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Jim Wallis

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Having the Sisters' Back

Posted: 04/25/2012 9:19 am

After an official investigation, the Vatican seems pretty upset with the Catholic Sisters here in the United States. They have reprimanded the women for not sufficiently upholding the bishops' teachings and doctrines and paying much more attention to issues like poverty and health care than to abortion, homosexuality and male-only priesthood. 

There are concerns with "a prevalence of certain radical feminist themes" and they have been taken to task for "occasional public statements" that disagree with the bishops, "who are the church's authentic teachers of faith and morals."

The Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR), the largest representative group of all the Catholic sisters orders, has now been put under the control of some bishops who are to "reform" them, change the group's statutes and programs, and approve who will speak at their events.

The Vatican's approach to its concerns, to say the least, is quite regrettable. Condemnation and control were chosen over conversation and dialogue. Quite honestly, do most of us believe, or even most Catholics believe, that the bishops are the only "authentic teachers of faith and morals?"

The sisters may be the most positive face of the Catholic Church today, and they are keeping people in the Church who would have given up on the all-male hierarchy long ago. These women are often the ones at the core of Jesus' ministry, building relationships with the poor and vulnerable and most concretely offering the love of God. If you had a referendum on whom the best faith and moral teachers are in many local communities and parishes around the country, it would likely be the women who are now under attack. That is the sad situation here and the serious mistake being made by the Vatican.

Over the years, I've seen how Catholic women formed the heart of Christian ministry around the country in schools, hospitals, prisons, homeless shelters, soup kitchens, women's clinics, and children's programs -- often in the worst urban neighborhoods and rural poverty areas. They were among the most faithful in peace marches and non-violent protest of our nation's endless wars. They were the ones who went to the ends of the earth to be with the most forgotten people on God's planet. 

Gratefully for Sojourners, these Catholic women have, from the beginning, been at the core of our subscribers and supporters. I've gotten to know them and their work as they hosted me and others in their monastic communities and for spiritual retreats.

The Church is very concerned about these sisters losing focus on abortion. But, most I know still feel abortion is a terrible moral tragedy and do whatever they can to reduce them. Their approach, however, is to support low-income women, which actually reduces abortion, instead of mostly legislative strategies that could just push abortions into back alleys. And perhaps the sisters would also rather minister to gay and lesbian people with the love of Christ instead of just telling them they are wrong and unacceptable. 

When the Vatican said that issues like poverty are more important to the sisters than issues like sexuality, they are probably right. But from a biblical point of view, the sisters may be right and the Vatican wrong. The Bible is much clearer on the Christian imperative to serve the poor and stand for justice than it is on same-sex marriage or exactly when full human life begins. I, for one, miss the leadership of Catholic bishops like the late Joseph Cardinal Bernardin who taught a "consistent ethic of life" and a "seamless garment" that defends life and dignity wherever it is threatened, from abortion on demand to poverty, the death penalty, and nuclear weapons.

Of course, there are important issues to discuss in regard to theology, Catholic teachings, what constitutes the most important issues of "orthodoxy," and how to most wisely and lovingly deal with crucial moral issues like abortion and human sexuality. But couldn't that be done through serious and respectful conversation with women who have earned the respect to be treated differently than they are being here?

When I heard about the Vatican's disciplinary action against America's Catholic "women religious," a personal memory came to mind.

I would be traveling to speak at very conservative Christian colleges, often in the Midwest and South, at the height of the popularity of the Religious Right. As I came into the auditorium or chapel, I would see a whole row of Catholic women religious, often still wearing their traditional dress as nuns. And they would all give me big smiles. Curious as to what they were doing at an Evangelical college with a constituency so unlike their own, I would walk up to say hello and ask what they were doing there. "We're from around here and came to support you tonight," they would say, "because we know what kind of place this is and thought you might need some people on your side."

The nuns were my bodyguards. I've always been willing to go into lion's dens to speak, but having the nuns with me there, offering very clear local and public support for my message, meant a great deal to me. It always made me feel much more ready and confident knowing the sisters had my back and that if anybody came after me, they would have the nuns to deal with!

