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catholicherald.co.uk/news/2014/12/16/full-text-vatican-report-on-us-women-religious/Vatican release report on Apostolic Visitation of Institutes of Women Religious in the United States of America
catholicherald.co.uk/news/2014/12/16/full-text-vatican-report-on-us-women-religious/Vatican release report on Apostolic Visitation of Institutes of Women Religious in the United States of America
Look at specific groups of Sisters though. Sisters of Life for example:Generalities. It is very sad how the number of US women religious has declined so dramatically and will continue to decline, as the median age is in the late 70’s.
hvmag.com/Hudson-Valley-Magazine/April-2014/Young-Nuns-Meet-Sufferns-Sisters-of-Life/the Sisters of Life, an order whose members have a median age of around 30
Agreed.Look at specific groups of Sisters though. Sisters of Life for example:
hvmag.com/Hudson-Valley-Magazine/April-2014/Young-Nuns-Meet-Sufferns-Sisters-of-Life/
This is the Apostolic Visitation (done by the Congregation for Religious) of Women Religious in general. I don’t think it was ever expected to stir much controversy, since it is a more routine thing.(Considering the lack of uproar in the media or on blogs, the report seems to have stirred little or no controversy. An almost “much ado about nothing” reaction. )
The Sisters of Life are a great favorite of mine. One of my teenage granddaughters attended a retreat they conducted. She came from a long way, and they boarded her long enough for her to make connections home. She loves them intensely.Look at specific groups of Sisters though. Sisters of Life for example:
hvmag.com/Hudson-Valley-Magazine/April-2014/Young-Nuns-Meet-Sufferns-Sisters-of-Life/
AH! Thanks for the clarification.This is the Apostolic Visitation (done by the Congregation for Religious) of Women Religious in general. I don’t think it was ever expected to stir much controversy, since it is a more routine thing.
The more “controversial” one is the CDF’s investigation of the LCWR, that’s more where the potential for controversy lies.
Interesting read. It confirmed what I have seen other places. New religious want to live in community and be recognizable as religious. Those orders that have those things are doing well and those without are dying off.
I was confused about it myself until a couple of days ago.AH! Thanks for the clarification.![]()
I don’t know. But one has to realize that the biggest single year of “baby boomers” was 1946, so in the 1960s there were a lot more young women than there were before. I think the number of those born in 1946 was just about double the number born in any year prior to that. 1947 and 1948 were big birth years too. I think the numbers remained fairly high, but tapered downward after 1946.Interesting read. It confirmed what I have seen other places. New religious want to live in community and be recognizable as religious. Those orders that have those things are doing well and those without are dying off.
I was kind of surprised to learn that the number of religious peaked in the 40’s-60’s. Anyone know what it was prior to then?
It could be, of course, that the Vatican figures the whole situation will be cured “by tincture of time” as the doctors say. The difficult part of it is going to be the new orders (and some faithful older ones that do remain) being able to garner the resources to house, feed and train new vocations and to carry out their missions. They really are “starting from scratch”.It’s nice to be polite. But one can be polite to a fault if one is so polite, that one’s points are never clearly made.
It’s a 900 pound gorilla situation in religious communities (men AND women) that most communities have withered while a select few flourish and explosively grow!
Does it seem pathetic to anybody else that a report like this doesn’t even seem to address this enormous disparity or attempt to identify and summarize consistent differences between the dying communities and those that are growing?
For sure there were demographic peculiarities that destined a decline in religious numbers. But I’m not remotely convinced that things needed to utterly collapse. That happened because the gospel was abandoned and betrayed in too many places. Anybody wondering what I mean by that can read “Ungodly Rage” by Donna Steichen (which focuses on women’s religious communities, but very similar things were happening in male religious communities and in the diocesan priesthood).
Extremely impressed and humbled.I’m impressed. I hope you are too. www.sistersoflife.com.
Hope I don’t get sanctioned for this, but I couldn’t help but notice that the “Nuns on the Bus” (all two of them) were riding around supporting Democrat political candidates in a bus that had to cost $200,000 and had a $20,000 “rock star” paint job.Extremely impressed and humbled.
What a shame that they have to scratch and scrounge to house their novices while old established orders squander the riches of generations of sacrifice because there are no young sisters to care for the elderly ones… Such a waste and a shame. Everywhere you go you see former monasteries and convents now moldering away as nearly bankrupt and mostly empty retreat centers for what is, at best, pep rallies for the corporeal works of mercy purged of spiritual content and, at worst, soft core Wicca.
Ah well. God’s never really short on cash. He’ll manage!![]()
It’s hard to get a real understanding of the workings of a group without spending some time with them. See where they live and their routines. With a survey, you may not get an accurate picture of what’s going on. If a group isn’t in line with Church teaching, it’s not a stretch to think they might lie on a survey.I don’t get it. It seems, for the most part, this necessary info-gathering exercise could have been done in one year by a required-for-all, confidential survey, with a follow up confidential survey (focusing on issues uncovered in the initial survey) and a final report.
Why did it require three or four years of public fanfare–an open invitation for the Church-hating media to distort and conflate with the CDF’s investigation of the notorious LCWR?
The really interesting new aspects are, of course, the bolded words in otjm’s post#14.