DULUTH — She resisted the call at first, even as God's persistent whisper became a roar. Lisa Maurer loved her original vocation — being a teacher and high school coach in Sleepy Eye, Minn. — and while her spirit was pulling her toward a convent, she found it difficult to give up her work with young athletes.
Not long after arriving at St. Scholastica Monastery in 2007, Maurer heard another call she could not ignore. "The football field is literally in my back yard," she said. "I'd be in my room with something to read, or a rosary to pray, and there were whistles blowing outside my back door. So I went out there for a walk, and pretty soon, I was sitting in the bleachers."
This fall, she went one step further. After six years of leading cheers and prayers for the team at the College of St. Scholastica, Sister Lisa was named a volunteer assistant coach, overseeing the kickers and punters for the top team in the Upper Midwest Athletic Conference.
A spokesman for the American Football Coaches Association said there have been a few female coaches in college football, but Sister Lisa is believed to be the first nun to roam the sidelines. St. Scholastica coach Kurt Ramler, who took over the Saints' program last spring, had no qualms about asking her to join his staff.
"It was an absolute no-brainer," he said. "She is a wonderful coach who makes all of us better. She just happens to be a member of the order."
Prayer and service still come first in Maurer's life. When the chapel bells toll at 5 p.m. each day, summoning the sisters to evening prayer, she scurries off the practice field in her jeans, sneakers and Saints jacket to join her fellow Benedictines in their devotions.
But the swath of artificial turf between the monastery and the sisters' cemetery feels like a sacred space, too. Just as God led her to the convent, Sister Lisa believes, he led her back to coaching, a blessing that has filled the only void in a joyful heart.
"I find the holy in sports, too," said Maurer, 44. "It's my way of connecting with God. He made me this way.