Mother of God Community

MaryMother of God Community is a Catholic, charismatic and ecumenical community, founded in 1968 as a fruit of Vatican Council II and the outpouring of the Holy Spirit in the twentieth century. Our mission is to glorify Jesus Christ by living the gospel and growing in the knowledge of God through prayer, fellowship, evangelization and service. Members include Christians from all walks of life – families, singles, priests and consecrated women – who are united by the call to live the “spirituality of Pentecost” in covenant with one another.

Our community life is rooted in the grace of baptism in the Spirit, an encounter with the living Christ which brings alive our participation in the Church through the Word of God and the Eucharist. From this grace flows an interior revelation of the lordship of Jesus, a thirst to read the Scriptures, the prayer of praise, an expectant faith that God speaks to His children, and the experience of new life in the Spirit through the power of the cross of Christ. The name Mother of God was chosen as a reminder that we are called to receive and treasure the Word of God like Mary. By yielding ourselves to God that Christ may be formed in us, we become vessels through which Christ is brought forth into the world.

With the guidance of the Holy Spirit, Mother of God Community aspires to be a people: whose deepest desire is that God be reverenced, loved and honored; who witness to the primacy of Christ, the firstborn of all creation; who seek to deepen the Christian life in close fellowship under the lordship of Jesus; who are empowered by the Spirit to proclaim the Gospel by word and deed in anticipation of Christ’s return; and who witness to the call to Christian unity in the one Body of Christ.

Mother of God community is recognized within the Archdiocese of Washington as a Private Association of the Faithful. This is a canonical designation which indicates that a religious organization is officially approved for voluntary participation by Catholics. The process of obtaining this recognition included writing statutes governing the life of the community and holding elections for the community's leadership.