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Saturday, August 11, 2018

Vatican to ‘Reform’ Contemplative Orders, Enforce “Fidelity” to Aims of Revolution

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Cor Orans Revisited...

nun paintingRead Hilary's Cor orans, Part I HERE.

[Editor’s Note: “Cor Orans” (“Praying Heart”) is the title of an April 1, 2018 document that implements instructions on how to apply Pope Francis’ 2016 Apostolic Constitution – “Vultum Dei Quaerere” (“Seek the Face of God”) addressed to Catholic women religious in contemplative communities. MJM]

One of the abiding characteristics of documents coming from the current administration in the Vatican is the aspect of “bait and switch,” the clever couching of completely opposite intentions in pious Catholic language. Many of the critics-of-the-critics of Amoris Laetitia pointed to the “good” passages of that document praising the family, and excoriated as “paranoid” the people who pointed out that these were there mainly to serve the function of the sugar that helped the drop of arsenic go down.

 

This seems to be the pattern for nearly all documents of this pontificate[1], and Vultum Dei Quaerere (VDQ) from Pope Francis and Cor Orans, (CO) the Instruction from the Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life[2], that lay out the Bergoglian New Paradigm for contemplative nuns, appear to be no exception.

Starting the second half of our examination of Cor orans, giving 289 new instructions for contemplative nuns, we see again the familiar pattern. Articles 156 - 159 speaks of the “Pauline dictate of not conforming to the mentality of this century, fleeing from every form of worldliness,” and “the aspect of separation from the world deserves particular attention for the high esteem that the Christian community nurtures towards this kind of life, sign of the exclusive union of the Church-Bride with her Lord, supremely loved.”

“The life of contemplative nuns, engaged in prayer in a very special way, in order to keep the heart constantly turned towards the Lord, in asceticism, and in the fervid progress of spiritual life, is nothing other than a striving to the heavenly Jerusalem, an anticipation of the Eschatological Church, fixed on the possession and contemplation of the face of God.

“The community of the monastery of nuns, placed as a city on the mountain top and a light on the lampstand, even in the simplicity of its life, visibly depicts the goal towards which the whole ecclesial community walks, ardent in action and dedicated to contemplation, it advances along the paths of time with eyes fixed on the future recapitulation of everything in Christ.”

So much for the sugar bait. Now the switch.

No correction of abuses: cloistered nuns who don’t really want to be cloistered nuns

The next few articles address one of the fundamental issues of cloistered life, namely the cloister itself, defining it as “a space to be protected, to prevent access by strangers.” Two years ago, Vultum Dei Quaerere, the papal document for which Cor orans is the follow-up, bizarrely insisted that instead of determining the “form” of cloister according to their own customs and constitutions of their orders, each community would be required “to ask the Holy See what form of cloister it wishes to embrace, whenever a different form of cloister from the present one is called for.” You’ll take what we give you, and thank us for it, in other words.

That strange tune has changed in Cor orans, reportedly after consultation with some cloistered nuns who objected to this wording. The “forms of cloister” are now to be determined according to a community’s constitutions. CO, however, first makes each superior of a monastery into a “Major superior” – a canonical category granting distinct legal powers – and then allows individual major superiors to determine the form of cloister a monastery will take and to “safeguard” the integrity of the cloister, to decide who comes and goes.

“166. The modality of separation from the outside of the space exclusively reserved for the nuns must be material and effective, not just symbolic or spiritual. It is the responsibility of the Conventual Chapter of the monastery to determine the modality of separation from the outside.”

One nun I consulted pointed out that over the last few decades, one of the biggest problems in religious life is the complete absence of any unified practice regarding cloister.

Most cloistered monasteries have effectively already – mainly through the neglect of oversight from either bishops or Rome since the ‘60s – become widely “diversified” in their treatment of their “separation from the world,” quite in contradiction to their orders’ actual rules and constitutions. The romantic picture many Catholics have of a cloistered nun being radically separated from the world, living forever behind her cloister walls, exists now in real life only a very few places in the world.

