day for nearly a month. While the priest talked
with Longo, hundreds of others prayed for his soul. At the end of the
month, Longo renounced Satanism, went to confession, and returned
to the sacraments. He then spent the next two years trying to atone for
his past by serving the poor and the sick.
Nevertheless, guilt continued to haunt him, until, as he describes:
18
SAMPLE
awaits me in Hell. As I pondered over my condition, I experienced
a deep sense of despair and almost committed suicide. Then I heard
an echo in my ear of the voice of Friar Alberto repeating the words
of the Blessed Virgin Mary: “One who propagates my Rosary shall
be saved.” Falling to my knees, I exclaimed: “If your words are true
that he who propagates your Rosary will be saved, I shall reach
salvation because I shall not leave this earth without propagating
your Rosary.”10
Longo spent the rest of his life spreading devotion to the Rosary,
writing books about it, composing Rosary novenas and prayer manuals,
publishing a magazine devoted to it, and building the great Basilica of
Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary in Pompeii. Befriended by Pope
Leo XIII, who himself wrote twelve encyclicals on the Rosary, Longo’s
work eventually led to the dogmatic definition of Mary’s Assumption
in 1950. His writing also inspired Saint John Paul II, who drew upon
Longo’s writing to formulate the Luminous Mysteries, which he
introduced in the encyclical Rosarium Virginis Mariae. Longo passed
away in 1926 and was beatified by John Paul II in 1980.
Bringing It Home
19
SAMPLE
whose origins are more supernatural than natural, and whose greatest
champion has been Our Lady herself. That makes it a prayer like no
other, and also one that bears fruit like no other.
Discussion Questions
20
SAMPLE
Closing Prayer
21
SAMPLE
“I take refuge, then, in prayer, and turn to
Mary, and our Lord always triumphs.”
Saint ThÉrÈse of Lisieux
22
More adult studies from Endow
Seeker of Truth
Seeker of Truth introduces women to Edith Stein, a poignant 20th century ex-
ample of a holy woman during challenging times. Canonized by Pope Saint John
Paul II, Edith was a young Jewish woman who suffered through the Holocaust,
converted to Catholicism, and found her vocation as a Carmelite sister. Her story
encompasses elements of philosophy and theology, offers compelling insights into
Jewish life in 1930s Germany, and is an inspiration to the women of today.
Visit www.endowgroups.org
to browse and purchase all studies.
Humanae Vitae
This study explores Pope Paul VI’s controversial encyclical explaining the beauty
of marriage and the sanctity of human life within the marital bond. Women will
address many questions Catholics battle in today’s culture—questions of authentic
love and truth, honoring our dignity within intimate relationships, and God’s ev-
er-present hand in procreation.
Letter to Women
Through the prayerful reading and lively discussion of Pope Saint John Paul II’s
Letter to Women, women learn about their dignity as daughters of God, how they
uniquely reflect the image of God, and the indispensable role women play in the
Church, the family, society, and the world. John Paul II’s pastoral wisdom will also
help women explore spiritual motherhood as well as their unique gifts of service,
attentiveness, and receptivity that lie at the heart of the feminine genius, leading
them to discern God’s call to love and His plan for their lives.
Redemptoris Mater
Calling Mary the greatest saint, Pope Saint John Paul II held that she was the
“most excellent expression of the feminine genius.” Redemptoris Mater is John
Paul II’s heartfelt meditation on the Mother of God in order to encourage devo-
tion to Mary and to awaken a genuine “Marian spirituality.” This study will help
women understand and appreciate Mary’s special place in the Church—at the
center of the mystery of salvation—as well as how Mary is the model for the true
dignity, vocation, and role of every woman in our world today.
Salvifici Doloris
In Salvifici Doloris, Pope Saint John Paul II, approaches the question of why God
allows suffering, how we experience suffering, and how we are to understand suf-
fering and participate in it as a means to our sanctification. He meditates on the
suffering of both Christ and the human person, illuminating the unbreakable ties
that bind His suffering to ours. In this study, women will review key passages of
the apostolic letter, examine the lives of suffering saints and martyrs, and find
meaning in their own suffering.
Teacher of Prayer
At the heart of this study is the passionate, unrelenting love of St. Teresa of Avi-
la, the famous 16th century Spanish nun who became the first female Doctor of
the Church. With her feminine heart and deep spiritual wisdom, St. Teresa helps
women embark on the spiritual journey that takes place within our souls, leading
them to a deepened relationship with Jesus and empowering them to become pio-
neers like St. Teresa of Avila, forging our way with love through the new, exciting,
and often challenging frontiers we face in life.
Discover Your Dignity Part I
This study, authored by four Religious Sisters of Mercy, takes women on a journey
through the stages of the early life of a woman (from conception to the fruitfulness
of early mid-life). The “guided tour” will walk women through the events and mile-
stones in their lives from different perspectives—the biological and philosophical,
the psychological and theological—helping them uncover the mysterious work-
ings of God throughout their lives and allowing them to discover their dignity and
see where their everyday lives intersect with God’s divine plan.
Visit www.endowgroups.org
to browse and purchase all studies.
Contributions
So that we can keep Endow accessible to as many women as possible, our
registration costs are supplemented by the gracious gifts of those who support
our mission. Endow gratefully receives financial contributions and grants as a
501(c) (3) nonprofit organization registered in the United States of America.
Please consider joining our mission and inviting others to do so by going to www.
endowgroups.org/give. We would not be able to exist without our generous donors
and the thousands of women and men praying for our mission! Deo gratias!
MISSION
Endow’s mission is to educate women toward a deeper, more profound
understanding of their God-given dignity and vocation as women. Rooted in
the teachings of the Catholic Church, the Endow study program recognizes
and affirms the true genius of women and responds to our culture’s desperate
need for an authentic feminine presence in every aspect of life and society.
www.endowgroups.org