Sharon Joyer
Though Sister Sharon Joyer, SNDdeN is one of nine brothers and sisters, her cousin Mary was one of her favorite companions. They were the same age and very close, so Mary’s unexpected death at age 12 was a huge loss for Sister Sharon and a defining moment. Why was she alive and Mary not?
Sister Sharon began to pray in earnest about her future, and later, in high school, she explored three separate religious orders. In the end, she remembers feeling such joy in the presence of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur that it was an easy decision to enter at the tender age of 17.
Sister Sharon taught at Sacred Heart School in Salinas, Notre Dame School in Yuba City and Notre Dame School in Santa Barbara (all in California), but it was a pastoral letter about Appalachia (“This Land is Home to Me”) that stirred her to consider a new ministry. In 1981, when the opportunity arose to work with Sister Diane Reese, SNDdeN in West Virginia, Sister Sharon jumped at the chance.
Working and ministering in the mountains of West Virginia for six years was a life-changing experience for Sister Sharon. As she recalls, “I taught all grades at Big Laurel School. It was total immersion in all of life. Teaching, gathering wood, burying the dead, serving as an emergency midwife, but also learning. I learned so much from the folks there. They were mountain-wise and had a reverence for the land.”
When she returned to California, Sister Sharon served at the House of Prayer in Carmel for two years, then studied at the J.F. Kennedy School in Orinda, Calif. and lived in an Oakland neighborhood besieged by drug activity and danger. She and Sister Pat Nagle, IHM regularly walked the neighborhood, met people and prayed for all who lived there. Then, when a neighbor was murdered, the Sisters invited the residents to their home “to give and be light to one another.”
Out of this grief and amid fear, the Sisters and neighbors worked together to create a neighborhood garden where bonds of trust and community were restored. After 12 years of Earth Home ministry in Oakland, the Pacific Northwest Bishop’s pastoral, The Columbia River Watershed: Caring for Creation and the Common Good, beckoned them to the Northwest. There, they continued Earth Home Ministry for 12 years. One of their most delightful projects was to create a Bioswale in the Church parking lot.
After spending a dozen years in the Pacific Northwest, Sister Sharon moved back to the San Francisco Bay Area to serve at Mercy Retirement and Care Center, where she accompanies our senior Sisters who live there. “The Spirit works marvels in my life. It is a grace to be here,” she says.
Sister Sharon is grateful for so many things. She is particularly delighted that the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur Chapter Acts now call the Sisters “to examine every facet of our relationship with the community of creation.” Sharon believes “every choice we make is so important for the earth.” Her friend Pat Nagle, IHM, says of Sharon, “Grounded in the Spirit of Oneness of God radiating through all life, Sister Sharon responds with simplicity and joy in serving the Living God.”
Updated in 2025

Sister Sharon gets water in Appalachia.