The one area they needed to have some enforcement of unity was in the keeping of cloister, my friend said. VDQ says, “The variety of ways in which the cloister is observed within the same Order should be seen as an enrichment and not an obstacle to communion; it is a ­matter of reconciling different approaches in a higher unity.”

But this odd comment ignores the problem of this “loose interpretation” of cloister that is already the norm among many nominally cloistered communities, that flouts in practice the very notion of both cloister and the given order’s unified identity.

To illustrate, most monastic communities, contrary to traditional practices, routinely allow outsiders to visit inside the cloister and nuns to “go abroad”. This de facto “open doors” policy is now so common throughout the world in female monastic life as to be considered normal. A few weeks ago one house of Poor Clares in Sardinia advertised a concert in their monastery with the orchestra and audience to be seated in the cloister’s central garden. No one batted an eye, apparently. Indeed, in Italy most monastic houses are regarded as little more than notionally religious “agritourismos” offering cheap rooms for a weekend getaway in the country. There are usually “cloistered” sections of the monastery off limits to guests, but it is quite normal to be invited to sit in the choir with the nuns if you show an interest in joining them for the Office.

It seems inescapable that many cloistered nuns simply no longer want to live as cloistered nuns, and that these documents are attempting to create a “unity in diversity” that simply no longer exists by forcing everyone to accept this situation and pretend it isn’t a problem. As my nun-friend drily commented, “Maybe each cloistered nun should choose her own form of cloister and see how that works out.”

The oddity of CO and VDQ broadly allowing these kinds of practices to continue[3] is offset by the imposition of top-down control by the Vatican through the Federations – granted massive and unprecedented powers over formation and the temporal goods of all monasteries – that the document requires everyone to join[4].

Perhaps this question is answered by article 200 that talks of the other contentious issue: “ongoing formation.”

  1. Leaving the papal cloister, unless with particular indults of the Holy See or in case of danger, is permitted by the Major Superior in ordinary cases, regarding the health of the nuns, the assistance of the infirm nuns, participation in courses of initial and ongoing formation meetings organized by the Federation or by another monastery, the exercise of civil rights, and those necessities of the monastery which cannot be provided for any other way.

The Instruction (art.201) seems to take for granted that novices or nuns in temporary profession would “perform part of their formation in another monastery of the Institute,” and be making “temporary or definitive transfers to other monasteries,” decisions that the Instruction also gives Federation presidents the power to make.

In article 210, the Instruction speaks of “monastic cloister” that has “the character of a more rigorous discipline” than the “common” type, but still “makes it possible to associate the primary function of divine worship with wider forms of reception and hospitality.” This is contrasted with the previously mentioned “constitutional cloister” that the Instruction invents to replace the “minor papal cloister of Pius XII” that foresees cloistered nuns conducting “some legitimate work of apostolate or Christian charity.”

Taken on its own, these passages would not be alarming. Visitation nuns, for instance are fully cloistered but traditionally ran boarding schools for girls, and it has always been a major part of Benedictine spirituality to offer hospitality to guests. But we must take care not to remove anything we see here from the larger context of our current situation. In conjunction with the previous emphasis on external “ongoing formation” programmes outside the cloister, and nuns moving from house to house, one wonders how it is possible to reconcile it all with the “real separation from the world, primarily marked by silence and solitude.” (Art. 186.)

I realise that the logical principle of non-contradiction isn’t popular among the Vatican’s current administration, but two opposite things can’t be reconciled. To paraphrase Aristotle, cloistered nuns can’t be both cloistered and not cloistered at the same time and in the same respect.

The hope among some nuns that Rome would one day step in to correct what are in reality abuses has faded. As one of my monastic correspondents put it, “We had always wished that the Order would step in and intervene in these houses who did not observe enclosure even remotely. We thought maybe they could still be part of the Order, but not call themselves [redacted]. So much for wishful thinking.”

Ongoing formation: it’s not what it sounds like

Again the Instruction starts us off with a bland but broadly traditional statement of how formation works for nuns.

