Liberal women’s religious orders aren’t worse off. Or are they?
By Phil Lawler | August 08, 2012
www.catholicculture.org/commentary/the-city-gates.cfm?id=382
Claims that liberal women’s religious orders are dying out “are not based in fact,” according to an analysis by two women religious in America magazine. Yet the article cites statistics that actually buttress the conservative claim.
Sisters Mary Johnson and Patricia Wittberg observe that the women’s religious orders affiliated with the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR) reported 507 candidates, novices, and sisters in temporary vows, while the generally more conservative orders affiliated with the Council of Major Superiors of Women Religious (CMSWR) reported only a slightly larger number: 535.
However, the LCWR orders account for a much higher number of the women religious in the US today. Among the religious communities from which the statistics were drawn for the America analysis, the LCWR orders outnumbered the CMSWR orders by nearly 5 to 1. Yet the much smaller group reported the larger number of women religious in formation. Thus the statistics appear to confirm the claim that the authors set out to disprove.
The America authors also include this curious paragraph:
The median number of entrants to L.C.W.R. institutes is one, which means that half of the responding L.C.W.R. institutes had no more than one woman in initial formation in 2009. The corresponding median number of entrants for C.M.S.W.R. institutes is four, which means that half of C.M.S.W.R. institutes had four or fewer in initial formation in 2009.
The data do indeed show that some CMSWR communities are failing to attract many new candidates. Still, there are attracting four times as many candidates as the LCWR orders. So if some CMSWR orders are in trouble, some the LCWR groups are probably beyond all help.
Q.E.D.
