Moving Forward in Hope Gatherings
Moving Forward in Hope Gatherings
Click to view complete Executive Summary
In dedicating the Year of Consecrated Life, Pope Francis called on the Church to celebrate the legacy of religious life and to renew the Church’s appreciation for this unique form of discipleship with a hope that others may join its ranks in the future. Religious sisters, in particular, have had a remarkable legacy in the United States, for they were some of America’s first pioneers who quickly became the backbone of the Catholic hospital and health care systems, parochial schools, and social services agencies that have been integral to the health, education, and welfare of generations of Americans and helped ensure the strength and endurance not only of the Church in the U.S. but the nation itself.
Recognizing the unique and significant gifts of women religious, NRVC sponsored the Today’s Catholic Sisters gatherings to provide a greater awareness and more informed understanding among laity, clergy, media, and other interested parties about women’s religious life today and why a younger woman would consider being a part of it.
The participants’ positive response to these gatherings affirmed that the faithful witness and selfless service of religious sisters continue to inspire and have a positive impact on our Church and world. Undoubtedly, there is a need to continue to tell this extraordinary story of faith, love, and service.
NRVC hopes that these gatherings will spur other church constituencies (especially Catholic colleges and universities) to engage in similar projects supportive of women religious and their unique and essential vocation, which in turn will contribute to an environment more conducive to religious vocation discernment among young women and men. The future of religious life depends on the efforts of an entire Church that benefits from the lives, works, and prayer of those who choose religious life.
Our very well-received Women Religious Moving Forward in Hope gatherings have concluded. Click to download or view the Final Report.
A total of 115 congregational teams took part in gatherings between Nov. 2012 and May 2013 representing more than one fourth of apostolic women’s congregations in the United States. These workshops were held in Chicago, IL, Burlingame, CA and Latham, NY.
The participants were asked to follow five guidelines for dialogue:
Congregational teams developed concrete actions plans that largely fell into four categories:
Congregational teams also agreed to increase their outreach to young adults and further educate their membership on what people are seeking in religious life today.
Original invitation sent to the vocation director and major superior of all canonically recognized U.S. religious institutes of women:
JUNE 4, 2012
Dear Vocation Director:
I am pleased to invite you and your major superior to apply to attend Women Religious Moving Forward in Hope, a gathering for women religious funded by the GHR Foundation and sponsored by the National Religious Vocation Conference. Building on the momentum of the 2010 Moving Forward in Hope Project (MFIH), which proved to be a milestone symposium, the Women Religious Moving Forward in Hope gathering will be in fulfillment of the National Vocation Plan developed at the 2010 symposium.
The purpose of Women Religious Moving Forward in Hope, offered in three separate locations, is to explore the ethnic and generational demographics of Catholic women in the United States, and the opportunities, challenges, and implications they present for new membership to religious institutes.
As highlighted in the NRVC/CARA Study on Recent Vocations to Religious LIfe, successful vocation ministry calls for a corporate ownership for promoting and supporting new membership within religious congregations. The Women Religious Moving Forward in Hope gathering will provide a unique forum for vocation and leadership personnel to assume this ownership with a greater awareness of the profile and diversity of today's Catholic women.
Please read on to learn more about the terms and benefits of this extraordinary opportunity.
GATHERING DETAILS
KEYNOTE SPEAKER
Sister Mary Johnson, SNDdeN, professor of sociology and religious studies at Emmanuel College and visiting professor at Trinity Washington University for the 2012-13 academic year. Sister Mary is co-authoring with Sister Patricia Wittberg, SC, and Dr. Mary Gautier, a book on the new generations of women religious.
THEOLOGICAL REFLECTOR AND MASS PRESIDER
Father Donald Senior, CP, president of Catholic Theological Union and member of the Pontifical Biblical Commission.
CO-FACILITATORS
Sisters Kieran Foley, FSE, and Gloria Marie Jones, OP.
LISTENERS
Sisters Lorraine Reaume, OP and Anne Walsh, ASCJ, who will attend each of these gatherings and prepare a final document on the three gatherings.
Who is invited to this special program?
NRVC invites both the vocation director and the major superior or leadership team member of any canonically recognized religious institute to apply to this program. A total of 150 women will participate in this project. Each gathering will host 50 women from 25 individual congregations representing the diversity of apostolic religious life.
What will the program consist of?
In addition to significant input, time will be devoted to prayer, dialogue, reflection, and celebration of our vocations.
What are the criteria for acceptance?
