Frequently Asked Questions on Vocations
Why did the NRVC commission this study on religious vocations?
Prior to this landmark study, the only information we had on
religious vocations in the United States was anecdotal. The purpose of
this study is to identify and understand who is entering religious life
today and to find out which religious institutes are receiving and
retaining new members. From this information, our goal is to identify
best practices in vocation promotion and religious formation. It is
hoped this important data will inform religious institutes as they
develop their vocation plans in the future, and bring a greater
awareness of vocations to the wider church.
Does this study have anything to do with the
Vatican’s apostolic visitation of women religious or the doctrinal
assessment of LCWR?
This study is totally independent of these investigations. Funding
for our study was obtained in December 2007, and the first phase of our
research was well underway prior to the announcement of the apostolic
visitation.
Why was there such a surge in religious vocations in the last century?
If you consider the continuum of religious life, the extraordinary
number of men and women who entered religious life during the last
century was an anomaly. Historically, religious sisters, brothers, and
priests have always been a small number of the Catholic population.
Some contributing factors to this surge in larger numbers were the
limited opportunities for church ministry prior to Vatican II, a large
influx of Catholic immigrants entering the U.S., the Catholic Church was
growing in prominence and respect, and the similarity in values of the
Catholic Church with U.S. societal values.
What is a vocation?
Many people use the word vocation (from the Latin vocare,
meaning “to call”) in reference to the call to be a priest, sister, or
brother. However, the Catholic understanding of vocation is much
broader: every baptized person has a vocation—a call—to love and serve
God. How you choose to live out that vocation is what each person must
discern. Some feel called to live as single or married laypeople; others
choose consecrated life and join a secular institute or religious
community (as sisters, priests, or brothers); still others choose
ordination as deacons or diocesan priests.
What is a sister or nun?
A sister or nun is a woman who belongs to a religious order, or
community. Many people use the word nun interchangeably with sister, but
technically nuns are those who live a cloistered (or enclosed) monastic
life; whereas sisters serve in an active ministry. After a period of
preparation (called formation) sisters and nuns take lifelong vows.
Usually they take vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience; that is,
they promise to live simply, to live celibately, and to follow the will
of God through their community.
What is a brother?
A brother belongs to a religious community of men. A brother takes
religious vows, usually poverty, chastity, and obedience. A brother’s
life revolves around prayer, communal living in a religious community or
monastery, and a ministry within the Church and society. A brother is
not ordained to the priesthood, and thus does not perform the
sacramental duties of a priest. Some men’s communities include both
brothers and priests, and both have equal respect and status in the
community.
What is a monk?
A monk is the male member of a monastic or contemplative order. Some
monks make solemn vows. Monasticism is a particular form of religious
life built around a rule, such as the Rule of Benedict, and the Divine
Office, a set of prayers and psalms chanted or sung at various points in
the day. Women who choose monastic life are called sisters or nuns.
What is a friar?
A friar is a male member of a mendicant order, such as the Dominicans
or Franciscans, although the term is sometimes extended to others in
the monastic tradition.
What is the difference between a diocesan priest and a priest from a religious order?
All priests are ordained to the priesthood through the Sacrament of
Holy Orders. However, a man may choose to be a diocesan priest
(sometimes called a secular priest) or a religious priest (or order
priest). If he chooses to be a diocesan priest, then he enters the diocesan seminary system, and once ordained typically serves within his own diocese (a geographic territory designated by the Catholic Church). He is appointed to his ministry—most often parish work—by the bishop of that diocese. A diocesan priest is accountable to his bishop and the people he serves.
If a man chooses religious priesthood, he joins a men’s religious community. While he may perform parish ministry, he generally serves in other ways, typically doing work related to the mission and ministries of his religious congregation. A religious priest is accountable to his major superior and the other men in his community for his religious life and his local bishop and the people he serves for his priestly duties.
Why does there seem to be fewer religious communities?
Religious communities have always had an ebb and flow since the days
of the early church. The needs of the time and the movement of the Holy
Spirit are the impetus for new communities to form and others to fade
away. Today in the U.S., while many religious communities are merging or
consolidating, others are being founded or are attracting new members.
In addition, there is a rising interest in religious life among North
American Catholics, as noted in recent VISION Vocation Guide surveys in
2007, 2008, and 2009.
Are young people still choosing to become priests, sisters, and brothers?
Yes, but in fewer numbers. Historically, religious have always been
fewer in number. Following an unusual surge in the mid-20th century,
the number of men and women religious today more closely reflects a
number consistent with the beginning of the last century. According to
the 2009 NRVC/CARA study, 71 percent of those who have entered religious
life and are currently in initial formation are under 40. And of the
more than 7,000 people who have filled out the NRVC-sponsored
VocationMatch.com profiles this year 67 percent are under 40.
