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Are Families To Blame For Declining Number Of Nuns?

California Nuns

First Posted: 02/08/11 08:38 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:30 PM ET

By Daniel Burke
Religion News Service

If she had listened to her parents, Sister Jenn Graus might never have professed vows last month to join the Congregation of St. Joseph.

Though lifelong Catholics, Graus' parents had met few nuns or sisters near their home in Sterling Heights, Mich., and assumed most were cloistered in remote convents.

They were uneasy when Graus, 27, told them about her religious calling. Would they ever see her again? Would the college education they scrimped and saved for go to waste?

"They had to overcome a lot of apprehension," Graus said. Gradually, her parents warmed to her vocational aspirations after Graus told them that, yes, she would be allowed to visit home, and no, she would not have to give up her teaching career.

Communities of nuns and sisters in the U.S. are weathering a season of demographic decline with far-reaching consequences for the country's vast network of Catholic schools, hospitals and social services.

But as Catholic leaders try to convince more young women like Graus to dedicate their lives to the church, recent surveys suggest that a big obstacle may lie surprisingly close to home.

More than half of the women who professed final vows to join a religious order in 2010 said a parent or family member had discouraged their religious calling, according to a survey conducted by Georgetown University's Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate.

Only 26 percent of the surveyed sisters said their mother encouraged them to consider religious life, and just 16 percent said their father cheered their choice, according to the report, which was released by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops on Feb. 2.

A more extensive survey conducted by the Chicago-based National Religious Vocation Conference in 2009 produced similar results.

After peaking at 180,000 in the mid-1960s, there are now just an estimated 59,000 nuns and sisters in the U.S. More than 90 percent are 60 or older. Less than 1 percent are, like Graus, under 40, leaving far fewer women to staff Catholic hospitals, charities and schools.

The steep drop in women's vocations has drawn the attention of the Vatican, which launched an ongoing investigation in 2009 to determine the causes. A separate probe is looking into allegations of doctrinal dissidence within an umbrella group of Catholic sisters.

In the last two years, just one woman has professed vows to join the Servants, Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, a 466-member community based in Scranton, Pa.

"Usually, parents are the most resistant," about women entering religious life, said Sister Ruth Harkins, the community's vocations director. "They certainly do not encourage it."

Sometimes parents object because they want grandchildren, or fear losing a daughter. Other times, they fret over their child's loss of freedom and independence -- an understandable but mistaken worry, according to many sisters.

"They really don't understand the choice," Harkins said. "They think we're leading them away and they won't have any contact with their daughter. They feel like they are losing their child."

Priests are more likely than sisters to receive encouragement -- and discouragement -- about their religious vocation from friends and family, according to surveys. That may be because more people are familiar with the priesthood and have strong opinions about it, according to church researchers.

In a presentation to the U.S. bishops in 2009, Brother Paul Bednarczyk, executive director of the National Religious Vocation Conference, flagged the discouragement from family and friends as a troublesome trend for the church.

"Although people want a full-time pastor in their parish or religious sister teaching their children in the Catholic school, ironically, they are reluctant to have their own son or daughter choose that vocation," Bednarczyk said in an interview.

At one time, having a nun or priest in the family was a source of pride for Catholics. Folklore even held that it would help parents and siblings gain a spot in heaven.

But smaller families, changing cultural norms, a lack of knowledge about religious life and the clergy sex abuse crisis all contributed to a general decline in the desirability and prestige of Catholic vocations, according to Bednarczyk.

"Honestly, entering religious life is countercultural in so many ways," said Sister Mary Joanna Ruhland, associate director of the U.S. bishops' Secretariat of Clergy, Consecrated Life and Vocations. "It can be difficult for parents to see that their sons or daughters are going to lead a difficult life, and a life that may remain hidden in many ways."

