The Catholic Church’s inquisition of American nuns

UNITED STATES
The Guardian (United Kingdom)

Victoria Bekiempis
guardian.co.uk, Thursday 24 May 2012

So, did you hear the one about the American nuns?

No, this isn’t the beginning of a joke. In April, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith – the Catholic Church’s current iteration of the Inquisition, if you will – issued an assessment of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, which represents 80% of the US’s 57,000 nuns.

Some key context here: the conference was formed 56 years ago at the behest of the Holy See, to provide “a unified voice” for US nuns who helped the poor, nursed the sick, taught students, worked as missionaries, and fought violence. (Another important bit of background: the congregation is the same arm of the church that bullied Lavinia Byrne, feminist theologian and former British nun, for arguing in favor of female ordination in a 1993 book.)

The conference, according to the Vatican, was spending too much time doing good – and not enough time enforcing church teaching (against abortion, homosexuality etc). So, the nuns actually got in trouble for being, well, nuns. So troubled was the church by this and the women’s alleged “radical feminism” that the assessment demanded the appointment of an archbishop delegate to make them behave.

Nope, no joke.

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