In April of 2012 the Vatican issued a harsh "doctrinal
assessment" of the largest organization of Catholic sisters in the
U.S., the Leadership Conference of Women Religious. The
"assessment" was the culmination of a three-year investigation.
Simultaneously, the Vatican had been conducting a visitation of 340
active (non-cloistered) congregations of U.S sisters. What do these
developments mean?
This is the question Catholic scholar and activist Marian Ronan
sets out to answer in "Sister Trouble: The Vatican, the Bishops,
and the Nuns," her galvanizing collection of articles about the
investigations, the doctrinal assessment, and the issues that
connect them.
In the first section of "Sister Trouble," Ronan chronicles the
conflict from the 2009 launch of the investigations to the 2012
actions of bishops appointed to oversee the Leadership Conference.
She also examines the condemnation of Sister Elizabeth Johnson's
book, the link between the sisters' support for the Affordable Care
Act and the Vatican crackdown, and the dispute over the ultimate
meaning of the Second Vatican Council that underlies the conflict.
The articles sizzle with Ronan's distinctive and sometimes acerbic
humor.
Readers curious about the Vatican crackdown will learn a good
deal from this first section of "Sister Trouble." But the talk that
comprises the second section provides much-needed context for
understanding the conflict. Here the author examines in particular
the treatment of dedicated celibate women throughout church history
and the threat they have always posed to the supposedly absolute
gender boundaries with which male leaders justify their domination
of the church.
Finally, in the concluding section, Ronan makes clear her
reasons for undertaking "Sister Trouble"-because she cares so
deeply about Catholic sisters. In the first article, she uses a
statue of Joan of Arc to trace a genealogy from one U.S. Catholic
sister to another and finally to herself. Then she draws on Irish
writer Nuala O'Faolain to explore how the sisters shaped the lives
and characters of generations of Catholic women. And in the final
essay, Ronan steps beyond the current conflict to bid farewell to
three recently deceased sisters whose lives of commitment
profoundly influenced her own.
As theologian Tania Oldenhage has written, "Sister Trouble" is
an "urgent, clear-sighted and deeply-moving account" of the
conflict between the Vatican and the nuns. It's also a testimony to
the legacy of Catholic sisters throughout the ages.
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