ROME
National Catholic Reporer – Global Sisters Report
by Joshua J. McElwee
The Vatican’s congregation for religious life has summoned to Rome the superior of one of the major orders of U.S. Catholic sisters, asking her to “report on some areas of concern” following the controversial six-year investigation of the country’s communities of women religious.
The head of the Sisters of Loretto, a Kentucky-based community founded in the early 19th century to educate pioneer children but now known for strong stands on social justice issues, has been asked to explain alleged “ambiguity” in the order’s adherence to church teaching and its way of living religious life.
While the summons from the Vatican’s Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life is directed specifically at the Sisters of Loretto, it may raise questions for other U.S. women religious communities of apostolic life, who were subject to an unprecedented Vatican inquiry, known as an apostolic visitation, starting in 2008.
Although the congregation formally closed that visitation in December 2014 with the release of a report on the state of religious life in the U.S., it has in at least this instance used material gathered in the investigation to inquire into the life of the order.
Loretto President Sr. Pearl McGivney announced her summoning to Rome in a short June 1 letter to her order’s members. In her letter, a copy of which was obtained by GSR, McGivney says she has been asked to visit the Vatican Oct. 18 to report on five so-called “areas of concern.” …
One of the order’s members has however drawn the Vatican’s interest several times in the past.
Sr. Jeannine Gramick — who was a member of the School Sisters of Notre Dame before joining the Loretto community in 2001 — was first criticized by the Vatican’s religious congregation in 1984 for cofounding New Ways Ministry, a Maryland-based group that advocates for LGBT Catholics.
In 1999, the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith issued a public notification about Gramick’s work.
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