So, given how the sisters have always had my back, I am coming to their defense. I am not Catholic, but many of my best friends and allies are, and some of them are bishops. I am an evangelical convert to Catholic social teaching, but this decision by the Vatican isn't consistent with the best of that teaching and certainly not with the spirit behind it.

For what it's worth, I'll support the sisters on this one. I've got their back now. And others will too.

Jim Wallis is the author of Rediscovering Values: A Guide for Economic and Moral Recovery, and CEO of Sojourners. Follow Jim on Twitter @JimWallis.

 
 
 

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After an official investigation, the Vatican seems pretty upset with the Catholic Sisters here in the United States. They have reprimanded the women for not sufficiently upholding the bishops' teachin...
After an official investigation, the Vatican seems pretty upset with the Catholic Sisters here in the United States. They have reprimanded the women for not sufficiently upholding the bishops' teachin...
 
 
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12:32 PM on 05/04/2012
This controversy and the discussion it has inspired, including the numerous comments from conservative Catholics reiterating that the church does not allow for its members to have questions on faith and morals that are resolved by any means except through its male leaders has finally and at long last led me to give up the struggle I have had being a woman and trying to be a Catholic. I am not welcome in this community and I no longer want to be a part of it. I no longer have to be hit over the head with a board to get the message. I sincerely believe that the very worst thing that anyone can do to another is to stand as a barrier between an individual and God, or a spiritual life. I sincerely believe that is what this patriarchal institution is doing. "As long as god is male, male is god." - Mary Daly
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janmarbol
Unapologetic Independent Progressive
08:34 PM on 04/27/2012
got Sisters' backs here too!
07:51 PM on 04/26/2012
"It is poverty to decide that a child must die so that you may live as you wish" Blessed Mother Teresa. I wondered how she would have weighed in on this issue.
07:45 PM on 04/26/2012
Supposedly, God created Man in His image. But if the truth be told, it seems the other way
around. Thus the male clergy, for the most part, create a God that reflects their characteristics: authoritarian, misogynistic, and narcissistic. On the other end of spectrum, many of these nuns create a God of love and compassion for the poor and helpless.

