Sign Up for Our Newsletter!


By submitting this form, you are consenting to receive marketing emails from: . You can revoke your consent to receive emails at any time by using the SafeUnsubscribe® link, found at the bottom of every email. Emails are serviced by Constant Contact

EPISODE#228
OC CATHOLIC RADIO: THE PRESENTATION SISTERS: A NUNUMENTARY

It is always a pleasure to have new friends join us in the studio, high atop the Tower of Hope on the campus of Christ Cathedral. The topic on the table today is all about some wonderful, Godly servants who reside at St. Bonaventure Catholic School in Huntington Beach. They are known as ‘The Presentation Sisters.’ On this podcast, host Rick Howick welcomes three unique guests: Alexa Vellanoweth (a former student at St Bonaventure), Kim White (the principal at St. Bonaventure) and Vanessa Frei (Director of Marketing and Enrollment).

So what exactly is a “NUNUMENTARY?” Tune in, and find out!

 

 

 

 

 

 

Originally broadcast on 5/15/21

EPISODE#55
CATHEDRAL SQUARE: GUEST IS SR. KIT GRAY OF THE SISTERS OF ST. JOSEPH OF ORANGE

Fr. Christopher Smith covers “all things Christ Cathedral” on the Cathedral Square radio show. He also relishes the chance to welcome good friends to the studio, located high atop the Tower of Hope. Today’s guest is extra special.

Sr. Kit Gray has made her presence known in the Diocese of Orange for many years, most notably in her vital work with the Sisters of St. Joseph of Orange.

Today, they will discuss Pope Francis’  declaration that 2021 would be ‘the Year of St. Joseph.’

 

Be sure to share this podcast with a friend!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Original broadcast date 5/1/21

SISTERS, NUNS AND VOWS

When Sister Katherine ‘Kit’ Gray felt God’s calling to enter religious life, she was influenced to enter the community of the Sisters of St. Joseph of Orange.

After all, the sisters taught her all through Holy Family School. They were joyful, related well to each other and made religious life look attractive, Sister Kit recalls.

“I was thinking about my future and they were in my life in a way that made it look really wonderful to be a sister, to be in community and in service to others,” she says. “We’re not perfect as a congregation, but what I’ve experienced as a sister is a certain joy and a great sense of service to the Church and the world.” It has been 53 years since Sister Kit took her final vows. She serves as Director of Mission Integration and Ongoing Formation at Christ Cathedral.

Like Sister Kit, many women called to religious life choose to become sisters, not nuns; and there are important differences. Sister Eymard Flood, vicar for religious for Christ Cathedral explains the distinction: Nuns belong to contemplative communities and do not have the freedom to come and go from their enclosed convents. Their primary goals are prayer and meditation. Sisters are women who are in religious life and are free to hold ministry positions in schools, colleges, universities, hospitals and more.

“A woman’s choice of community suits her personality and background, her education, and the ministry she wishes to be involved in,” Sister Eymard notes. “Yet the call to religious life is a call by God, not a choice on our part.” Rather than a career, service in religious life must be discerned together with a trusted pastor or spiritual director, friend of within a community, she adds.

When advising women who feel they are called to religious life, Sister Eymard encourages them to research and read about different communities, their ministries, locations and members. Once they determine interest in a particular community, women are advised to make plans for a weekend or weeklong visit to spend time in the community and experience their ministry and way of life, she says. Once a woman has narrowed down her interest to one or two ministries, their spiritual adviser will discuss with her which is best.

The formation process can last two to three years, she says, before a woman makes her vows. At the end of that period the woman must discern if her community is where God wants her to be.

Once they make final vows, women serve for their lifetimes, Sister Eymard says. They join the workforces of their community and continue in religious life.

Sister Eymard, who is a member of the Sisters of St. Clare, celebrated her Golden Jubilee of 50 years two years ago. She was a young girl in Ireland when she was impressed by the sisters.

“I was impressed with the kindness that the sisters showed my parents when I was in high school,” Sister Eymard remembers. “It had a big effect on me. We were not very rich for our parents to come up with monthly tuition, and the sisters always made concessions. Consideration was given and it really impressed me.”

The Sisters of St. Clare were very pastoral in their relationship with parents and girls, she says. “They tried to help and advise us on life issues as a time when we thought we knew everything.”