  1. A nun becomes with full rights a member of the community of the monastery sui juris and participates in its spiritual and temporal goods with the profession of solemn vows, the free and definitive response to the call of the Holy Spirit.
  2. The candidates prepare themselves for solemn profession passing through the various stages of the monastic life, during which they receive an adequate formation and, although in a different degree, they are part of the community of the monastery.
  3. Formation as a continuous process of growth and conversion that involves the whole person must favor the development of the human, Christian, and monastic dimension of the candidates and nuns, radically living the Gospel, so that one's life becomes a prophecy.

Etcetera…

The switch comes in Chapter 4, when we start talking about “ongoing formation.”

  1. The purpose of ongoing formation is to nourish and preserve fidelity, both of the individual nun and of the community, and to bring to completion what was begun in initial formation, so that the consecrated person can express fully her own gift in the Church, according to a specific charism.

Sounds like they’re just describing religious life. Everyone knows that the purpose of all religious life is to conform the person to Christ, through a lifetime of prayer and penance. This is how religious life makes you a saint, right?

Yes, except, that’s not what they mean; “ongoing formation” is code. Reading through the documents and speeches from the Congregation for Religious, and of the leadership of the religious orders themselves, the term appears again and again as a buzzword. In these documents a rather different picture emerges of a programme designed to separate nuns as often and as long as possible from their monastic enclosures, to make the monastic walls as permeable as possible, and at the same time to get hold of the young ones for what amounts to “ongoing indoctrination.”

These “ongoing formation” programmes are to be provided by the Federation, not the monastery the nun lives in. Thus the Congregation is effectively hijacking formation of nuns, centralising it through the imposition of mandatory Federation membership. The Federations, of course, answer to the Congregation more than they do the membership, and the monasteries answer to the Federation.

As I wrote last month,

Novices and juniors are expected to attend these “formation courses,” and pressure is put on a monastery that declines to participate. These courses appear to be structured like an academic conference at which the novices from many monasteries gather at a hotel conference room to hear speakers and then “break into small groups” to talk about what they’ve heard. It seems that the techniques of modern corporate management have become the working model for monastic life, with very little resistance.

And it’s not just novices. All nuns in “initial formation” are expected to attend, which includes those in temporary vows. And they don’t leave you alone to get on with your monastic life in peace even after final vows. The “invitation” to attend these ongoing formation sessions is extended to novice mistresses and prioresses, as well as any nun who has made her vows within the last ten years. One nun wrote to me, “It’s as if they think just living the life isn’t sufficient formation.”

Again we see the sweet, sweet Catholic bait:

  1. Surely the first instrument of ongoing formation for all consecrated persons, even more so for contemplatives, is care of the life of prayer: liturgies well prepared and dignified, according to the possibility of the community; fidelity to moments of personal prayer to guarantee that space where one can establish an intimate relationship with the Lord; care of the relationship with the Word, through personal lectio and community collatio, when possible.

…and then the switch:

  1. Also useful and important are the formation courses common to several monasteries of the same charismatic family, thus, federal or inter-federal courses, without forgetting that "formation, especially ongoing formation ..., has its own humus in the community and in everyday life.”

To get a hint about what “ongoing formation” courses are intended to accomplish we return to Vultum dei quaerere (Conclusion and Regulations):

Art. 3 §2. In order to ensure adequate ongoing formation, federations are to promote cooperation between monasteries through the exchange of formational materials and the use of digital means of communication, always exercising due discretion.

- 4. Sisters charged with the sensitive task of formation may also attend, servatis de iure servandis, specific courses on formation outside their monastery, always conducting themselves in a way fitting and consistent with their own charism. The Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life is to issue particular norms in this regard.

-  7. To ensure a high quality of formation, monasteries should, as circumstances dictate, promote common houses for initial formation.

This last means that a group or Federation of monasteries of a given order is, if possible, to have a common house of formation for all candidates for all monasteries. That is, if the traditional Benedictine Sisters of Mary at Ephesus in Gower Missouri join a Benedictine Federation, it will necessarily be with Benedictine houses that adhere to completely different, Novus Ordo, forms of liturgy. This means if they have some homeschooled, traditional Catholic young ladies who want to join, they have to send these girls to a house of formation that will include candidates for all other, Novus Ordo, houses of the Federation, instead of allowing them to enter in Gower directly and be formed there, “in house”. You can see the problems.

