Pope Francis asks Argentinian Benedictine Nuns to Reside in the Vatican's Mater Ecclesiae Monastery where Pope Benedict XVI Lived



The Vatican announced that Pope Francis asked a community of Argentinian Benedictine nuns to take up residence in the Vatican's Mater Ecclesiae Monastery, where Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI lived for around 10 years after his resignation in 2013.
The Mater Ecclesiae Monastery is located in the Vatican Gardens and it was the "home" of the Pope Emeritus, Benedict XVI, for almost ten years.

Pope Francis has asked that it once again serve as the residence for contemplative orders "to support the Holy Father in his daily care for the whole Church, through the ministry of prayer, adoration, praise, and reparation: a praying presence in silence and solitude."
A statement released by the Holy See Press Office on Monday,  November 13th, said Pope Francis announced this decision in a handwritten letter dated October 1st, 2023.
The Pope has summoned the Nuns of the Benedictine Order of the Abbey of Saint Scolastica in Victoria, Buenos Aires province (Diocese of San Isidro) in Argentina, "who have generously accepted the invitation" of the Pontiff, the statement said.
In his brief “The Contemplative Life” of 25 March 1994, St. John Paul II canonically established a monastery of contemplative nuns in Vatican City, with the title of Mater Ecclesiae.
Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI had expressed the desire to reside there after his historic resignation on 11 February 2013. He spent the last years of his life there, assisted by his collaborators and accompanying the Church in prayer until his death on 31 December 2022.
The monastery, the statement continued, will now welcome six nuns who, according to the statutes, will form the Monastic Community and will begin living in the monastery in early January.
Pope Francis has also decided that the Governorate of the Vatican City State will be responsible for all matters concerning the Mater Ecclesiae Monastery.

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