St. Clare’s vision for women is for them to be what their community’s Gospel needs are, Sister Eymard says. “In Assisi, she took women in to reach them, ministered to the poor, worked within the convent to empower women so that they could go out and help the less-fortunate.”

The women Sister Eymard serves have entered the Poor Clare Missionaries, the Eucharistic Ministers of the Holy Trinity, the Society Devoted to the Sacred Heart and the Sisters of St. Joseph as they have worked to discern their religious life.

Apart from their spiritual formation, women must be emotionally and physically healthy with the capacity for educational accomplishments and participation in the work they’ll be doing before they can enter a particular convent, Sister Eymard notes. Some convents take members of different ages, while others are open only to younger women.

She recalls one woman who recently became a sister over her parents’ strong objections. “She entered a community and now has reconciled with her family and their relationship is much better. They were afraid of losing her, that she would be sent outside the country and they wouldn’t see her. Those are natural fears of parents with young daughters.”

Everyone recognizes that fewer women enter religious life these days, and Sister Eymard says there are many reasons why.

“There weren’t a lot of career choices for women to make in the past,” she says. “Today women can virtually do anything and they have lots of opportunities. In the past, entire high school classes would enter the convent together.” Still, she says, convents remain viable with dwindling members because of the Providence of God.

 

PHILIPPINE NUNS, PRIESTS SAY ROLE IN REVOLUTION AFFECTED THEIR FAITH

MANILA, Philippines (CNS) — Religious and clergy in the Philippines say their experiences in the People Power Revolution 30 years ago have had a lasting impact on their faith and vocations.

Sister Porferia “Pingping” Ocariza, a member of the Daughters of St. Paul, told Catholic News Service that what she did Feb. 23, 1986, was worth it.

“Because for me at that time when we were facing the tanks, I believed heavily that God was there,” she told Catholic News Service. “God was there as if the seed (of democracy) was being planted.”

A three-week protest that saw millions of Filipinos converge on a main thoroughfare just outside the country’s military headquarters toppled Ferdinand Marcos, who had been in power for more than 15 years. Marcos had ordered his military to disperse angry crowds that claimed he stole a snap election from Corazon Aquino.

Standing in pairs, Sister Ocariza and 16 other nuns led the rosary as soldiers escorted rolling military tanks with their turrets trained on the sisters. The nun said staring down those tanks has been the scariest experience of her life.

“I said, ‘Lord forgive me for all my sins and even the offenses of our Filipino people.’ If really the tanks would crush us, at least the two of us … kill us sisters, not the people because we (did not) want bloodshed. I love my country.”

But the tanks stopped. And the soldiers joined the protesters reciting the rosary.

Sister Ocariza said she believed that God heard their prayers and saved the country from what could have been a violent, bloody uprising. She said she looks back to that time as a source of courage and a reminder to press ahead to fight for what is right. Today, she continues to press for housing for the poor in metro Manila.

Sister Ocariza, along with droves of clergy and religious, joined the 1986 protests after a message broadcast from then-Cardinal Jaime Sin of Manila.

Father Larry Faraon, a former Dominican, was station administrator for Radio Veritas, which at the time was one of a handful of broadcasters not controlled by the government.

Cardinal Sin “only called up once,” Father Faraon told CNS. “But then it was my decision to replay it … every 10 minutes.”

The cardinal had implored citizens of the overwhelmingly Catholic country to pray and especially go and support the rebel forces led by then-defense minister Juan Ponce Enrile and Gen. Fidel Ramos, who both turned against Marcos and sided with the Aquino camp.

Father Anton Pascual, current president of Radio Veritas, said the Marcos regime was “aware of the church’s moral ascendancy. He (Marcos) knew how to play politics with the church” and that the church was very powerful whenever it “would flex her muscle.” But Father Pascual, who was a 25-year-old seminarian assigned to help monitor the vote counting, said Marcos retaliated against the station over the message of Cardinal Sin.

Father Faraon said that, during the turmoil following the snap elections, the Marcos military brought down the Radio Veritas transmitter in Bulacan province, just north of metro Manila. He said he learned from rebel troops guarding the station’s only temporary transmitter in Quezon City that their antenna was in danger of being razed.

Father Faraon had to decide whether to close the station. With just little more than a year in the priesthood, he called it “a defining moment” in his vocation.

