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From carefree to convent: What happened when a group of radical millennials moved in with nuns?

A project called Nuns and Nones took young idealists with progressive politics all the way around and back to the Catholic Church

Thursday 20 June 2019 14:57 BST
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Adam Horowitz (left) helped to establish the programme
Adam Horowitz (left) helped to establish the programme

Sarah Jane Bradley was an unmarried, “spiritual but not religious” professional in her early thirties, with a rowdy group of friends and a start-up when she moved out of her communal house and into a convent. A group of friends went with her. They called the project Nuns and Nones, and they were the “nones” – progressive millennials, none of whom were practising Roman Catholics. Intended to be a pilot project, the unusual roommate situation with the Sisters of Mercy would last for six months.

The idea was spearheaded by Adam Horowitz, a 32-year-old Jewish man, and the pilot programme was guided by Judy Carle, a 79-year-old Catholic Sister of Mercy in the Bay Area of San Francisco. Horowitz and his friends heard the call after a road trip to visit intentional communities. They were brainstorming ways they could live radical activist lives, lives of total devotion to their causes. They were trying to figure out who was already doing this, and when Horowitz talked to a minister, it came to him. The answer was nuns. “These are radical, badass women who have lived lives devoted to social justice,” Bradley says. “And we can learn from them.”

These are also hard times for the sisters. The average age of a Roman Catholic nun in the United States is close to 80. Convents around the country are closing. The number of nuns in the United States has collapsed from 180,000 in 1965 to below 50,000 today.

Sisters are passing leadership at Catholic hospitals and schools to lay people. Some have even begun talking about their mission here in the United States as being complete. At the same time, millennials are the least religious group of people in the United States – only about 27 per cent attend weekly religious services. Young women who aspire to lives of good works without the burden of a husband are quite able to do that now without Catholicism. Yet for small pockets of the young, urban and progressive, the convent is calling. Their radical politics took them all the way around and back to the Catholic Church.

The millennials arrived by Subaru. The sisters had prepared small rooms for the women and men alike, in the wing where they originally housed novices but now use for retreats. Each room had a twin bed, a small wooden desk, a chair and a Bible. The sisters also made them an office with specifically chosen sacred art, including a painting of Moses because some of the Nones were Jewish. The sisters were not sure what exactly the young people wanted to know about them, and the first meeting came as a shock.

“I was stunned, and I said to the other sisters, ‘you will never guess what the millennials want to talk about: the vows,’” says Sister Patsy Harney. “Everybody laughed. It was kind of like a joke, you know?” But the millennials were nothing if not earnest.

Harney found a book on the vows – poverty, obedience, chastity – that she had bought once but never read. “I saw Alan creeping around with his mobile phone to take a picture of the cover, and then next time I saw it Sarah had been reading it and it was full of post-it notes all over,” Harney says. “Millennials were looking at it like this is the glue. They were looking for the secret sauce of how we do this.” The sisters began to see that the millennials wanted a road map for life and ritual, rather than a belief system.

On one of the first nights, Sister Judy Carle says, one of the young people casually asked the sisters, “So, what’s your spiritual practice?” “That’s the first question, not, ‘What do you believe’?” she says, noting that throughout history, the specifics of belief were so important that people fought wars about it. “So many of the millennials would say, ‘I’m looking for rituals. I’m looking for rituals to work in my lesbian community or social justice or I need rituals for this other thing,” Carle says. One young woman wanted ritual so much that she started going to mass every morning.

Nuns and Nones is now running groups in about a dozen cities

The millennials worked their normal jobs during the day, but in the evenings and on weekends the group had a slew of activities. They joined for convent feasts and Easter vigil. They had their feet washed on Holy Thursday. They studied the prophets. They invited the sisters over for Shabbat dinner. One night, a group of millennials and sisters were dancing and laughing. They got so loud that a security officer came and knocked on the door and told them the party would have to continue in the basement. It did.

Sister Janet Rozzano, 81, chose not to be involved with the young visitors at first, but they started using her kitchen. In the end, she wrote a haiku about the millennials.

Nuns and Nones is now running groups in about a dozen cities, including Grand Rapids, Michigan, Minneapolis, New York City and Boston. In each locale, groups of sisters and millennials meet regularly. (The sisters are colloquially known as nuns, though technically that term only refers to the cloistered women who do not engage in work at outside schools or hospitals.) The just-concluded pilot residency in California is the first attempt at cohabitation. Wayne Muller, a minister in Santa Fe, New Mexico, was the one who originally suggested to Adam Horowitz that a partnership between millennial activists and sisters might be worth exploring. He has been surprised at how well the activists have taken to the programme and how quickly they have begun to see the sisters as comrades. “It’s like,there’s a pope you know; they’re in his Rolodex, and it’s always a him – and you guys are OK with this?” Muller says.