Thus although seemingly one church, two different Gods are worshiped.
06:03 PM on 04/26/2012
Feminists should realize that the rapidly declining number of nuns will only make the church's leadership even more "male-dominated." As a former Catholic and former seminarian, I learned the hard (and very painful way) that those who have power in the church and in seminaries are very, very power-hungry and that "progressives" in those positions are at least as power-hungry and authoritarian and intolerant as their conservative counterparts. The "progressives" in charge at my seminary were rigidly intolerant of anything not at least 98% "politically correct." Feminists and other liberals should know that, regardless of the Vatican, there are plenty of pro-Feminist, politically correct liberals in the leadership of the Church, at least in the USA. And they aren't the "kindest and gentlest" people in the world either!
12:24 PM on 04/27/2012
How true, "The "progressives" in charge at my seminary were rigidly intolerant of anything not at least 98% "politically correct." These progressives are every bit as fundamentalist as their right-wing opponents, every bit as punitive and have every bit as much devotion to their own sacred writings and rites as the right-wingers. For progressives, abortion is the sacrament.
04:02 PM on 04/26/2012
These mainly elderly nuns lost their faith years ago. The fact that they want to remain in the Church they despise shows a lack of integrity.
12:50 PM on 04/26/2012
It is wonderful to serve the poor, but the truth matters too, and when sisters abandon key elements of the Christian message, it matters. They are not being persecuted...in fact, this attempt to get them to reform has been long, long delayed. Some of us have seen the damage being done to their communities, to souls they mislead (even if sincere, they have mislead people) and to their own souls, and have been praying for someone to try to help them come back to the faith...
12:21 PM on 04/26/2012
Okay, so these liberal nuns could call themselves liberal Protestants; but for the sakeof the truth, stop calling them Catholics.
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mjc
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11:51 AM on 04/26/2012
It may be hard for non-Catholics...like myself...to understand or even guess what it is like to have a religious group of women gently and silently ignore the male dominated hierarchy that is the Roman Catholic Church. Decades ago there was a nun who taught in one of the two...at that time...Catholic schools who was respected, even loved, by most of educators and politicians in a small city in upstate NY because she dared to spend lots of teaching the high school students in her charge how to evaluate simple concepts such as enemy and friend when applying one's vote or support...or even country. Yep, it was in the 60s. Lots of these supporters told her that if she should ever decide to "go over the wall" she could find a job with them. Women like her and these nuns probably do more to promote Catholicism than any single action. To be more concerned with the teachings of Jesus than the teachings of church councils speaks volumes to the poor, to those who suffer discrimination because they are gay or those who are overburdened with too many pregnancies and too little affordable child care options.
11:37 AM on 04/26/2012
The biggest problem with the Vatican's position is that they believe that they have the final word on everything . Their sort of like unfunded mandates they never put their money where their mouth is . I see the decline of organized religion accelerating with hierarchies total pissing off their members . Most of the Abrahamic religions are many millenia out of date with global reality .
04:57 AM on 04/26/2012
I still have yet to have anyone convince me that this is an action against nuns, in general. It is an action against the LCWR. Anyone on the WEB has had access for years to the materials presented at their conferences. Faith was light and social justice was high. For non-Catholics that might be enough but these women are consecrated leaders of the Church - my Church. And I don't recognize what they espouse as being anything more than social work in their public presentations. I expect more from Church leaders whether they are men or women. Women have no greater virtue than men here. Matriarchy is just the flip side of the Patriarchy coin. I don't think it is inconsistent therefore for the Vatican to say - get back to the basics on faith. That actually is their job. And personally, I fail to see why the nuns don't take up the abortion cause. It is the number one social justice issue. We kill the very least among us. One would think this would cause outrage on here on earth as much as I'm sure it does in heaven.
11:20 PM on 04/25/2012
First of all the Seamless Garment philosophy promoted by the late Cardinal Bernardin was just 'junk religious theology'. It has been debunked and condemned by the Church for years. This is not about the nuns ministering to the poor etc., it is about promoting and teaching the word of God. They have lost their way and it's about time Sister Mary Sweatpants and bongo playing throng come back into the Church or get out altogether; harsh...yes....true....absolutely. The true teachers of the Catholic Church are indeed the bishops who have been disrespected by the leadership of the LCWR for years. These nuns are take a vow of obedience which they, like many errant priests, have decided not to obey. It is not optional for these nuns to pick and choose what doctrines of the Church they will obey and teach. They must accept and teach all that has been divinely revealed through Scripture, Apostolic Tradition (T), infallible papal pronouncements and the constant teaching of the Ordinary and Universal Magesterium.
10:08 AM on 04/26/2012
"Debunked and condemned by the Church for years"--really?
12:25 PM on 04/26/2012
There was this guy called Joseph Ratzinger who wrote to the US bishops in 2004 to remind them that Catholics can disagree about war anf the death penalty, "but not, however, in regard to abortion and euthanasia."
He's now known as Benedict XVI.
11:06 PM on 04/25/2012
Sorry- while I abhor the bishops' attack as much as anyone, is it actually beneficial that the sisters "are keeping people in the Church who would have given up on the all-male hierarchy long ago"? I think not. Time to do away with this institution.
08:59 PM on 04/25/2012
While there has been a great deal of work on the part of LCWR promoting issues of social justice in harmony with the Church’s social doctrine, it is silent on the right to life from conception to natural death, a question that is part of the lively public debate about abortion and euthanasia in the United States. Dear sisters -- consider unborn women -- don't kill them
08:19 PM on 04/25/2012
you do not need an "authentic" teacher to teach faith. I am so happy that I am not a member of any "religions" or religious orgs,
I have read what various religions have to say and I found them kinda frightening to cope with all the rituals and such
I feel free.
The only book I really love and dwell with is the Bible ( in privacy )
I have faith in that god from the Bible.
Keeping things simple!