Priority for acceptance will be given to NRVC member communities. If a congregation is accepted and agrees to participate in the program, both the vocation director and leadership team member must:
Make a full commitment to the schedule, process, conversation, and follow-up to the program in fulfillment of the grant requirements
Be open to dialogue across differences
Desire to invite new members into their institute
Commit to some action or purpose
Where will these programs take place?
These programs will take place within three regions of the country. Communities may prioritize on their application their first, second, and third choice of gathering.
November 26-28, 2012, Felician Sisters Motherhouse, Chicago, IL
January 7-9,2013, Mercy Center, Burlingame, CA
March 5-7,2013, Carondelet Hospitality Center, Latham, NY
Additional Offering! May 28-30, 2013
Communities may prioritize on their application their first, second, and third choice of gathering.
How much does this program cost?
Communities are only responsible for their travel to and from the gathering location. The entire program, including meals and accommodations for all participants, is covered by the grant funding.
What if my congregation cannot afford our travel?
A limited amount of funding is available for those communities who find unbudgeted travel expenses a financial hardship. Please call the NRVC office at 773.363.5454 for further information.
How do I apply?
Simply click the following link and complete the online application:
Women Religious Moving Forward in Hope Online Application
No additional documents are necessary, nor will they be considered in the selection process. All applications must be received by Monday, March 15, 2013. Any application received beyond that date will not be considered.
When will I hear whether or not my congregation is selected?
A selection committee will review all applications. Applicants will be notified of their status by July 26. Communities not accepted will be placed in an established “waiting pool” of applicants. If both selected applicants from one congregation are unable to attend, they should notify NRVC as soon as possible. NRVC reserves the
right to select other participants from the waiting pool of applicants to take their place.
What will be the outcome of these gatherings?
In addition to providing a forum for dialogue among sisters and setting a direction for future vocation efforts, NRVC will publish a final document for wide distribution gleaning the shared wisdom of the three gatherings.
I would like to express my deep gratitude Mrs. Maryellen Glackin, project coordinator, for her careful preparation of these gatherings and to the planning committee for their dedication and commitment to this project: Sisters Paula Marie Buley, IHM, Joyce Candidi, OSSH, Mary Johnson, SNDdeN, Donna Markham, OP, Maureen Martin, ASCJ, and Miriam Ukeritis. CSJ.
If you have any further questions, please contact Mrs. Maryellen Glackin.
With prayerful best wishes and blessings, I remain
Sincerely yours in Christ,
Brother Paul Bednarczyk, CSC
Executive Director
Click to download the Men Religious Moving Forward in Hope Final Report.
Religious priests and brothers gathered at St. Meinrad Archabbey, St. Meinrad, in December 2013 and at Holy Name Retreat Center, Houston, TX in January 2014 to focus on new membership issues. Approximately 125 men attended one of the two identical events. They listened to presentations on what canon law says about religious life, Catholic demographics, the contemporary social context for vocations, and how their own institute's "vocation culture" can enhance new membership efforts.
These gatherings took place in fulfillment of one of the objectives of the Moving Forward in Hope National Vocation Plan developed in 2010. Funded by an anonymous foundation, each of the participants received a tool to assess the vocation culture within their own institute. As highlighted in the NRVC/CARA Study on Recent Vocations to Religious Life, successful vocation ministry calls for a corporate ownership for promoting and supporting new membership within religious congregations.
The facilitator was Brother Paul Michalenko, ST, director of the Institute of Religious Formation at Catholic Theological Union in Chicago, IL. Brother John Mark Falkenhain, OSB developed and presented the "Vocation Culture Assessment Tool" which all participants received.
NRVC expresses deep gratitude to Sister Deborah Borneman, SS.C.M., project coordinator, for her preparation of these gatherings and to members of the planning committee for their dedication and commitment to this project: Brother Paul Bednarczyk, CSC; Father Thomas Enneking, OSC; Brother John Mark Falkenhain, OSB; Brother Ronald Hingle, SC; Father James Kent, OFM Conv.; Brother Paul Michalenko, ST; Father Robert Lombardo, CFR; Brother Sean Sammon, FMS; and Father Vince Wirtner, CPPS.
For further information, please contact Sister Deborah Borneman, SS.C.M., at debbiesscm@nrvc.net
To see or download photos of the event, go to http://www.flickr.com/photos/nrvc/sets/72157639804919613/
Photo above: Father Hank Lemoncelli, OMI, of the Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life talks with participants in the January 2014 "Men Religious Moving Forward in Hope" event held at Holy Name Passionist Retreat Center in Houston, TX.
