The bells at the St. Francis Xavier Cathedral in Amravati rang out with special echo this week on a day that was steeped as much in collective gratitude as in personal devotion. In a noisy world that’s often filled with frenetic activity the celebration of a Religious Profession Jubilee is a rare example of stillness and tranquility, an opportunity for everyone to take stock of what it means for someone to dedicate their lifetime to one spiritual calling.
The Amravati Diocese gathered together on January 10, 2026 in order to felicitate a number of the religious Men and Women who attained special milestones called from Silver Jubilees (25 Years) to Diamond Jubilees (60 years).
A Lifetime of Service: The Heart of the Party
In the cathedral, the mood was solemnly joyous. The pews were lined with the families and parishioners of brother jubilarians, another testament to the lives these sisters have reached over seven decades. Whether through teaching, health care or social work in the backwater villages of Vidarbha, these men and women are the “silent backbone” of the Church’s mission in this area.
The Diamond Jubilarians were especially the objects of a good deal of admiration. ”Someone who has 60 years in religious life has seen the wonderful growth and now decline of both the Church and our country. These men and women had entered their respective orders in the mid-1960s, a period of cataclysmic change, and they had persisted through every social and ecclesiastical convulsion since.
The Liturgy: A Renewed Promise
The Presider for the day was the bishop of Amravati and the Solemn Thanksgiving Mass was celebrated. In his homily, Bishop insisted that a jubilee is not just a backward glance to many years of work but rather the “renewal of the fire” which led these men andwomen to answer “yes” to their calling.
The emotional high point was clearly one of the Renewal of Vows. In a well-worn voice that has grown over decades of prayer and service, the jubilarians renewed their vows to poverty, chastity and obedience as brothers. It was a powerful image: young novices lining up with veteran sisters and brothers, the past and future of religious life intersecting in India.
Impact Beyond the Cathedral Walls
The ceremony in Amravati Cathedral is more than a religious ritual: it’s recognition of a community contribution. Religious in the Diocese of Amravati Religious have played a key role in the :
- Education in Villages: Establishing schools in places where education was never a reality.
- Healing Ministries: Dispensaries and mobile clinics to provide low-cost health care.
- Women Empowerment: Campaign & Formation of self-help groups, vocational training for women in the village.
Most of the jubilarians being celebrated this week spent their “golden years” right here in these same trenches. Their stories are sewn into the life of local villages — stories like walking through mud to see a patient in need, or teaching the first generation of one family there how to read.
An Amrit — for the “Amrit Peedhi”
As the ceremony ended with a benediction program, speakers spoke to the youth who were there. Less than unlike in previous generations, in an age where life-long fidelity is often treated with suspicion, jubilarians were lauded as the “spiritual pioneers.
The event was, in essence, an invitation to “the younger generation” (Amrit Peedhi) to see these lives not as stunted relics of the past but templates for a meaningful future. The expression of joy on the faces of those sisters and brothers, some of them well into their 80s, was a powerful testament that life lived for others is life that remains forever young.
Conclusion: A Legacy Continued
As the sun set behind the spires of the Amravati Cathedral, following the ceremony, the celebration moved from the altar to a courtyard for a feast. There was laughter, reminiscences and a profound feeling of peace.
The 2026 in Religious Profession Jubilees is a red-letter day in the faith annal of Amravati. They remind us that leaders come and go, policies change, but the foundation of every community — the work of those individuals who volunteer without expectation of recognition or praise — does not. For the citizens of Amravati, these jubilarians are not mere religious personages but adored lives pulsating with their own faith.
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