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By Daniel Burke Religion News Service If she had listened to her parents, Sister Jenn Graus might never have professed vows last month to join the Congregation of St. Joseph. Though lifelong Catholi...
By Daniel Burke Religion News Service If she had listened to her parents, Sister Jenn Graus might never have professed vows last month to join the Congregation of St. Joseph. Though lifelong Catholi...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sorrytobeakansan
Radical Moderate
10:46 AM on 02/13/2011
The Catholic church is responsible for the decline of the Catholic church. The rest of this is just noise.
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mcmutter
A Groover has to expect a few setbacks .....
08:08 AM on 02/13/2011
during the Great Depression being a nun was a great deal for a girl ....

housing, meals, medical and retirement ....
05:09 PM on 02/12/2011
My mother used to be a nun in the 60s. She joined at a young age and after 6 years decided it wasn't for her for a number of reasons. One of which was seeing a very cruel nun who would slap children around and when she finally got in trouble for it, was sent to work with Native American children on a reservation instead (as if they needed that, right?) She saw a lot of disrespect and abuse shown to those who should have been protected and didn't even have anything to do with peds. Plus the difference between how nuns were treated vs. priests probably didn't help much.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
thinkingwomanmillstone
My life is microbiodegradable.
08:31 AM on 02/12/2011
The Catholic church takes no responsibility for anything does it? A religion that protects pedphilia and considers women unfit for all offices and subservient to any male within the church has declining female religious. What a shock. Perhaps they are right though. Any family that has a female within who is loved by that family would only be doing what's in that female's best interest to discourage her from involvement in the Catholic Church in any fashion.
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mcmutter
A Groover has to expect a few setbacks .....
08:10 AM on 02/13/2011
not a nickle dime or quarter ... watch em go bankrupt from the sex abuse lawsuits ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
purenergy
06:30 AM on 02/12/2011
Why would a woman want to become a nun? So they can hid an protect a bunch of pedophiles?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MexiChick67
Que? Que? Queee?
03:55 AM on 02/12/2011
One of the things that the church has to look at is that many women became nuns when they didn't nab a husband, had some kind of 'defect' or became too old to marry. The families would be faced with another mouth to feed, so it was easier to send them tot he convent. Also this was the only choice that women had where they could be semi-independent without having to get married. Women nowadays have choices and being a nun is not the default choice.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
esgabel
09:09 AM on 02/12/2011
nab a husband? defect? too old? Some of the most intelligent, creative and strong women whom I have ever met were "nuns"...you have no concept of the women who became nuns or their communities. Women do have more choices now...but your original statements are a slap in the face to the many women who ran schools and hospitals in this country and expected those in their charge to excel...to live one's life wether religious or secular in service of God and humanity...I am 63...a product of 16 years of Catholic Education--I bless the experience every day...I could bitch, I could tell "Sister Ignatius-type" stories but all in all my Education was worth the gold standard--my dad died when I was 10 months old--my mother had precious little money until she remarried--but the sisters, never asked for money! They expected all of us to go to college--never expected any of us not to make it--not to surpass our parents and themselves.
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Gregor53
Remembering your past gives power to the present.
10:24 AM on 02/12/2011
MexiChick67 may have been referring to past history such as the Middle Ages.  Yes, there were some women that volunteered at an early age, but there were also many that were considered to be "plain" by their families and were not married.  Galielo's daughter is an example of this and although he dearly loved his daughter, he felt it was best for her to be a nun.  Although it may be true that familiies discourage their daughters from becoming a nun, I would suspect that one of the real reasons for the decline is there are many more opportunities for women today than in the past.  In the long run, it is really going to be the indiividuals choice as to whether or not they enter the church as a nun or priest, the same it is true that many sons also enter the military despite the concerns of the parents. 
10:32 AM on 02/12/2011
Yes ultimately it's about individual people standing for their aspirations. Stereotyping is not much help. The question is whether the church provides a context in which people CAN stand for their aspirations with integrity. It seems like that is becoming less true, and perhaps has something to do with the declining number who want to devote their lives to this specific God. That in no way diminishes the accomplishments of the many good priests and nuns who are out there fighting the good fight.
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Gregj
10:03 PM on 02/11/2011
Maybe its the fact that they are treated as less than second class citizens by a church heirarch that can not see the log in their eyes but are looking to blame everyone else including the victims themselves. My question is whom can blind their eyes from the evils of the church and still see God through the tears.
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Kelley Smith
Mother, Veteran, IT Geek
04:30 PM on 02/11/2011
Why would a woman want to be a nun? In other faiths women are pastors and bishops. Why should any woman take an unnecessary demotion?