“Creative Fidelity” – what’s in a name?

One phrase that keeps popping up in the documentation from religious orders who do this kind of formation is “creative fidelity” to the order’s charism. The idea, in brief, is that times have changed and what was good for Benedictines, Augustinians, Carmelites, Dominicans, Poor Clares or any nuns in the past isn’t any good anymore. This is the current year!

“Creative fidelity” is one of the most popular buzzwords of the Revolution. There are papers and articles on it from all corners of the religious life. In fact, you can find whole books on the subject by Jesuits, if you really want all the details. And you can be sure that it is a high priority right now in the Congregation for Religious as well as the leadership of the religious orders, to help the good sisters to a full understanding of its aims. Taking away all the academic circumlocution, however, it boils down to “fidelity” to the aims of the Revolution, while maintaining a veneer of respectable religious terminology, more or less a textbook definition of Neo-Modernism.

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A sample of the guiding principles that will govern the creation of these external formation programmes is not difficult to find, and the expression “creative fidelity” does not take long to appear. In February 2016, in a talk titled “On-going formation for Discalced Carmelite Nuns: a Proposal,” the Father General fo the Carmelite order, Fr. Saverio Cannistrà, told assembled cloistered nuns to get ready for major changes, including the need to adopt “creative fidelity” to their charism.

“If we do not continually work on our identity as religious, contemplatives, and Teresian, it is inevitable that the model we received during our initial formation will become a suit too tight for a body that has meanwhile grown,” Cannistrà said.

“On-going formation helps religious to integrate creative fidelity since the Christian and religious vocation requires dynamic growth and fidelity to the demands of concrete circumstances. …“To follow Christ,” means to put oneself always on the path, to guard oneself from sclerosis and hardening, in order to be capable of giving living and true witness to the Reign of God in this world.

“Such a demand for on-going formation is particularly urgent in this historical time that we are asked to live in, a time of major changes that present us with new questions.

“There are many perplexing questions before us that do not have clear answers, already written in some text. Even those that are written in texts, for example the Constitutions [of the Carmelite order], often require contextualization in new historical and cultural situations and interpretation according to the spirit more than the letter.

“Paul, who had to translate into a Hellenistic context what was born in a Jewish context, has taught us that ‘the letter kills; the Spirit gives life.’ (2 Cor. 3:6)

“True fidelity implies the capacity to constantly change.”

He gently chided the nuns who disagreed, saying they were showing “rooted in a secure pretense to already know the answers and the solutions.”

“We are often satisfied with a superficial knowledge and we limit ourselves to living by what we have learned by ourselves without questioning ourselves further, without examining in depth our imperfections or infidelity.”

The Father General asked, “How, therefore, can we organize this formative course? What are the contents, what is the methodology, what are the instruments?”

Five months after giving this speech, jammed from top to bottom with the favourite Neo-Modernist buzzwords of the progressivist revolutionaries in the Church, Pope Francis helpfully answered these questions by issuing Vultum dei quaerere requiring all cloistered nuns to join Federations, who would be put in charge of creating external “ongoing formation” courses under the supervision of the Congregation.

“Overwhelming,” unnecessary and destabilising: what do the actual nuns say?

One nun involved in formation of novices in her monastery responded to my request for comment, saying that from the context of the cloister, these demands looked “overwhelming.”

“In the past, each Community has been free to implement whatever type of ongoing formation program that they see fit. We were not required to implement some one size fits all (liberal re-education) program into our daily lives. I cannot imagine how this is all going to play out.”

She said that even now, “it is difficult to have nuns away from the community and now with all these required courses, there will be many comings and goings.” She also wondered where the money was going to come from to pay for courses, travel and hotel expenses. “They don’t seem to mention the fact that all this travel costs money.”

vintage nun 5Simply, she said, the constitutions and rule of her order were already sufficient, and had been for hundreds of years. “We would prefer to continue to take care of our own ongoing formation. Faithfully living your daily life provides a wealth of formation that books and courses can never teach you.”

