Dear Friends,
From
August 7 -11, St. Louis Catholics have dubbed their hometown a "Sister City" to
support the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR) meeting there. At
their annual gathering, the sisters will contemplatively discern how to
respond to a harsh Vatican mandate issued last April.
Just as St. Louis has become a "Sister City," FutureChurch is working
with the Nun Justice Project to
raise up other Sister Cities. We are encouraging special
solidarity vigils on August 7 (or another time that
week). Already, the project has 15
Sister City vigils planned! We
will sing the classic "We are Called" in a chorus of solidarity with all who
work for justice. Inspiring new
prayer resources are available for sidewalk vigils, vigils in churches,
and private use.
On August 7 please support the sisters in prayer,
song and solidarity by organizing a public or private vigil in your
city.
Catholic Response Throughout
the month of May and June, vigils in support of U.S. Sisters were held across
the country in over 50 cities. The Conference of Major Superiors of Men , six
individual religious orders of priests and brothers , the new Association of
U.S. Catholic Priests, and the international peace movement Pax Christi, have
passed resolutions supporting LCWR. Currently, United States Congress has 176
cosponsors on a resolution honoring Catholic sisters. The outpouring of support
has attracted extraordinary media attention. From Public Radio's Diane Rehm
Show to Comedy Central's The Colbert Report to local TV footage and
national Associated Press coverage, Catholics everywhere are expressing their
dismay at how the Vatican was treating women religious.
More Background On April 18, 2012
the Congregation for Doctrine of the Faith (CDF) and the United States
Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) launched a crackdown on the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR), an
umbrella group that represents more than 80 percent of the 57,000 women
religious in the United States. The Vatican
harshly criticized LCWR for
alleged doctrinal irregularities and organization was placed under the oversight
of three bishops and ordered to revise its statutes, programs, speakers,
liturgical practices and justice affiliations.
On
June 1, LCWR officials issued a statement saying the Vatican critique was based
on unsubstantiated accusations that arose from a "flawed process" and had caused
"scandal and pain throughout the church." On June 12, LCWR leadership travelled
to Rome hoping for clarification, but the meeting was characterized as a
"dialogue of the deaf" by the outgoing prefect of the CDF, Cardinal William
Levada. LCWR has been consulting with regional groups and will consider its
response at the organization's annual meeting August
7-11.
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You already think you're a priest, so this is just par for the course.
ReplyDeleteThis will all just go away if we keep our heads in the sand.
ReplyDeleteYou took my priesthood!
ReplyDelete