Joyce Meyers has one of the largest churches in the country. Why settle?
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HawaiianLady
My name means Gift of God.
06:30 PM on 02/11/2011
Well, Joyce isn't Catholic, so she can head up her own church. No woman will ever be ordained a priest, no matter what people think about it, so there are no possibilities there for a Catholic woman.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
esgabel
09:11 AM on 02/12/2011
nothing is impossible with God...
12:09 PM on 02/11/2011
Smart women know that the church is a male dominated org. that treats nuns like second class citizens.
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ladyvader
Less apathy, more empathy!
07:50 PM on 02/11/2011
Yes, they do and that simple fact will never change. The Vatican is the only country in Europe that does not allow women to vote.

If a priest leaves the church, they will get a little money to start their new life. If a nun leaves, she gets zip.
hfpf
Wake up World.
05:53 PM on 02/12/2011
If a priest leaves the church, they will get a little money to start their new life. If a nun leaves, she gets zi

Didn't know that, my respect lessens the more I learn.
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Gregor53
Remembering your past gives power to the present.
10:46 AM on 02/12/2011
It seeds were planted during the Roman Empire and it flowered in the Middle Ages.  It has not evolved much since that time and because of its ways, the Reformation in Europe began.  It does appear that with the Catholic Church, those with the power to make changes really do not want change as it would challenge their power.  Of course, there are those of both sexes in the Church that also feel the status quo is the way to remain.  It is a Conservative organization and will remain such.   
relevancematters
You're so full of what's right, you can't see what
09:09 AM on 02/11/2011
It's not families, it's the church itself. In our area, they closed the convents and sent the ladies out to find apartments. There are rumors that retirement is pretty bleak. Should a nun--or group of nuns--have the temerity to speak out on human rights abuses against women, she's subject to investigation and--one must assume--not only censure but defunding from the powers on high.

The church is a very tough gig for women these days--the playing field is not level. I would block both military and religious careers for my girls.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ladyvader
Less apathy, more empathy!
07:51 PM on 02/11/2011
You can try and block those careers, but they will do what they want in the end.
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Slate 1947
Lead me not into temptation. I can find it myself.
06:45 AM on 02/11/2011
The declining numbers of Priests and Nuns are directly related to an increase in education. The more people learn, the more questions they ask, and that has always been detrimental to religion.

Martian Luther understood this when he said "Reason should be destroyed in all Christians".

"Blame" television, movies, the Internet, etc. Communication and access to information and new ideas cause people to question authority... that's a good thing.
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Moti
Guns 'n Moses
12:08 AM on 02/11/2011
I think it's global warming. The ice flows were they like to gather are shrinking making them more vulnerable to Orcas.
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Gregj
10:07 PM on 02/11/2011
very funny brought back many child hood memories but later they turned to painfull memoriies I still have measurments impressions on my hands and head.
11:27 PM on 02/10/2011
I think this is a good sign that humanity may be maturing and wome realizing they do not have to be bossed around.
Carroll27
Nature's own nice conservative
08:47 PM on 02/10/2011
This is from the article:
"More than half of the women who professed final vows to join a religious order in 2010 said a parent or family member had discouraged their religious calling, according to a survey conducted by Georgetown University's Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate."

This suggests that families can play a positive role in fostering vocations. So what does the Po say? ARE FAMILIES TO BLAME???
07:34 PM on 02/10/2011
I'm amazed that the church had to do a survey to determine the cause of their declining number of female slaves, er, nuns. Surely they could have asked any Women's Studies freshman and gotten a very clear and concise answer. Maybe the church just can't fathom why any woman would want to give up her freedom, her salary, her sex-life and potential procreation just to be of service to the male priest-class. As always the church's self-centered myopia is staggering. Don't they realize there are more satisfying 24/7 ess em relationships to be had?