He said, “I really had to make a choice between being a martyr or just living it off and returning to my convent and telling everybody, ‘Well, that’s all for you. That’s not for me.’”

But his staff said they wanted to see the work through.

“All of a sudden I felt there was a very, very strong call … to answer right now. … I used to receive a proposal and study (it) and then make a decision, but that was a time that I really had to make a decision, right now … a ‘matter of life and death’ decision. Somehow it helped me. It transformed me. I learned so much … from that personal experience,” said Father Faraon.

 

NUNS SAY BY MAKING ALTAR BREAD, THEY’RE ‘HELPING BRING JESUS TO SOULS’

WESTFIELD, Vt. (CNS) — It’s generally quiet in the Altar Bread Department at the Monastery of the Immaculate Heart of Mary in Westfield as Benedictine nuns in their full habits covered with smocks produce thousands of hosts to be consecrated and distributed to Catholics at the Eucharist.

In keeping with the contemplative lifestyle of their order, the Congregation of Solesmes, there is little talking.

When Sister Marie Anges Martel does her work at the cutting machine by the window, the dominant sound is the hiss and clunk of the machine cutting through layers of whole wheat wafers, which resemble thin pizza crusts.

It is important work, for as Sister Claire-Joseph Desmarais, the altar bread official, said: “We help Jesus bring himself to souls by making altar bread hosts. Through the priest, Jesus brings himself to the people.”

She and the two other sisters who work in the department — Sister Marie Anges and Sister Theresa Margaret Hagen — enjoy their work “helping bring Jesus to souls, the real, true bread of life.”

It’s a process the sisters and their Benedictine Oblate baker and sorter have down pat: Weigh the flour, mix the batter, bake the wafers on five bakers that resemble tortilla presses, sort and store the baked wafers, add flexibility to the crisp

discs in the humidity room, cut them into hosts, lay larger ones on blotters to flatten, sort and dry them, weigh and bag them, store them and finally send them to customers in about 16 states — as far away as California and Texas.

But at a time where there is more and more of an emphasis on “buying local,” the Benedictine altar bread is more than a local product.

“I can get altar bread from a lot of different (secular) companies. They send me a bill but don’t pray for my parish,” said Msgr. Richard G. Lavalley, pastor of St. Francis Xavier Parish in Winooski, which uses about 1,000 communicants’ hosts a week.

“These nuns are praying for us. I want to keep them in Vermont. They are praying for our diocese and our parishes,” he told Vermont Catholic, the magazine of the Diocese of Burlington. “We have to do everything we can to support them,” like getting altar bread from them, he added.

He appreciates the fine quality of the hosts and gets the thickest ones because “I want them to look like bread, to taste like bread, to feel like bread.”

The Benedictine nuns began making altar bread in 1990 when the Daughters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus in Newport, discontinued their operation and gave them their equipment, including one small baker.

In 1991, the nuns replaced that with four larger bakers; they added a fifth three or four years later.

Some of the bakers have etching on them to imprint crosses on the hosts.

Sister Marie Anges served as altar bread official from 1990 to 2015 but still helps in the Altar Bread Department at the monastery. At first, she worked alone in the department with sorting help from women in the novitiate.

She remembers cutting the larger priests’ hosts, those elevated at the consecration, one by one. Now she can cut 14 at a time with updated equipment.

She cuts 45 to 84 communicants’ hosts on a different cutter in one cut depending on their thickness.

Baking usually takes place three days a week for a total of six batches a week. One batch produces 160 large round wafers; each wafer yields about 74 communicants’ hosts or 14 to 19 priests’ hosts.

Out of about 6,000 hosts, about 5,500 are sellable.

Imperfect hosts and the cuttings — the sections of the wafers left after the hosts are cut from them — go to local farmers for pigs and chickens; some of the cuttings are packaged, labeled as “Monastery Manna” and sold in the monastery gift shop for $1 a bag.

The nuns produce about 3 million communicants’ and priests’ hosts a year. They range in diameter from 1 and 1/8 to 5 and 1/2 inches.

The only ingredients are wheat flour and water; the monastery does not produce gluten-free hosts.

Once they are packaged and ready to mail, the monastery chaplain takes the packages to the post office for the nuns.

Income from the altar bread is used for expenses at the monastery, home to 16 nuns.

