Benedictine sister turning 105 said longevity secret is love people, God

1472 0
Sister Helen Lange, a member of the Benedictine Sisters of Florida in St. Leo, turns 105 Sept. 28. Seen in an undated photo, Sister Helen leaves an "endearing mark on all those she encounters," says her order. She joined the community in 1930. (CNS photo/courtesy Benedictine Sisters of Florida)

ST. LEO, Fla. (CNS) — Benedictine Sister Helen Lange, who turns 105 Sept. 28, is described as someone who leaves an endearing mark on all those she encounters.

For 44 years, she taught school in Texas, Louisiana and Florida and she talks about these years with great joy and amazing recall.

A story in the Tampa Bay Times when she turned 100 said that Sister Helen, trained in elementary and music education, was part of the group known as the Texas Five who taught in Catholic schools across Florida. She also served as school principal for several years.

When she was growing up, she wanted to study piano or pursue a career in nursing, but her parents couldn’t afford it.

Becoming a sister offered her a chance to pursue higher education and a career.

Her key to working with students, she told the newspaper, was simple: “You’ve got to trust the kids and teach them to trust you.”

Guy Moore, from Tallahassee, planned to attend the birthday celebration of his former teacher from St. Martha in Sarasota along with graduates from another Florida school, St. Anthony in San Antonio. Many of her former students say Sister Helen gave them the profound gift of the love of learning and music.

When she turned 103, the local fire department helped her blow out candles on her cake.

Sister Helen, the long-devoted teacher, had a second career in gerontology and pastoral ministry. She worked at Maria Manor in St. Petersburg and coordinated the Benedictine Sisters’ elder hostel program in Belleville, Illinois.

Her legacy includes the short stories she wrote about her life titled “Kicking the Habit,” which covers 1913-1999. In it she shares a strong tradition of faith from her family of hard-working early pioneers, her strength in leaving home from Rowena, Texas, to join the Benedictine sisters in Florida and the many changes and opportunities she experienced in a life of service.

Her life story is both serious and funny.

It concludes with this message: “Today I’m looking forward to the year 2000 and living in a changing era, religious and laity alike. It is a changing time, an exciting and a holy one. We need to embrace it with zeal, faith and trust in God. We must keep the fires of enthusiasm alive.”

She also quoted an old Gaelic saying: “If not to bank the fire, then certainly to bury the coals, to carry them to new places so that they can flame again,” calling that the challenge for everyone. “This is how we keep the flame of God’s love alive in our souls,” she said.

Today, Sister Helen continues her ministry of service by caring for fellow residents at Heritage Park Rehabilitation Center in Dade City where she lives.

Five years ago, she said her key to a long life was a positive attitude.

“You’ve got to love people,” she said. “And love God.”

Related Post

A Catholic church and belfry are seen in 2013 in the coastal Philippine town of Balangiga after a typhoon. The town built the belfry in 1998 in the hope that the United States would return three bells it says were stolen during the 1899-1902 Philippine-American War. U.S. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis Aug. 11 signed documents for the return of the bells to the Philippines. (CNS photo/Nathan Layne, Reuters)

Filipinos welcome U.S. vow to return historic Catholic church bells

Posted by - August 18, 2018 0
TACLOBAN, Philippines (CNS) — Filipinos welcomed an announcement by the United States that it planned to soon return church bells…
Pope Francis gives the homily as he celebrates morning Mass in the chapel of his residence, the Domus Sanctae Marthae, at the Vatican Oct. 15, 2019. The pope, in his homily, said Christians must avoid hypocrisy by scrutinizing and acknowledging their own faults and sins. (CNS photo/Vatican Media)

Jesus does not tolerate hypocrisy, pope says

Posted by - October 20, 2019 0
VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Jesus enjoys unmasking hypocrisy, which is the work of the devil, Pope Francis said. Christians, in…