From the Catholic League site, these comments by Bill Donohue:
Aside from Deacon Greg Kandra, the
Catholic News Agency, and EWTN, both the religious and secular
mediaincluding the Catholic mediahave failed to report an important
story that deserves wide attention: on New Year’s Day, 11 Anglican nuns
from the Community of St. Mary the Virgin in England entered the
Catholic Church. Moreover, a sister from another order of Anglican nuns
joined with them to form a new Catholic order, the Sisters of the
Blessed Virgin Mary.
The 12 sisters were received wearing
their black habits, the signature color of their new Benedictine order.
William Oddie, a prominent English writer and broadcaster (himself a
convert), described the scene: “Here was a pristine, freshly minted
Catholic community, fizzing with new life and (unlike, I fear, most
Catholic sisters these days) wearing full habits….I had feared they
might be received in lay clothes, only being clothed in their habits
once the new community had been formally established, but there was no
nonsense of that kind.”
The sisters will spend the next six
weeks with a Benedictine community, learning the contours of the
normative order. After that they will live a life of poverty in service
to the Lord. “This historic event (I don’t think it’s too much to call
it that),” says Oddie, “is a sign of great hope for the future of the
Catholic Church in England.”
So why isn’t this “historic event” being
publicized? Imagine the media reaction if on New Year’s Day 12 renegade
Anglican nuns had held a press conference in their street clothes
announcing their intent to join a dissident Catholic order so they can
press for gay marriage and women priests! It would have been front-page
news. And had they rented an oversized luxury bus to haul them around
town, that would have been world news. But because these are humble
orthodox nuns, who eschew media gimmicks, there is a news blackout.
Donohue's
question is, I'm certain, rhetorical. He knows quite well, of course,
that most reporters, however decent they might be or unbiased they seek
to be, see the Church, Church authority, and orthodox Catholics through
secular, reactionary glasses (as the GetReligion site documents
on a daily basis). The vast majority of journalists are either puzzled,
confused, or annoyed by Catholics who not only take Church teaching
seriously, but dedicate themselves to living it in both private and
public. Add the additional wrinkles, so to speak, of religious life
combined with conversion, and I'm sure the level of cognitive dissonance
for many reporters is simply overwhelming.
But put a couple of
"social justice" sisters on a bus and have them bash on politicians who
think a bit of budgetary restraint might be in order, and you'd think CNN (and Co.) was the Catholic News Network.
Another great example is the coverage of the CDF's directive that LCWR
leadership address longstanding failures to uphold and teach Catholic
doctrine and morality. Which is why CWR published articles such as this one, clarifying the issues and making clear this wasn't a case of "bad bishops attacking good sisters", as it was consistently "reported".
With that said, here is the opening of Dr. Oddie's January 2nd column:
I have had, as we all have, many good moments in my life as a
Catholic (greatly outweighing the inevitable bad ones); but yesterday
was one of the very best. Have I ever, I try to recall, had such a vivid
sense of how glorious it is to be a Catholic, of the transcendent
splendour of the Catholic life? Probably, but I wonder if any liturgy
ever passed off with such an exultant sense of joyful celebration? I am
referring, as some of you who read my last post may have surmised, to
the reception of 11 sisters led by their mother Superior (all the active
ones) now formerly of the Community of St Mary the Virgin in Wantage,
into the Catholic Church, and their formal erection (joined by another
former Anglican sister who had already been received) as a new community
by the Ordinary of the Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham, Mgr Keith
Newton.
They were received wearing their habits; but the habits
looked different; it turned out that that was because the sisters,
having now adopted the rule of St Benedict, had adopted the traditional
wimple of the Benedictine order, and their habits were now black, not
blue (two of the remaining CSMV sisters had come in their blue habits to
support them, and were seated in the pew behind). There was something
unexpectedly moving about the formal document erecting the brand new
community, who will be known as the Sisters of the Blessed Virgin Mary
(SBVM), despite its being couched in the unlovely bureaucratic language
apparently beloved of canon lawyers; it was solemnly proclaimed by the
Ordinary (who was wearing the most splendid baroque mitre I have ever
seen, very tall indeed, and suitably impressive he looked in it): but
the formal document brought home what had happened. Here was a pristine,
freshly minted Catholic community, fizzing with new life and (unlike, I
fear, most Catholic sisters these days) wearing full habits, based on
their old ones but adapted to their new Benedictine lives. I had feared
they might be received in lay clothes, only being clothed in their
habits once the new community had been formally established, but there
was no nonsense of that kind. An intrinsic part of their habit is still
the rosary, which hangs at their sides, and each rosary was blessed and
individually copiously sprinkled with holy water by Mgr Newton.
Read it all on the Catholic Herald site.