Participants at the St. Meinrad event bless each other during a prayer service.
Brother John Mark Falkenhain, OSB presents the Vocation Culture Assessment tool.Every participant received this tool to use with his own community.
Vocation directors and superiors talked together about steps their communities could take to move forward in new membership. Pictured here are Fathers Thomas Smolich, SJ and John Bentz, SJ.
Moving Forward in Hope: Keys to the Future workshop is funded by the GHR Foundation and sponsored by the National Religious Vocation Conference (NRVC). In fulfillment of one of the objectives of the Moving Forward in Hope National Vocation Plan developed in 2010, this special project is meant to provide religious institutes with a “conversational tool” to allow members to engage in a deeper exchange about the results of the NRVC/CARA Study on Recent Vocations to Religious Life and the implications for apostolic religious life, specifically around the areas of community, visibility, communal prayer, and the celebration of Eucharist as they are experienced in individual congregations. Sr. Lynn M. Levo, CSJ, facilitated this training for women and men religious to gain a deeper understanding of the study and be given skills and training in how to facilitate discussions around these critical issues in their own congregations and elsewhere.
In June, 89 women and men religious who represented the diversity of religious life in North America came together at the Oblate Renewal Center to experience this workshop. Religious brothers, sisters, and priests came from 24 states as well as Canada, representing all three leadership conferences. They were from different generations, ethnic backgrounds, ecclesiologies, and spiritualities. Fifty-nine percent of the participants are vocation ministers; 23 percent are in religious leadership; and 18 percent are in formation or other forms of ministry. The planning committee consisted of: Brother Jonathan Beebe, CSC; Sisters Deborah Borneman, SSCM; Charlene Diorka, SSJ; Maria Therese Healy, O. Carm; Virginia Herbers, ASCJ; Lynn Levo, CSJ; Ms. Jeanne Dennison, and Father Mark Soehner, OFM.
Every religious institute has received a complimentary copy of a CD which includes this comprehensive program for use in their religious institutes. Please read the following quotes from our participants:
NRVC NATIONAL ACTION PLAN, approved by the NRVC Executive Board, Feb. 17, 2011.
Letter from Cardinal Rode
Prefect for the Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life
Letter from Cardinal Seán O'Malley, OFM Cap,
Archbishop of Boston, Chair of the USCCB Committee on Clergy, Consecrated Life, and Vocations
Syposium Schedule
Catholic News Service stories on the Symposium:
Next steps for vocations; Fr. Robin Ryan on young adults (scroll to second story)
In December of 2009, the National Religious Vocation Conference (NRVC) was awarded a $47,450 grant by the GHR Foundation to sponsor a vocation symposium as a follow-up to the NRVC / CARA Study on Recent Vocation to Religious Life in the United States. This symposium was to serve as a think tank composed of highly skilled experts in various fields of church life and ministry. Currently, there is no structure for a gathering such as this to occur.
Given the significance of the study results, the NRVC executive board recognized that we needed to take the research to the next level. The board asked the question: How can we constructively use these important findings to help sustain the viability for religious life for generations to come? Because NRVC is the officially recognized professional organization for religious vocation directors in the American Catholic Church, and since NRVC sponsored the study, it only made sense that this next initiative rest with our organization.
The goals for this gathering were threefold:
A planning committee was established. The members of this committee included Brother Paul Bednarczyk, CSC, NRVC executive director, Sister Charlene Diorka, SSJ, NRVC associate director, Sister Elyse Marie Ramirez, OP, coordinator of religious vocation ministries for the Archdiocese of Chicago, Father Robin Ryan, CP, director of Catholics on Call, Brother Sean Sammon, FMS, former superior general of the Marist Brothers, and Ms. Patrice Tuohy, executive director and publisher of TrueQuest Communications. Sister Joan Scanlon, OP, was hired to serve as the symposium facilitator and joined the planning group in April.
The planning committee focused on the evidence in the NRVC/CARA study that showed a renewed interest in religious life found in a segment of younger Catholics. Given this reality, it was agreed that we definitely needed to champion new perspectives, fresh ideas, and innovative approaches to vocation ministry by generating new energy in our promotion of religious life.
Gleaning the wisdom of the 2002 North American Congress on Vocations, the committee compiled a list of potential invitees to this gathering that would be representative of the various diverse constituencies in our Church. The final list consisted of vocation directors, Catholic educators, major superiors, diocesan personnel, parents, youth, young adult and campus ministers, younger religious, media and communications experts, and church researchers and statisticians.
