This Is the History of the Ideological Battle Between Catholic Bishops & Nuns
- Posted on June 12, 2012 at 3:55am by
Billy Hallowell
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NEW YORK (The Blaze/AP) — A conflict that has entangled the Vatican, American bishops and the largest umbrella group for U.S. nuns may seem to have erupted suddenly, but it actually has its roots in decades-old disputes over Roman Catholic teaching.
In April, The Blaze first told you about the Church’s plans to overhaul the group. It was then that the Vatican orthodoxy watchdog, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, concluded that the Leadership Conference of Women Religious had strayed far from authentic doctrine and gave three American bishops the authority to overhaul the organization.
The board for the nuns‘ group responded by calling the Vatican’s investigation flawed and its conclusions unsubstantiated. Top executives of the sisters’ organization brought their concerns to a meeting Tuesday in Rome with Vatican officials.
(Related: Vatican Orders Overhaul of U.S. Nun Group Over Liberal Stances on Sexuality & Abortion)
The meeting was conducted in an atmosphere of “openness and cordiality,” according to a Vatican statement. But the church insisted that the nuns LCWR must promote church unity by stressing core church teachings.
On the face of it, the Vatican’s timing is baffling. America’s religious sisters are far from the height of their influence. Their numbers have plummeted from about 180,000 in 1965 to 56,000 last year, according to the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate. Their average age is now above 70. Many orders go for years without any new candidates.
But the contretemps can be explained in the context of long-simmering differences that have also divided the broader church into opposing camps of theological liberals and conservatives — with many Catholics caught in between. Each side is acting consistently according to long-established priorities.
THE VATICAN:
Pope Benedict XVI is on a course correction. Benedict has been trying to restore Catholic traditions he believes were lost 50 years ago in the modernizing reforms of the Second Vatican Council. As he presses for a more conservative Catholicism, the pope has been vigilant about ensuring that groups and individuals that operate in the name of the church are adhering to core Catholic teaching.
Benedict recently approved new statutes for Caritas Internationalis, a global consortium of Catholic humanitarian aid groups, giving the Vatican more authority over the association’s work. He dedicated much of his Holy Thursday homily this year to chastising a movement of Austrian clergy seeking women’s ordination and optional celibacy for priests.
Last week, the same Vatican agency that rebuked the U.S. nuns’ group sharply criticized a book on sexuality written by a prominent American nun, Sister Margaret Farley, saying its author had a “defective understanding” of Catholic theology.
The nuns’ conference is accused of taking positions that undermine church teaching on the all-male priesthood and homosexuality while staying mostly silent on abortion and promoting “certain radical feminist themes incompatible with the Catholic faith.”
THE U.S. BISHOPS:
American bishops are struggling to reassert their teaching authority, even as fewer Catholics are listening.
Less than a quarter of U.S. Catholics attend Mass every week. Most reject church teaching on artificial contraception and a majority support same-sex relationships. About one-third of Americans who were raised Catholic have left the church, according to the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life.
These trends were already shaping Catholic life when the scandal over clergy sex abuse erupted in 2002, further eroding the bishops’ standing.
Still, church leaders have been newly assertive. They have stepped up public condemnation of individuals and groups who call themselves Catholic while dissenting from core beliefs. According to officials involved in the review of the nuns’ group, religious sisters are among those who need correction.

Bishop Leonard Blair (AP)
“What are the church’s pastors to make of the fact that the (nuns’ group) constantly provides a one-sided platform – without challenge or any opposing view – to speakers who take a negative and critical position vis-a-vis church doctrine and the church’s teaching office?” said Bishop Leonard Blair of Toledo, Ohio, who conducted the doctrinal review for the Vatican.
After Blair began his inquiry, relations between U.S. bishops and the nuns worsened over the Obama administration’s health care overhaul. The bishops said the changes would increase government funding for abortion; the Leadership Conference and other prominent sisters’ groups disagreed and said so publicly.
THE U.S. SISTERS:
After the Second Vatican Council of the 1960s, many religious sisters shed their habits and traditional roles as they sought to more fully engage the modern world.
Many were better trained than ever to carry out the changes. The sisters’ formation movement of the 1950s had emphasized advanced education for the nuns. As a result, sisters started taking on higher-level professional work such as running colleges and hospitals.
Over the decades, the women’s religious congregations focused increasingly on Catholic social justice teachings: fighting poverty and the nuclear arms race, advocating for civil rights and creating AIDS ministries, while continuing in their jobs as social workers and educators. The Leadership Conference of Women Religious, which the Vatican had created in 1956, became a platform for ideas fueling this activism. The group, based in Silver Spring, Md., represents the leaders for about 80 percent of U.S. sisters.
But as the nuns’ advocacy increased, so too did the criticism from theological conservatives. They argued that the sisters’ congregations had become secular and political, while abandoning traditional prayer life and faith. The nuns insisted prayer and Christ were central to their work.
This dispute continued as Pope John Paul II defended Catholic orthodoxy and appointed bishops and Vatican officials who shared his concerns about the proper direction of the church.
In 1992, the Vatican created a separate group for sisters with a traditional approach to religious life and church authority. The Conference of Major Superiors of Women Religious is significantly smaller than the Leadership Conference of Women Religious. But a recent study found the traditional religious orders are having greater success attracting new candidates.
