I don’t know how women religious do this. I won’t attempt to speak for them. There was a time among male religious when we have a group of consecrated men whom we often called “Lay Brothers”. These men were responsible for sewing, cooking, cleaning, laundry, shoe making and all of the things that mothers traditionally did.
When Vatican II and later, Vita Consacrata, demanded that religious return to our charisms: vision and mission of our founders, many of us found that we had committed grave sins against justice. We had limited many men to being involuntary servants within their religious communities.
There are religious communities that always had lay brothers who only did these tasks. They did no outside ministries, nor were they choir monks. These lay brothers entered those communities to consecrate their lives and their ministry was to serve their confreres… In those communities the custom continues. It is voluntary and it goes back to the founder.
There were other communities, among them the Franciscans, the greatest sinners of all in this area (not just some branches, but all the branches). we had turned our lay brothers into mandatory servants. They were not allowed to serve outside of the friary in any pastoral capacity. They were not allowed to go for higher education. Eventually, we took away their right to vote in the community. We took away their right to hold the office of superior or to serve on the community council. Then we took away their right to serve as formators of postulants, novices, seminarians and temporary professed religious. In the end, we even went as far as demanding that they refer to their ordained brothers as Father. We never called our ordained men Father. Everyone was Brother, even the great St. Bonaventure who was a cardinal was Brother Bonaventure until the day that he died. Father was only one, St. Francis and he was a lay brother, then a deacon during the last two years of his life. But he was and is Father Francis.
We were in shock when we looked back. This was never part of the original foundation. In the original foundation everyone was a brother, whether you were ordained or lay. Every brother did laundry, sewed, cooked, cleaned house, and served his brothers. Many lay brothers were theologians, professors at seminaries, missionaries, spiritual directors, chaplains, preachers and so forth. Many ordained brothers were cooks, housekeepers, launderers, beggers for the community. Everyone took a turn holding office.
In other words, everyone used whatever talents they had to serve the community internally and the Universal Church externally, provided that those services were not in conflict with the mind of the founder. This was not only true of Franciscans, but of many religious institutes of men.
As we have corrected the flaws that crept into male religious life prior to Vatican II, with all of these distinctions that were not desired by the founders, we have to deal with the reality. Today’s male religious is usually very well educated in theology, science, languages, and so forth. He is very competent in many ministries. The number of men who are tailors is but a handful. That’s because in the modern world, tailoring is not a common craft as it used to be. Men do not know which side of a sewing machine is up.
In addition, we have a great need for men in the shelter, soup kitchen, parish office, retreat house, youth ministry, street ministry, administration, religious formation, community administratin, teaching at the seminary, serving as chaplains or spiritual directors to the faithful. Due to these needs, unless a man says that he wans to be a tailor, we don’t assign male religious to those tasks. We assign them to the ministries of their religious institutes for which they have spent seven to nine years in formation. These are more important to the founder than making habits. We pay to have a habit made.
My own habit, which is very simple, costs $170.00 to make one tunic. I have two. One I wear daily and the other I wear four times a year. And yes it gets dirty and smelly. But what else can I do. Our constitution says that this is to be worn 24/7. We wash it every Wednesday.
Fraternally,
Br. JR, OSF