That these young progressives – working as community organisers, artists and social workers – are finding answers in the Catholic Church is a surprise to them, as well. Many of the young people say they view convent culture as an almost separate, rebel force, hardly related to the Catholic Church at all – though of course it is an integral part of the church. And that church has hardly seemed like a place for young progressives. In recent years, the church has been in a prolonged crisis around sexual abuse and systematic cover-ups.

To Muller, Nuns and Nones is also, in part, a real estate story. Moving young people into convents can help sisters hold onto their property amid rising nursing home care costs. The young people get low-income housing in exchange for helping take care of the sisters. (The young participants bristle at the suggestion that their interest has to do with housing costs; they worry about being seen as gentrifiers of convents.) Muller says another benefit for young activists is to learn to avoid burnout by studying the sisters, who have made social change a lifestyle.

The sisters have been doing radical social justice work for forever

Wayne Muller

“The call itself is very similar,” Muller says. “The sisters have been doing radical social justice work for forever.” Many of the nones are looking at Catholicism anew, even as they rarely use the word, speaking about it more loosely in the new language of spirituality.

“A lot of us in social justice, a lot of the people of our generation, it’s this culture that’s all about forward-moving progress, and that forgets that there’s this cyclical spiral and these really old wisdom traditions that can feed change,” says Christina Tran, a 34-year-old comic artist in Corvallis, Oregon, who organises monthly Nuns and Nones meetings. “It’s less about building anew; it’s more about remembering.”

What happens when those “really old wisdom traditions” include opposing same-sex marriage and abortion rights? Horowitz is loath to answer, finally settling on: “We engage in dialogue about that.”

The nones, many of whom say they felt overwhelmed by life’s choices, were drawn to the discipline and the notion of sacrifice. A life of chastity was especially appealing to them. “I started to realise chastity was an invitation to ‘right relationship’ and not just about celibacy,” Sarah Jane Bradley says. “In an era of Me Too, we need right relationships. We need to know what it means to respect someone’s personhood and to respect your own personhood and to be a conduit for love rather than ego needs.” Bradley is the co-founder of an adult learning support community called Open Master’s, which includes a programme for those interested in religion called Alt*Div. She is not planning on a life of celibacy, but she does want a little infusion of chastity. “It’s about deciding what’s the price we’re willing to pay for the world that we want to live in and the life we want to live,” Bradley says.

David Bronstein, a 31-year-old academic tutor and education activist who lived in the convent during the programme, agrees. “Chaste also means devoted to a way of life,” he says. For Bronstein, who will be leading a “food justice learning journey” for high schoolers this summer, it has meant saying “no” to more things and keeping his calendar emptier. “Chastity has been about taming the work beast and reorienting from that and toward a primary orientation toward spirit and community,” Bronstein says.

The millennials started rethinking other vows. The vow of poverty is about stewardship of resources and shared prosperity, they say. But obedience, as a concept, was tricky. “It sounds like it’s about taking orders, but the sisters helped me see it’s about preparing the heart for dialogue and a deep internal listening for truth,” Bradley says. “The vows opened up this portal in which to really appreciate how countercultural the lives these sisters have led are.”

The sisters’ days are full. Many start prayer at 6.30am in the chapel and then work on the large hospital network their order founded or their affordable housing programme, which serves 152,000 people nationally. The millennials kept more flexible hours. “I was envious,” Carle said to the millennials one morning. “Our lives are going on and sometimes faster. Yours was more like what I would call a retreat-type experience.”

Other convents heard about what was going on and started to get interested. People in Rome started asking about it, and the president of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious mentioned Nuns and Nones in a recent address “They want to know how we found them and if there are more like them,” Harney says. For decades now though, the story of sisters has been one of diminishment. As they have been passing their leadership roles at those hospitals and housing projects on to lay people, they have found that often men replace them. And what worries them most is who will inherit their charism – the great spiritual gift their order brings. For the Sisters of Mercy, that gift is, naturally, mercy.

Soli Salgado, a reporter for Global Sisters Report who has been tracking the Nuns and Nones movement, says she thinks this is the sisters’ most existential worry. “When they talk about dying out, they’re less concerned about making sure the institution survives and more about who’s going to inherit the charism, who’s going to keep doing this mission that’s been fuelling them all these centuries,” Salgado says. “For the sisters, Nuns and Nones could be a vehicle for passing along their charism.”

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The night the Bay Area residency comes to end, the sisters and millennials gather in a circle around a small altar. Sisters and millennials write and read poems to each other. And they sing one of the sisters’ chants:Sacred is the Call”; “Awesome Indeed the Entrustment”; “Tending the Holy”; “Tending the Holy”. When the millennials move out in mid-May, they scatter back around the country. The Sisters of Mercy, of course, remain at the convent. Some of the sisters are now answering a call to go to the US-Mexico border for an extended stay. They plan to work with asylum-seekers. The nones could come too, if they are up for it.

© New York Times

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