In 2010, the congregation announced that it had agreed to buy the Pope John Paul II Cultural Center in Washington, D.C., to be used as a house of studies,[5][6] but withdrew from the purchase in 2011 to concentrate on building their new priory in the diocese of Austin, Texas.
Additionally, they also offer spiritual retreats and spread the Christian faith by giving talks at such places as colleges, universities, Catholic groups, and vocation fairs. The sisters also host a catechetical series on EWTN entitled "Truth in the Heart" for elementary school-age children.[7]
As of 2021[update], the sisters' Motherhouse in Ann Arbor counts over 100 Sisters, with an average age of 32. The average entering age is 21.[11] The Sisters are currently expanding geographically, with domestic missions in California, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Missouri, Minnesota, Illinois, Michigan, Ohio, and New York, as well as Rome, Italy, with their Motherhouse in Michigan at full capacity.[12]
In October 2012, the Sisters moved the novitiate into Saint Felix House in Huntington, Indiana, as a temporary measure whilst they seek to further develop the expansion and building of a new property in Austin, Texas. The sisters numbered over 120 in 2012. Plans to develop their priory in Loomis, California, were put on hold in early 2013, but in April 2013 they announced that as of the 2013–14 academic year they would have a small convent located in a section of Casa Santa Maria, the original building of the North American College in Rome.[13]