“I came here to live life and love God and praise his name,” said Sister Claire-Joseph who entered the monastery in 2001. She had filled in for Sister Marie Anges three times before assuming responsibilities as altar bread official. “Working on the altar bread is providing for my family.”

The ideal is for the workers in the Altar Bread Department to work in as much silence as possible; any talk should be related to the work.

A former security clerk, she said putting her organizational skills to work in the Altar Bread Department is enjoyable.

Before Sister Claire-Joseph computerized the department, Sister Marie Anges used a manual typewriter for labels and billing.

With Jesus as her spouse, Sister Claire-Joseph said she is

“living my spousal relationship on a daily basis” and helping to bring Jesus to her extended family in the church.

The nuns’ life is based on “ora et labora” — prayer and work. “When we are not praying or engaged in divine reading we are working,” she explained.

“We are not idle,” Sister Marie Anges said. “It’s beautiful because we work for the Lord. We’re close to the Lord in this kind of work.”

Sister Claire-Joseph said that as the altar bread production increases, the nuns plan to include other Benedictine Oblates to help as necessary “to keep everything in the Benedictine community.”

Without the Oblates’ help, “there would be too much baking and we would miss the (Divine) Office” prayers, she explained.

– – –

Urban is a staff writer for Vermont Catholic, the magazine of the Diocese of Burlington.

RESEARCHER FINDS SOMETHING DEEP, LIFE-CHANGING WITHIN NUNS’ CLOISTER

GLENMOORE, Pa. (CNS) — When independent filmmaker and artist Abbie Reese inaugurated her collaboration with the Poor Clare Colettine nuns at the Corpus Christi Monastery in Rockford, Illinois, she had a professional goal: nurturing a collaborative relationship that would serve as a backdrop to a young woman’s transition from secular life into an alternative community.

Ten years down the road, Reese admits that the time she has spent with the nuns, who practice a form of strict enclosure relatively rare in contemporary culture, has had an effect on her that goes well beyond scholarly objectivity and curiosity.

A relationship that began a decade ago as a long-term project has, over time, evolved into a project she described as both broader and more profound.

Reese was fresh off a yearlong volunteer stint as a media liaison in the communications department for a huge hospital ship, another form of enclosed community, when she began her oral history collaboration with the nuns, whom she first approached in 2005.

In the introduction to her 2014 book, “Dedicated to God: An Oral History of Cloistered Nuns,” Reese writes that the call to leave the secular world and embrace a cloistered existence — these nuns rarely leave the monastery — was, for many, quite unexpected: “It defied their God-given temperaments. It violated dreams. It dashed plans for marriage and children. It meant their world would shrink, temporally, to a fourteen-acre campus, so that their minds could dwell on God.”

As her relationships with the nuns deepened, they began to open up, not only the physical space they inhabited, but their own vocational stories. “Looking back, I think they wanted to see if I could respect their faith and honor their tradition while within their space,” she said.

While at first she would dress in the street clothes she normally wore, eventually she found herself dressing with deliberate modesty. “They only see the hands and faces of other (women), so to see more skin on somebody else is quite distracting. … I would not wear makeup, and would take off my dangly earrings before going in.”

She makes it clear that the nuns didn’t impose their expectations on her. Nor did her growing knowledge of monastery life impel her to discover a hitherto unknown call, she added.

“It’s clear your calling is to tell stories,” one of the nuns told her.

Given that the nuns only speak to each other when strictly necessary, even the act of interviewing one of them was eye-opening, said Reese. “Sister Nicolette (a pseudonym), who was really worldly before she entered, fluent in four languages and grew up in Europe, would get hoarse in half an hour. It takes an emotional toll to communicate like that. She was so deliberate in the words she chose, so thoughtful and contemplative.”

“I experienced the monastic pace through them. It is incredibly compelling,” Reese said in a telephone interview with the National Catholic Reporter’s Global Sisters Report. She added that while she spent nights in the guest quarters and visited the enclosure on occasion as the project evolved, she never spent a night inside the nuns’ residence.

In her book, Reese describes the way nuns order their days, a rhythm that moves between manual labor and prayer with a particular and sustained focus on veneration of the sacrament. A few are deputized to answer the phone, a link to the personal and global sorrows and crises outside their walls.