The symposium was held at Catholic Theological Union (CTU) in Chicago, IL, from September 16-19. It was important that we host this gathering at an institution associated with religious life. CTU is the largest theological union in the United States and is also home to the NRVC offices.
Because of the diversity of the participants, after some initial tone setting on the opening night, an entire day was dedicated to placing the vocation question within the context of the study's findings, religious life as it is lived today in this country, and the faith and spirituality of young adult Catholics, whom we hope to attract. The second day was a work day where, through a facilitated process, all participants gathered in seven interest groups: church leadership, religious life, communications and media, youth and young adults, parents and family, ethnic and cultural diversity, and Catholic education. The task of each group was to develop a plan from their given expertise to promote religious life. This was to be done through the lens of the study's findings of today's candidates, the characteristics of the communities who receive them, and the best practices of vocation promotion.
A final report on this symposium with its proposed plans will be submitted to the foundation by December 31. An executive summary of this plan will be posted on the NRVC website by Christmas. The NRVC board will review and promulgate the final plan at the February board meeting.
For those of us who had participated in this gathering, it was an extraordinary experience. As one participant eloquently wrote in the final evaluation:
I met other religious with what I perceived to be a differing and even offsetting ecclesiology and approach to religious life from mine. I saw them as "other" and expected them to offer little that would be helpful or instructive. Instead, through speaking and listening, praying and altering my own narrow perspective, I found in that encounter other consecrated persons also committed to lives of ministry, prayer, and community in albeit very different lifestyles. In the course of the days at CTU, I realized that consecrated religious life is a large and amazing tent into which God invites a spiritual menagerie of charisms, communtities, and characters. Who am I--who are any of us--to set ourselves up as ringmasters or ticket-takers at the door of that mysterious tent?
Through honest dialogue and respectful listening, what started as a vocation symposium became an encounter with the sacred, which resulted in greater understanding, reconciliation, and solidarity.
The name for this symposium, the Moving Forward in Hope Project, was taken from the homily given by Pope Benedict XVI to priests and religious in St. Patrick's Cathedral in 2008. The Holy Father prayed: "May our Lord Jesus Christ grant the church in America a renewed sense of unity and purpose, as all-bishops, clergy, religious, and laity-move forward in hope, in love for the truth and for one another."
With a renewed union of hearts and minds, the symposium participants left Chicago with a clearer truth about religious life and its future, and a mutual commitment to "move forward in hope" with one another inspired by the wonder of God's Providence.
Opening Address by Br. Paul Bednarczyk, CSC
Presentation by Dr. Mary Gautier, Ph.D., on the CARA/NRVC Study on Recent Vocations
Br. Sean Sammon, FMS Address on the State of Religious Life in the U.S.
Sr. Doris Gottemoeller, RSM Response to Br. Sean's address
Mother Shaun Vergauwen, FSE Response to Br. Sean's address
Ms. Lisa Bagladi
Public Relations and Marketing
World Library Publications
Mr. Heherson O. Balabbo, CMF
Seminarian
Claretian Missionaries
Br. Paul Bednarczyk, CSC
Executive Director
National Religious Vocation Conference (NRVC)
Mr. DeKarlos Blackman
Supreme Knight and CEO
Knights of Peter Claver, Inc.
