A
anode
Guest
…the title of a terrific piece in a recent NCR, which I read online:
ncronline.org/news/women/we-did-what-church-asked-us-do?nocache=1#comment-51311
This article gives a detailed outline of the various instructions from Rome to women’s religious institutes regarding their modernization. What I didn’t realize was how extensively Pope Pius XII was involved in initiating this. One tends to think that all of this started with Vat II. Wrong. Puis XII was a brilliant man. In 1950, he perceived the problem with all the archaic statutes in women’s orders especially, and he delivered detailed orders and instructions to religious orders to update and get rid of the nonessential. This included a huge meeting in Rome over 12 days, and apparently involved 4000 superiors (that must have been an interesting sight!) Pius also blamed the archaic restrictions on religious life for the ‘alarming’ decline in religious vocations after WWII. So the decline actually antedated the council.
This article describes all that followed Pius’s initiative in considerable detail. It makes worthwhile reading.
ncronline.org/news/women/we-did-what-church-asked-us-do?nocache=1#comment-51311
This article gives a detailed outline of the various instructions from Rome to women’s religious institutes regarding their modernization. What I didn’t realize was how extensively Pope Pius XII was involved in initiating this. One tends to think that all of this started with Vat II. Wrong. Puis XII was a brilliant man. In 1950, he perceived the problem with all the archaic statutes in women’s orders especially, and he delivered detailed orders and instructions to religious orders to update and get rid of the nonessential. This included a huge meeting in Rome over 12 days, and apparently involved 4000 superiors (that must have been an interesting sight!) Pius also blamed the archaic restrictions on religious life for the ‘alarming’ decline in religious vocations after WWII. So the decline actually antedated the council.
This article describes all that followed Pius’s initiative in considerable detail. It makes worthwhile reading.