Vocations plugged in
Recently, some well-deserved attention has been out there on blogging priests.
Now, Time magazine is featuring nuns who are online and in tune.
For the iPod generation, it doesn’t get more radical than wearing a veil. The hijab worn by traditional Muslim women might have people talking, but it’s the wimple that really turns heads. And in the U.S. today, the nuns most likely to wear that headdress are the ones young enough to have a playlist.
Over the past five years, Roman Catholic communities around the country have experienced a curious phenomenon: more women, most in their 20s and 30s, are trying on that veil.
It’s about time mainstream media turn their attention to the upturn in vocations in this country, by both men and women. It’s one of the better ways media are trying to ‘get’ religion.
Career women seeking more meaning in their lives and empty-nest moms are also finding their way to convent doors…This is a welcome turnabout for the church.
Nobody denies the downturn in vocations for decades now, but the resurgence is the news in recent years, and it’s only getting better.
…over the past decade or so, expressing their religious beliefs openly has become hip for many young people, a trend intensified among Catholic women by the charismatic appeal of Pope John Paul II’s youth rallies and his interpretation of modern feminism as a way for women to express Christian values.
As this so-called JP2 generation has come of age, religious orders have begun to reach out again to young people–and to do so in the language that young people speak. Convents conduct e-mail correspondence with interested women, blogs written by sisters give a peek into the habited life and websites offer online personality questionnaires to test vocations. One site, Vocation-network.org frames the choice much like a dating service, with Christ as the ultimate match.
And although the extreme conservatism of a nun’s life may seem wholly countercultural for young American women today, that is exactly what attracts many of them, say experts and the women themselves. “Religious life itself is a radical choice,” says Brother Paul Vednarczyk, executive director of the National Religious Vocation Conference in Chicago. “In an age where our primary secular values are sex, power and money, for someone to choose chastity, obedience and poverty is a radical statement.”
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