Sr. Mary Charlotte Chandler, RSCJ
Province Leadership Team
Religious of the Sacred Heart
Former Director, Center for the Study of Religious Life
Mr. Peter Cunningham
Membership Coordinator
USA Council of Serra International
Sr. Charlene Diorka, SSJ
Associate Director
National Religious Vocation Conference (NRVC)
Dr. Mary Gautier, PhD
Senior Research Associate
Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate (CARA)
Sr. Angela Gertsema, ASCJ
Teacher
Apostles of the Sacred Heart
Ms. Julie Gilberto-Brady
Communications Coordinator
School Sisters of Notre Dame
Board Member, National Communicators' Network of Women Religious (NCNWR)
Mrs. Maryellen Glackin
Vocation Director
Grey Nuns of the Sacred Heart
Board Member and Leadership Team Member, National Religious Vocation Conference (NRVC)
Sr. Doris Gottemoeller, RSM
Senior VP of Mission & Values Integration
Catholic Healthcare Partners
Former President, Sisters of Mercy of the Americas
Former President, Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR)
Sr. Maria Hughes, ASC
Director
Institute of Religious Formation
Board Member, Religious Formation Conference (RFC)
Sr. Mary Hughes, OP
Prioress
Amityville Dominican Sisters
President, Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR)
Br. Charles Johnson, SM
Former Vocation Director
Society of Mary (Marianists)
Institute of Religious Formation
Sr. Mary Johnson, SNDdeN
Professor of Sociology
Emmanuel College
Sr. Mary Emily Knapp, OP
Vocation Director
St. Cecelia Congregation Dominican Sisters
Mr. Matthew Kuczora, CSC
Seminarian
Congregation of Holy Cross, Indiana Province
Fr. Hank Lemoncelli, OMI
English Language Department
Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life, Vatican City
Sr. Maryann Seton Lopiccolo, SC
Episcopal Delegate for Religious
Diocese of Brooklyn/Queens
Former President, National Conference of Vicars for Religious (NCVR)
Sr. Bernadette McCauley, SCC
Vocation Director
Sisters of Christian Charity
Fr. William Shawn McKnight
Executive Director
USCCB Secretariat of Clergy, Consecrated Life, and Vocations
Dr. Kathleen Mahoney, PhD
Consultant
Sr. Donna Markham, OP, PhD
Clinical Psychologist
Former Prioress, Adrian Dominican Sisters
Former President, Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR)
Fr. Edwin H. Obermiller, CSC
Assistant Provincial
Congregation of Holy Cross, Indiana Province
Br. Hugh O'Neill, CFC
Province Leader
Congregation of Christian Brothers
Board Member, Conference of Major Superiors of Men (CMSM)
Sr. Elyse Marie Ramirez, OP
Coordinator of Religious Vocation Ministries
Archdiocese of Chicago
Mr. Matthew Robaszkiewicz
Membership Services
National Federation of Catholic Youth Ministry (NFCYM)
National Association of Catholic Youth Ministry Leaders (NACYML)
Sr. Marcy Romine, OSF
Vocation Director
Franciscan Sisters of Our Lady of Perpetual Help
Board Member, National Religious Vocation Conference (NRVC)
Sr. Mary Joanna Ruhland, RSM
Associate Director
USCCB Secretariat of Clergy, Consecrated Life, and Vocations
Fr. Robin Ryan, CP
Vicar Provincial
Passionists, Eastern Province
Former Director, Catholics on Call
Br. Sean Sammon, FMS
Visiting Scholar
Marist College
Former Superior General, Marist Brothers of the Schools
Former President, Conference of Majors Superiors of Men (CMSM)
Sr. Joan Scanlon, OP
Council Member
Dominican Sisters of Peace
Ms. Carol Schuck-Scheiber
Publications Editor
National Religious Vocation Conference (NRVC)
Ms. Kathy Schmitt
Seminary Department
National Catholic Educational Association (NCEA)
Ms. Tami Schmitz
Campus Minister
University of Notre Dame
Sr. Katarina Schuth, OSF
Professor
St. Paul Seminary
Fr. Donald Senior, CP
President
Catholic Theological Union
Ms. Laurie Svatek
Campus Minister
St. Catherine's College
Vice Chair, Executive Board, Catholic Campus Ministry Association (CCMA) Board
Sr. Patricia Tekippe, FSPA
Vocation Minister
Franciscan Sisters of Perpetual Adoration
Ms. Patrice Tuohy
Publisher/Executive Director
TrueQuest Communications
Ms. Terry Tuohy
Development Director/Catechist
St. Matthias Church
Mr. Len Uhal
National Vocation Director
Society of the Divine Word
Mother Shaun Vergauwen, FSE
Mother General
Franciscan Sisters of the Eucharist
Board Member (Treasurer), Council of Major Superiors of Women Religious (CMSWR)
Sr. Julie Viera, IHM
Partner
A Nun's Life Ministry
Sr. Mary Ann Walsh, RSM
Director of Media Relations
United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB)
Fr. Freddy Washington, CSSp
Director of Formation
Spiritan Fathers and Brothers
Br. Patrick Winbush, OSB
Vocation Director
Benedictine Monks of Newark Abbey
Fr. Andrew-Carl Wisdom, OP
Vocation Director
Dominican Friars, Province of St. Albert the Great
Sr. Patricia Wittberg, SC
Professor of Sociology
Indiana University
Sr. Shu Chen Wu, MM
Formator
Maryknoll Sisters
Sr. Leonard Zielinska, OP
Vocation Director
Dominican Sisters of the Immaculate Conception
Sr. Judy Zielinski, OSF
Director, Faith and Values Programming
New Group Media
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