Histories of Nuns and the Church Hierarchy
By Carol Faulkner
Amidst the public attention to the relationship between the Vatican and American nuns, I do not want this recent clash between the Catholic hierarchy and the Leadership Conference of Women Religious to go unnoticed on RiAH (see Kathleen Cummings on the last one here). Since this is not my area of research, I’ve decided to assemble some references on the history of this crisis, as well as the activism of American sisters. I hope RiAH readers and bloggers will add to this list.
Amidst the public attention to the relationship between the Vatican and American nuns, I do not want this recent clash between the Catholic hierarchy and the Leadership Conference of Women Religious to go unnoticed on RiAH (see Kathleen Cummings on the last one here). Since this is not my area of research, I’ve decided to assemble some references on the history of this crisis, as well as the activism of American sisters. I hope RiAH readers and bloggers will add to this list.
Commentators who have addressed this crisis from a historical perspective include Gary Wills here,
Mary Hunt here,
historian Anne Butler here,
and my wonderful colleague Margaret Susan Thompson here and here.
Even a brief look at the history of American sisters suggests that such conflicts
over power and doctrine have been part of Catholicism in the U.S. for a long
time. In 1810, for example, Mother Elizabeth Seton wrote to Archbishop John Carroll as she
battled with the priest appointed to supervise her Sisters of Charity (the italics are Seton's):
“Sincerely I promised you and really I have endeavored to do everything in my power to bend myself to
meet the last appointed Superior in every way but after continual reflection on
the necessity of absolute conformity with
him, and constant prayer to our
Lord to help me, yet the heart is closed and when the pen should freely give
him the necessary detail and information he requires it stops, and he remains now as uninformed in the
essential points as if he had nothing to do with us, an unconquerable reluctance and diffidence takes place of those
dispositions which ought to influence every action and with every desire to
serve God and these excellent beings who surround me I remain motionless and
inactive” (Quoted in Faulkner, Women in American History to 1880,
78-79).
Anne Boylan skillfully weaves the history of Seton and other
Catholic women into her The Origins of Women’s Activism.
As Boylan writes of Seton’s experience, “Their
religious superior, as well as the presiding diocesan bishop, could demand
obedience from the sisters, recruit applicants for the order, assign members to
new posts, and request services for other Catholic institutions. At the same
time, as the community’s founder and leader, Seton exercised inviolable
authority in many areas of daily life.” Boylan argues that the “key difference” between the activism of
Catholic and Protestant women was that “nuns
living in religious orders performed the bulk of charitable labor within the
church. They, not laywomen, gained the kind of experience acquired from
creating a permanent institution, raising endowment funds, attaining corporate
status, and behaving as legal entities.”
Other historians have written the important history of nuns’
involvement in social welfare, and its implications for their spiritual and
temporal authority. These include Emily Clark’s Masterless Mistresses (reviewed
by Tracey Fessenden here),
Katheen Sprows Cummings’s New Women of the Old Faith,
and Maureen Fitzgerald’s Habits of Compassion.
For the period during and after Vatican II, Mary Henold's book
examines the intertwined history of American feminism and Catholicism. To incorporate this
history into your courses, I highly recommend Henold’s document project, including an introductory essay and primary sources, on Women and Social Movements in the United States, 1600-2000 (requires library subscription), titled “How Did Catholic Women Participate in
the Rebirth of American Feminism?” Henold’s document project includes “The
Declaration of Independence for Women” from the National Coalition of American
Nuns in 1972. Among other demands, the sisters included:
Full
and equal status of women in churches, including ordination to the ministry and
elected proportional representation in church voting bodies. Just as today we
are appalled that organized religion once approved slavery, so within a few
years will the present oppression of women in churches be recognized as
immoral. Imagine how ludicrous that Roman Catholic bishops meeting in their
Synod had the theme of justice when not one woman had a vote.
and
Broad-based
research programs in human sexuality. We request organized religion to address
contemporary issues related to human sexuality, such as homosexuality,
"alternate forms of marriage," abortion, etc., and to do research
before making judgments. Judgments which include empirical data will help
dispel current myths and fables which tyrannize decisions and behavior of the
human family today.
Clearly, as Mary Hunt writes, “Roman Catholic Church history is
unfolding before our eyes."
Comments
In 1975, the United States had more than 135,000 nuns. Now, there are fewer than 56,000.
In recent years, some religious orders have reported a recruiting uptick. But young novices are flocking not to the fiercely independent religious orders that so irk the Vatican but to more traditional orders - those that wear habits, live together in a convent, devote themselves to teaching, nursing and prayer, Georgetown researchers found.
Given that the younger nuns tend to be more traditional, church historian Shaw said he did not think the Vatican should expend too much effort reining in the older generation.
"Look at their median age," Shaw said. "This is an issue that is going to be settled by actuarial tables, not theologians or canon lawyers."
http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/04/20/us-usa-vatican-nuns-idUSBRE83J1B720120420