She added that CO’s mandated Aspirancy programme, added to the normal formation time from postulancy, to novitiate and temporary vows, would do nothing more than create more work for the nuns and more uncertainty for the candidates.

“If a young woman enters our community at the upper limit of our age range, 35, she will be between 44-47 when she makes final vows. When some enters at 35 or around there, they are usually pretty mature and have a good deal of lived experience. To make them spend 9-12 years in initial formation seems tedious at best.”

In the normal course of her order’s formation, novices are kept quite separated from the community’s professed nuns. As in most orders, nuns not in final vows cannot hold offices or vote in chapter. The extended formation time would keep a woman wondering for a significant portion of her life – 9-12 years – if she is going to stay or will have to leave. “We of course try to make the novices feel part of the community, but you do not truly have that sense of completely belonging until after Solemn Vows. 5-6 years is plenty in the Novitiate. 9-12 is not necessary for everyone, should be left as an option, not made mandatory.”

Another nun, also working in formation in her monastery, wrote, “Additional years of initial formation will do nothing positive for either the candidate or the community. It’s like waiting for a bus that has already gone by. The Church does not require couples to be engaged for nine to twelve years before marriage; why should this be demanded of cloistered religious?”

Another pointed to article 284: “…the novices must perfect the gifts of nature and education, and develop their own personality, feeling truly responsible for their own human, Christian, and charismatic growth…” calling its language “an example of the self-centeredness found throughout this document.”

This, she said, is continued in article 285 about the Juniorate or temporary vows: “…creating their own personal synthesis of the charism and incarnating it in the various situations of daily life.”

Sister said, “We have already seen, for the past 50+ years now, many, many active religious creating their own ‘synthesis of the charism,’ and it leads to the end of the charism started by their Foundresses and the end of their Orders. This is not something we are interested in at all.”

The document’s language was strange, she said, and not in keeping with what she understood to be the nature of religious life at all: “Cor orans makes mention several times of ‘possessing natural gifts.’ This focus on one’s own gifts is troubling. The only gift that matters is the gift of oneself to Christ. That should be the focus.

“Natural or psychological gifts (no one knows what this means) or talents should not have bearing on a vocation. It would have been better to leave that out.”

“This life can never work if we put our gifts and self before Christ or the community.”

After hours of reading the pompous academic gibberish of Cor orans and the Carmelite Father General, one sister was refreshingly down to earth about the need to develop “natural gifts”: “We are not stupid,” she said. “If a sister is very good at sewing or happens to have a degree in fashion design, she is probably going to find herself doing a great deal of sewing in here.”

__________________________

[1] I make no particular pronouncements about the quality of material that came out of Rome prior to the advent of the Bergoglian regime. I haven’t examined many of Pope Benedict’s documents as closely as these, so it may well be that this habit is merely a continuation of what has been happening since the “time bombs” of Vatican II and the “new normal” for the Catholic Church.

[2] From now on, “the Congregation for Religious” will do.

[3] The catastrophic results of allowing and even encouraging such practices – effectively the abandonment of the orders’ original charisms and the adoption of the Vatican II “New Paradigm” – I laid out in “A Dismal Record: Why are they destroying the nuns?” for the Remnant, June 3, 2018. In brief, the herding of all remaining cloistered nuns into federations and the imposition of “ongoing formation” programmes to indoctrinate novices and nuns into the New Paradigm seems to be what VDQ and Cor orans is about, practices that have already driven cloistered life to the brink of extinction.

[4] “Cor Orans: another evil spirit of Vatican II” The Remnant, June 26, 2018

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Last modified on Saturday, August 11, 2018
Hilary White

Our Italy correspondent is known throughout the English-speaking world as a champion of family and cultural issues. First introduced by our allies and friends at the incomparable LifeSiteNews.com, Miss White lives in Norcia, Italy.

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