What does it mean to you to be a religious or member of a society of apostolic life in the church and world today?
To be a religious today demands an appreciation for the past, hope for the future and attention to the present. A thoughtful question posed by a peer at a recent gathering of IHM Sisters under the age of 55 expresses the opportunity and challenge of the current time for religious life. "Can you/I/we risk an unknown future with a known God?" My daily response of "yes" is experienced by how I spend my time, what captures my imagination, where I devote my energy, who I know, when and how I pray, how and who I love.
Today's generation of religious life is not unlike all others in that we face challenges created by internal or external forces. We work at living community and strive to respect differences while giving definition to what unites us. We may minister independently or with fewer Sisters each year. I experience the incongruence of being a professed religious in a Church that sometimes disappoints me. Through the advances in communications technology, I can feel the excitement of being a citizen of the world but must accept the accompanying its limitations and feelings of heartache and powerlessness.
Personally, I am grateful for the IHM legacy and happy to hear the stories of the days gone by. Collectively, they tell the tale of the IHM Congregation as well as the history of the ministries of the Catholic Church in the United States. I am proud of my IHM heritage and pray that I may carry the mission forward with faith and confidence.
What are your dreams for the future of religious life in the United States?
My hope is that religious life will always be available as an option for those men and women who feel called to it. Certainly, there will be fewer religious in the future based on current trends. Although we won’t experience strength in numbers, I pray that we may know a profound sense of purpose in witnessing to God's unconditional love in the world. I hope that religious life will not always be defined by what it used to be but rather for the potential it still holds.
The diminishment, which cannot be denied, may reveal unexpected treasures. In particular, I anticipate that this may provide increased opportunities for the laity to assume their rightful role in tending to the ministries of the Catholic Church. Wonderful opportunities to experience adult spiritual formation, a gift of religious life, can be mutually shared through associate relationships. The future is filled with hope and promise.