Author: meaghan

One Year Later, Vatican Continues Crackdown On U.S. Nuns

Erin Saiz Hanna:  202.675.1006 Nicole Sotelo: 773.404.0004 x285  WASHINGTON D.C. – One year ago today, the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR), an umbrella group representing 80% of the 57,000 nuns in the  United States, came under fire from the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith for their social justice ministries and not supporting the…
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Pope Francis reaffirms Vatican censure of “radical feminist” nuns

The Vatican announced this week that bus-riding, foot-washing Pope Francis supports his predecessor’s crackdown on the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, an umbrella organization that represents 80 percent of nuns in the United States. Like Pope Emeritus Benedict, Francis believes that the nuns focus too much on serving their communities around issues of health care and economic justice and too…
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One year later: Support the Sisters!

Almost exactly one year after the Vatican released its unjust mandate attacking the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR), Pope Francis has reaffirmed the critique, which found LCWR had "serious doctrinal problems," exposed "radical feminist themes," and needed to be reformed.   LCWR released a statement on Monday’s meeting between their leadership and Archbishop Gerhard Ludwig Müller, the head of…
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Religious Women Press for Change

Religious Women Press for Change James Carroll, Boston Globe April 15, 2013    MORMON WOMEN cannot be priests. Catholic women cannot be priests. Muslim women cannot lead prayers in mixed-gender congregations. Jewish women are restricted in praying at the Western Wall in Jerusalem. But Mormons have the “Let Women Pray” campaign. Catholics have the “Women’s Ordination…
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Reuters: Pope stresses “fundamental” value of women in Church

By Naomi O’Leary ROME (Reuters) – Pope Francis stressed the "fundamental" importance of women in the Roman Catholic Church on Wednesday, a message hailed as a significant shift from the position of his predecessor Benedict. Supporters of liberal reform of the Church have called on it to give a greater voice to women and recognize their importance to the largest religious…
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Reuters: Women stage pink smoke protest in Rome as men-only conclave begins

(Reuters) – Protesters demanding a greater role for women in the Roman Catholic Church set off a pink smoke flare on a hill above the Vatican on Tuesday as the men-only conclave that will choose the next pope began. Mimicking traditional smoke signals from the Sistine Chapel – white for a new pontiff and black…
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Huffington Post: Pink Smoke Billows Over Vatican As Protestors Challenge Church’s Policy

As white smoke over the Sistine Chapel captured the world’s attention, smoke of another hue at the Vatican has gone largely unnoticed. According to Reuters, protestors in Rome set off pink smoke on a hill above the Vatican on Tuesday, as they called for the ordination of female priests and a more prominent role for…
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MSN: Pink smoke protesting no women priests puts color into papal conclave

Even as pope-watchers spotted the first puffs of white smoke coming from the Vatican chimney and announcing a successor to Pope Benedict XVI, a few other Catholics were setting off their own fireworks. The Women’s Ordination Conference renewed its calls to expand the role of females in the church, in particular allowing them to become priests, and sent…
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Democracy Now! Pink Smoke Over the Vatican: Women Demand Greater Role in the Catholic Church

While the world waited for white smoke to flow from the Sistine Chapel chimney to indicate a new pope had been chosen, smoke of a different color began billowing into the sky over the Vatican. It was released by protesters demanding a greater role for women in the Catholic Church. [includes rush transcript] On Wednesday, Democracy…
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Pink smoke protest at the Vatican calls for women priests

EuroNews: The smoke billowing into the Rome sky was neither white, nor black, but pink – to back the argument in favour of women being able to be ordained as priests in the Catholic Church. A group of several Catholic women – from Britain, America and Australia – gathered in Rome to protest against the…
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