Then, under Benedict, the conflict reached a turning point.
Around 2008, the Vatican announced the doctrinal review of the Leadership Conference and also launched an Apostolic Visitation, or investigation, of all U.S. women’s congregations. That inquiry looked at quality of life, the response to dissent and “the soundness of doctrine held and taught” by the women. Results of the wider inquiry have not been released.
But for the next five years, the Leadership Conference will effectively be under Vatican receivership.
Seattle Archbishop Peter Sartain and two other U.S. bishops will oversee rewriting the statutes of Leadership Conference, review the groups’ plans and programs, approve its speakers and ensure the women properly follow Catholic prayer and ritual.
And despite the nuns’ complaints, and the protests around the country organized by Catholics who support them, executives from the Leadership Conference acknowledge a hard reality: As a group created by the Vatican, they have few options for persuading Rome to reverse course.



















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Warpspeedpetey
Posted on June 17, 2012 at 10:58pmThe Church is not a democracy. There is no right to dissent on matters of faith and morals. This sort of poisonous dissent should be cut from the faith, root and branch. These nuns have no right to expose the laity to such perverse ideas and represent them as authentic Catholic teaching.
Report Post »Bob From District 9
Posted on June 30, 2012 at 7:03pmReread the article. There is not one word claiming any deviation from Catholic teaching. In fact it says the social justice issues they focus on are Catholic teachings on social justice.
There is not one word saying they deviate in prayer or worship. Everything they do is in keeping with Catholic social teachings and theology.
Learn something about the Catholic teachings before you condemn those who live by them.
disclosure: I am a pro-life Catholic. Oh, and in Bishop Blair’s diocese.
Report Post »lukerw
Posted on June 17, 2012 at 6:54amThese conflicts continue… and by normal standards, Islam is WINNING! But, Modernists, Liberals, and the AntiChristian cannot seem to see the Concept of One War… rather they Compartment Mentalize History into individual dates. clashes & battles.
So, when Nuns venture to support Socialism and State Charity & Care… opposing Individual Charity & Love as taught in Christianity… their unintended AntiChristian position… opens the door to support for a Christian Alternative: Islam and Atheism (Communism)!
Report Post »Bob From District 9
Posted on June 30, 2012 at 7:06pmYour twist to anti-Islamic hate spewing condemns you. As to your BS about state charity and care, read the Catholic Bishop’s website. Then you can condemn the Catholic Bishops, and the Catholic Church.
http://old.usccb.org/comm/archives/2010/10-104.shtml
Reflecting decades of advocacy on behalf of universal access to health care, the bishops were clear in calling for health care reform as a moral imperative and urgent national priority. We called for reform that would make health coverage affordable for the poor and needy, moving our society substantially toward the goal of universal coverage.
Report Post »lukerw
Posted on June 17, 2012 at 6:46amSupported by Chistians… Augustus Constantine became Emperor of the Roman Empire… where in 325, Council of Nicaea, he made Christianity the State Religion, assembled and published the First Bible, and converted the Roman Legions… and where in 330 ad, he founded Constantinople as Capital of the Eastern Roman Empire, from which he ruled.
In 610 ad, Mohammed arose against the Roman Empire… publishing the Koran as their bible of Islam and began a Holy War… conquering the Eastern Roman Empire, piece by piece… where a Successor (Caliph) conquered Constantinople in 1453 ad… and where upon the began to further advance into Eastern Europe.
In 476 ad, the Western Roman Empire fell… and was reconstituted in 800 ad, as the Holy Roman Empire, by then Emperor Charlemagne who had been fighting the Muslims of the Spainish Invasion of 711 ad. In 827 ad, the Muslims invaded Sicily, and in 929 ad, the Muslims set up the Spainish Caliphate, which ended in 1031 ad, but total rule did not end until 1492 ad.
From 1801 to 1805 ad, the US fought it’s First Foreign War against the Ottoman Caliphate… in the North African, Muslim, Nations… under Thomas Jefferson, who basically stated that the Koran was Satanic and the Muslims were Primative Barbarians.
In 2001 ad, Muslim Terrorist attacked Washington DC and New York City! In return, Iraq and Afganistan were attacked. But in 2011 ad, the US began supporting Revolution in Africa and the Muslim Brotherhood there
Report Post »by faith
Posted on June 18, 2012 at 6:38pmFirst written recorded reference to the Catholic Church … 107 AD
First Bible was approved …AD 382 Council of Rome. Listed the New Testament books in their present number and order.
Constantine and co-Emperor Licinius issued the Edict of Milan in 313, which proclaimed religious tolerance of all religions throughout the empire
That’s strike one, strike two and strike three.
Your credibility is shot. Nothing you say can be taken seriously.
Report Post »Stop spreading ignorant lies
Bob From District 9
Posted on June 30, 2012 at 7:11pmOn Sept 11, 2001, Saudis and those allied with them attacked DC and NYC. Due to their basing in Afghanistan the us invaded Afghanistan. Due to the Neo-con Project for a New American Century plan the US invaded Iraq to take over their oil. As a result over 4000 Americans and over 100,000 Iraqis died. That’s murder for profit and power. Which is a death penalty offense under federal law I believe.
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