Within hours of the Vatican's announcement Monday
that Pope Francis had reaffirmed a controversial takeover of the
primary group of U.S. Catholic sisters, reactions from prominent
American sisters ranged from "wait and see" to the proverbial straw that
broke the camel's back.
It may be too early to tell what the news means for the country's
57,000 Catholic sisters, said several former leaders of the Leadership
Conference of Women Religious.
Others said it could signal it is time to
reconsider their energy in trying to tamp down potential tensions with
bishops.
"LCWR has spent an enormous amount of energy in conversations and in
preparation materials and in actual meetings" with Vatican prelates,
Mercy Sr. Helen Marie Burns, a former LCWR president, said. "The
question becomes, How fruitful is the continued use of that energy for
the church as well as for the LCWR organization?"
"It's a question of limited energy and what's the best use of that
energy in the present moment," said Burns, who served in LCWR's
presidency from 1988 to 1990.
The Vatican announced Monday that LCWR leaders had met that day with
Archbishop Gerhard Müller, the head of the Vatican's Congregation for
the Doctrine of the Faith.
During the meeting, the Vatican said Müller told the sisters' leaders
he had "recently discussed" with Pope Francis his congregation's April
2012 order that the group revise and place itself under the authority of
three U.S. bishops.
The pope "reaffirmed the findings of the Assessment and the program of reform," the Vatican said Müller told the sisters.
That mandated reform, announced after a three-year investigation of
the group launched by the congregation's previous head and former San
Francisco archbishop Cardinal William Levada, has attracted wide
attention and spurred nationwide protests of support for the sisters
last year.
The congregation placed the sisters' group
under the control of Seattle Archbishop J. Peter Sartain, who was a
given a five-year mandate to oversee reforms as its archbishop-delegate.
Sartain was also present for Monday's meeting.
Announcement of Francis' reaffirmation of the move disappointed some.
"Nothing has changed," said Margaret Thompson, a professor of history
and women's studies at Syracuse University in New York and an associate
of the Monroe, Mich., Immaculate Heart of Mary community.
"We were hoping, some of us, that Pope Francis would be very, very
different from Pope Benedict," Thompson said. "For us to expect anything
radically different was probably wishful thinking."
Sr. Mary Ann Hinsdale, a theologian at Boston College and member of
the Immaculate Heart of Mary community, said she was "very disappointed"
with the news and said it may suggest Catholics are still learning how
Pope Francis will handle delicate matters.
"All these nice gestures" -- for example, the decisions to wash
women's feet on Holy Thursday and to wear more basic liturgical
vestments -- "don't necessarily say what he thinks theologically or with
regard to his understanding of religious in North America," Hinsdale
said.
Monday's meeting was the first between LCWR, which represents about
80 percent of the United States' approximately 57,000 sisters, and
Müller, who became head of the doctrinal congregation in July.
Sr. Annmarie Sanders, LCWR's associate director for communications
and a member of the Immaculate Heart of Mary community, wrote in an
email that the meeting between the group's leaders and the Vatican
congregation was one of many set up by the group "several months ago" as
part of an annual visit to Vatican dicasteries.
In a brief statement Monday,
LCWR said the conversation between the groups during the meeting was
"open and frank" and added: "We pray that these conversations may bear
fruit for the good of the Church."
Mercy Sr. Patricia McDermott, who as president of the Institute of
the Sisters of Mercy of the Americas leads one of the largest groups of
Catholic sisters in the western hemisphere, wrote in an email to NCR that she had hope for those conversations.
"What is public is only the first glimpse of the conversations that
occurred," wrote McDermott, whose organization represents approximately
4,000 sisters serving in the United States and 11 other countries.
"And while it is painful to hear the announcement, we continue to
hope for greater understanding of one another's perspectives on
religious life as we live this life in the United States today."
Several of the sisters noted that the Vatican's statement said the
pope discussed the matter with Müller but did not mention direct
communication with the sisters' group.
"I would hope that the pope actually would speak directly to the
officers of LCWR," said Immaculate Heart of Mary Sr. Nancy Sylvester,
who served in the group's presidency from 1998 to 2000.
Burns, however, said Monday's statement renewed "feelings of
frustration and anger" that many of the reasons given in April 2012 for
LCWR's takeover were unsubstantiated.
Current LCWR leadership has repeatedly made the same claim, pointing to inconsistencies in the doctrinal congregation's document
that gave Sartain authority over the group, including quotations from
speeches at the group's assemblies the sisters say misrepresent the
authors' viewpoints.
The assessment, LCWR said in June 2012, "was based on unsubstantiated accusations and the result of a flawed process that lacked transparency."
The doctrinal congregation's leaders, Burns said, "keep reaffirming
data that has been identified by LCWR as unsubstantiated. And yet the
conversations continue to move from that data rather than a new place of
more common understanding."
After considering the Vatican order at its annual assembly in August, about 900 LCWR members approved a resolution
saying the group would continue discussions with church officials on
the matter but "will reconsider" if it "is forced to compromise the
integrity of its mission."
Burns referred to that August statement, asking how the sisters' group could maintain its integrity while following the mandate.
"This challenges how that's going to be possible," she said. Monday's
Vatican statement, she said, "suggests ... that the mandate will be
implemented.
"And then LCWR is under the reformation of the three bishops. That
doesn't seem to me a way toward the continued integrity of LCWR and its
mission."
Another question Burns posed is what kind of dialogue is now possible
between the bishops and the sisters.
Quoting from Pope Paul VI's 1964
encyclical Ecclesiam Suam,
which describes dialogue partially as the "discovery of elements of
truth in the opinion of others," she said she wondered if the two groups
might be at a conversational impasse.
Paul VI, she said, "spoke of dialogue being ... about people sitting
down with openness and a possibility of changing their own viewpoint."
For some bishops, she said, dialogue seems to mean "sitting down and
talking through their understanding of the truth in a way that then they
expect will enlighten the hearer so there can be agreement."
"It's a whole different concept of dialogue," she said. "I do think,
perhaps, that's creating the impasse. Is the conversation on the part of
the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith open to change? It would
appear not."
Beyond questions of dialogue, Thompson said more basic questions of application could determine LCWR's future.
"Policy is also how it's implemented," she said, referring to the
April 2012 order that gave Sartain wide-ranging powers over the group.
"We know what authority Sartain has been given," she said. "But we don't know how he's going to exercise it now."
"There's a whole lot that we just don't know," Thompson said.