Vatican City, 16 April 2015 (VIS) -
Officials of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (C.D.F.),
Archbishop Peter Sartain and officers of the Leadership Conference of
Women Religious (L.C.W.R.) met April 16. Archbishop Sartain and
L.C.W.R. officers presented a joint report (attached) on the
implementation of the C.D.F. Doctrinal Assessment and Mandate of
April 2012. The joint report outlines the manner in which the
implementation of the Mandate has been accomplished. The Congregation
accepted the joint report, marking the conclusion of the Doctrinal
Assessment of L.C.W.R. Present for the April 16 meeting were His
Eminence Gerhard Cardinal Muller, Archbishop Peter Sartain, Sr. Carol
Zinn, S.S.J., Sr. Marcia Allen, C.S.J., Sr. Joan Marie Steadman,
C.S.C., and Sr. Janet Mock, C.S.J., and other officials of CDF.
During the meeting, Archbishop Sartain
and L.C.W.R. officers outlined the process undertaken by the Bishop
Delegates and L.C.W.R. over the past three years, noting the spirit
of cooperation among participants throughout the sensitive process.
Cardinal Muller offered his thoughts on the Doctrinal Assessment as
well as the Mandate and its completion. He expressed gratitude to
those present for their willing participation in this important and
delicate work and extended thanks to others who had participated,
especially Archbishop Leonard P. Blair, Bishop Thomas J. Paprocki,
and the past officers and executive directors of L.C.W.R.
Following the meeting, Cardinal Muller
said: “At the conclusion of this process, the Congregation is
confident that L.C.W.R. has made clear its mission to support its
member Institutes by fostering a vision of religious life that is
centred on the person of Jesus Christ and is rooted in the tradition
of the Church. It is this vision that makes religious women and men
radical witnesses to the Gospel, and, therefore, is essential for the
flourishing of religious life in the Church”.
Sr. Sharon Holland, IHM,President of
L.C.W.R., was unable to be present for the meeting but commented, “We
are pleased at the completion of the Mandate, which involved long and
challenging exchanges of our understandings of and perspectives on
critical matters of Religious Life and its practice. Through these
exchanges, conducted always in a spirit of prayer and mutual respect,
we were brought to deeper understandings of one another’s
experiences, roles, responsibilities, and hopes for the Church and
the people it serves. We learned that what we hold in common is much
greater than any of our differences”.
Archbishop Sartain added, “Over the
past several years, I have had the honour of working with L.C.W.R.
officers and meeting a large number of L.C.W.R. members through the
implementation of the Mandate. Our work included the revision of
L.C.W.R. Statutes;review of L.C.W.R. publications, programs and
speakers; and discussion of a wide range of issues raised by the
Doctrinal Assessment, L.C.W.R., and the Bishop Delegates.The
assistance of C.D.F. officials was essential to the great progress we
made. Our work together was undertaken in an atmosphere of love for
the Church and profound respect for the critical place of religious
lifein the United States, and the very fact of such substantive
dialogue between bishops and religious women has been mutually
beneficial and a blessing from the Lord. As we state in our joint
final report, ‘The commitment of L.C.W.R. leadership to its crucial
role in service to the mission and membership of the Conference will
continue to guide and strengthen L.C.W.R.'s witness to the great
vocation of Religious Life, to its sure foundation in Christ, and to
ecclesial communion'. The other two Bishop Delegates and I are
grateful for the opportunity to be involved in such a fruitful
dialogue.”
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