Are young adults pressured to join a religious order if they request information?
Trained vocation ministers adhere to a code of ethics that
specifically encourages them to allow inquirers a sense of true freedom
to choose or not choose religious life or priesthood without any
pressure or expectation from others. In fact, extreme pressure to enter
religious life is a canonical impediment to admission to vows. Online
websites, discussion boards, and email exchanges allow inquirers to seek
information anonymously until they feel prepared to make more personal
contact.Most vocation directors acknowledge that their role is to accompany those in discernment, not to recruit them. In addition vocation directors have a duty to their communities and the church to properly assess and offer honest feedback about a candidate's fitness for religious life.
What is a vocation director?
A vocation director is designated by a religious institute to promote
vowed membership, to help others discern their vocation, and to oversee
the application process of new members entering the community as a
postulant. They assist those who are considering the possibility of
religious life by providing support, discernment counseling, and
information. The Vocation director for a religious congregation answers
to the elected superiors of their congregation. The National Religious
Vocation Conference is the professional organization for vocation
directors of religious communities. Vocation Directors who work on behalf of a diocese answer to the bishop. They have their own professional organization, the National Conference of Diocesan Vocation Directors.)
What is the process to enter religious life?
Typically someone interested in religious life goes through a
discernment process where they prayerfully consider the call to
religious life, explore vocation options, contact religious communities,
and eventually begin a more formal process of discernment with a
particular religious institute.Once a candidate chooses to apply to a community and is accepted, he or she typically begins a formation process starting with postulancy or candidacy, in which the person is introduced to the communal life, ministries, and mission of the community. Following postulancy comes the novitiate, where a person is formally admitted to a religious institute. The novitiate is an extended time of prayer, study and spirituality, which usually lasts for at least one year. After the novitiate, the novice is admitted to temporary vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience. This period of temporary commitment allows for further discernment before he or she makes perpetual profession of vows within a given religious institute.
How many religious institutes are there in the U.S., and how many priests, sisters, brothers?
There are approximately 900 separate religious institutes in the United States.Total priests in 2008: 40,580These and additional statistics are found on the CARA website.
Diocesan priests: 27,614
Religious priests: 12,966
Permanent deacons in 2008: 15,893
Religious brothers in 2008: 5,001
Religious sisters in 2008: 61,855
How do religious communities screen candidates?
Religious institutes usually require an extensive process of
screening candidates to religious life, which usually includes extensive
interviews, background checks, and medical and psychological testing.
Candidates must demonstrate a lived commitment to the Catholic faith and
an appropriate level of maturity and mental and physical health that
the rigors of religious life require. Candidates who do not meet
specific standards set by both Church law and the individual religious
institute are not admitted to religious life.
Can married people enter religious? Widowed and divorced?
Religious life in the Roman Catholic Church is reserved for celibates
only. Some religious institutes have accepted widowed and divorced
people who have had their marriages properly annulled by the Church.
What are the vows of religious life?
The main vows for men and women in religious life are chastity,
poverty, and obedience. Individual institutes may require additional
vows.
How do priests, nuns, and brothers spend their days?
Men and women religious have an obligation of personal and communal
prayer, including daily Mass. They live in community, usually in one
house. Apostolic communities, including missionaries, are engaged in
ministries, such as healthcare, education, and social service.
Contemplative communities are committed to daily prayer and some form of
manual labor.
What is the National Religious Vocation Conference?
The National Religious Vocation Conference (NRVC) was founded in 1988
as a professional organization of men and women committed to vocation
awareness, invitation, and discernment to consecrated life as brothers,
sisters, and priests. The NRVC has an annual membership of over 1,300
women and men, most of whom are vocation ministers for religious
congregations. The organization is divided into 14 regions plus
international members. The NRVC serves its members by providing
education, resources, and services for professional growth.
What is VISION Vocation Guide?
VISION Vocation guide is a print, online, and digital
resource for those interested in entering religious life. Published by
TrueQuest Communications on behalf of the National Religious Vocation
Conference, VISION is distributed throughout the U.S. and Canada in
print and around the world in its digital format. VISION articles and
features are also available in Spanish and French online. The magazine
is in its 22 year of publication. In 2006, VISION launched its popular VocationMatch.com service which assists those discerning a religious vocation to narrow their search for the right community. An annual VocationMatch.com Survey on Vocations helps track current trends.
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