Jessica Hayes is bought a wedding dress, a veil and an alliance.
Photo: Catholic today / Joe Romie / BBC News Brazil
She was married to Jesus Christ.
Jessica is 41 years old and a consecrated virgin. A vocation adopted by the women of the Catholic Church who wish to be "brides of God".
At the dedication ceremony, the candidate, dressed in a white dress resembling that of a wife, makes a vow of eternal chastity and promises never to have bad or love affairs.
Women also wear a covenant, symbolizing marriage with Christ.
"I am often asked if I am married," says Jessica. "I simply explain that I am like a nun.I have badumed a total commitment to Christ, but I live in the world (not in a convent)."
Unlike nuns, consecrated virgins do not live in closed communities or wear special clothing. They have a secular life, work and support each other.
"I have been a teacher for 18 years, I teach in high school that I attended," says Jessica, who lives in Fort Wayne, Indiana, USA.
"Before my consecration, I realized that I had no vocation for community life, such as that of nuns, nor in a religious congregation with a specific pastoral ministry."
Jessica reports to a bishop and meets regularly with her spiritual advisor.
"I am part of a parish located two miles from my home.I am always available to help my friends and family.I teach, I am surrounded by people all day, but I can still welcome this special consecration to the Lord. "
& # 39; Permanent commitment & # 39;
Even in the Catholic Church, consecrated virgins are little known, partly because this vocation has been publicly recognized only by the Church for less than 50 years.
However, virgins have been part of the Catholic Church since the early days of religion. During the first three centuries before Christ, many died as martyrs defending their allegiance to God.
Among them is Agnes of Rome who, in order to remain in chastity, refused to marry the governor of the city.
The practice of surrender to Christ, but not as a religious, declined in the medical era as the popularity of religious life in monasteries increased. But the "consecrated virgins" were restored by the Ordo Consecrationis virginum of 1971 [19719042] – a document in which the Vatican recognizes the eternal feminine virginity as a voluntary consecration integral part of the Catholic Church.
For Jessica, this vocation was, until recently, an "unknown territory". She had never thought of becoming a consecrated virgin before meeting a spiritual advisor who "started asking the right questions".
"He began to be clear that God was asking me to live a conjugal relationship with him," he says.
Jessica made the decision in 2013 and the consecration took place two years later. The culmination of the rite occurs when the virgin sits on the altar as a sign of submission to God.
"It was I who offered myself as a gift to God and received God in a permanent commitment," he explains.
"Even though I keep the same commitments as before (of consecration), it is different." If referring to God as a wife is something completely different from doing it as a friend. "