Posted on 11/25/2007 4:33:18 PM PST by NYer
Michelle Boorstein of the Washington Post has a patronizing yet grudgingly positive article on the Nashville Dominicans, who are opening a high school in the Arlington Diocese. The piece is framed, somewhat facetiously, along the lines of a business-section feature about a successful marketing ploy, focusing on the externals of a well-ordered religious life. Most Catholics readers will understand that more than a change of uniform is at work:
In her floor-length white habit with black veil and a rosary around her waist, [Sister Mary Jordan] Hoover is the picture of affirmation for traditional dioceses, including Arlington's.
And that makes her a hot property. With a stated mission of teaching, the Nashville Dominicans get letters and phone calls almost daily from dioceses across the country, asking that they send their youthful -- and overtly devout -- vibe to one school or another.
Asking that they send their "vibe" ... ? Nope. Tried that 40 years ago. Other also-rans console themselves with the product recognition/market segmentation line: the Nashville gals succeeded on the strength of distinctive branding:
"If Catholic schools don't look any different and use the same textbooks and have the same teachers and the same standards, why have them?" asked Sister Patricia Wittberg, a sociologist at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis who studies religious orders. One way to distinguish yourself is "to get a bunch of women in habits in there. They are icons of Catholicity in a diocese that wants Catholicity."
Wittberg suggests that those who'd stoop so low as to make a play for the Catholicity niche-market can do so by deploying "a bunch of women in habits" -- a curious expression. It doesn't exactly sound like a compliment. Not to downplay the importance of distinctive religious garb in an age of increasingly aggressive secularism, but I'd more inclined to think that what aspirants, and parents, and latterly even bishops are finding attractive in the Nashville Dominicans is not principally their vesture, but their Faith.
... or, if you prefer, the Indianapolis Benedictines at recreation.
Oh brother (or should it be ... Oh sister!) ... Diogenes hits the nail on the head!
**”If Catholic schools don’t look any different and use the same textbooks and have the same teachers and the same standards, why have them?” asked Sister Patricia Wittberg, a sociologist at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis who studies religious orders.**
Yes, hits the nail on the head!
....what aspirants, and parents, and latterly even bishops are finding attractive in the Nashville Dominicans is not principally their vesture, but their Faith.
****
True. But, lordy, it would be great to see religous sisters looking like religous sisters once again. God bless these godly women.
The Nashville Dominicans send representatives to events here in Charlotte regularly. Such nice young women!
(Not militant enough for ubiquitous Anoreth, unfortunately. She wants to go to Iraq and blow things up, even if it means sacrificing purple hair.)
Having never experienced the supernatural, how else is a materialist to explain it?
(Sorry, I'm a little late to the party but I felt I had to comment.)
Here are the "Nashville Dominicans".
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