When they aren’t gathered for the Divine Office seven times a day — including at midnight — or engaged in private prayer, the nuns can be found working in the garden, baking altar breads to be packaged and mailed off to different congregations, or fixing furniture in their workshop. Though they depend chiefly on donations to run their household, they also have a gift shop in which they sell hand-sewn Communion veils as well as cards and rosaries.

As do other cloistered communities, the nuns at Corpus Christi seem to have great confidence in the efficacy of their calling: healing the world through the power of intercessory prayer.

“They intervene in the course of history, believing that their prayers and penances for strangers and family can alter outcomes,” writes Reese. “At the ceremony when a nun makes final, permanent vows, she hugs her family for one final time. This sacrifice serves a purpose: The material world is not the end, and their sufferings and martyrdoms allow God’s will to become manifest in the world.”

These final hugs happen six years after a sister enters as a postulant. “It’s a really emotional ceremony,” said Reese. “Their mothers don’t want to let go.”

Thereafter, nuns will only see their families seated behind a grille, and they are only allowed four visits per year. Some of the older nuns told her, Reese said, that after they departed for the monastery, their mothers would continue to set a place at the dinner table for them: “The separation was so extreme that it was like a death.”

Nonetheless, she said, the community continues to attract vocations. At the moment, there are approximately 22 nuns in Rockford, some of whom had transferred from active orders. One, she said, had served in the military.

Like other religious communities, these Corpus Christi nuns — theirs is a Franciscan order (Clare was a friend and follower of St. Francis — have pets. Though the nuns told Reese that the dogs are there to protect them, “God sent them a cat. They found it in the dumpster one day.”

“People keep asking me why I spent 10 years on the project” said Reese, a non-Catholic raised by two veterans of the 1960s’ Jesus movement. “There are really fun women. That’s part of the reason it was so enjoyable for so long.”

But they also are very open about the cost of shutting the door on the secular world. “When a young woman enters, she isn’t immediately expected to wake up every night (for prayer). It’s something they are gradually assimilated into.”

As Reese spent more and more time getting to know the Corpus Christi community, her interest in telling the story in greater depth grew.

“The whole reason I wanted to do this project was to follow young women through the process of transitioning from one identity to another,” said Reese. In addition to her focus on the Illinois community, she is pursuing a separate project with funding from the Harvard University Shlesinger Library on the History of Women. For the past 10 years, she has been interviewing young women around the country who are considering religious life.

Currently she is in the process of editing “Chosen (Custody of the Eyes),” a film that follows 20-something painter and blogger “Heather.” In both the book and the movie the nuns chose to use aliases. “Heather,” whom Reese met in 2005, ended up joining the Rockford community of Poor Clare Colettines, becoming “Sister Amata.”

But when Reese sets foot in the monastery, which is set back from a busy road, and catches a whiff of the incense, the way she experiences the passing of time itself changes, she said. “As I interacted with those women, who have embraced a different, ancient rule, I understood it in a different and much deeper way.”

Asked why women who so rarely interact with the culture that laps at their door chose to open up their lives to her, Reese said: “In part they see the benefit of people knowing that this life still exists, that young women are still called.”

While she was collecting information, she shared the transcripts with the nuns she interviewed.

And when the book was finished, she gave them a copy which, the mother abbess told her, they passed from one nun to another. As the nuns have read the book, they have told Reese they’ve been learning about themselves.

Reese’s project has another future benefit: providing the nuns who function as administrators with biographical details about their companions, with whom they often shared the rigor of a daily routine without the small intimacies of secular friendships. “When a nun died,” she said, often they didn’t know what to put in the monastery record.”

Eisenstadt Evans is a religion columnist for Lancaster Newspapers Inc., as well as a freelance writer.

 

 

NUNS, SISTERS AND THE CALL TO SERVICE

For Catholic women, determining a vocation means knowing the facts

Even the most observant Catholics may not know much about women religious. The differences between nuns and sisters, why women choose to join particular religious orders, and the reasons some orders are enclosed, or cloistered, and others are not – this can be unfamiliar territory to both Catholics and non-Catholics.

While it’s common to use the terms “nun” and “sister” interchangeably – and the title of “Sister” is used to address both of these individuals – nuns and sisters lead different lives. A nun is a religious woman who lives a contemplative and cloistered life of meditation and prayer for the salvation of others, while a religious sister lives an active vocation of both prayer and service, often to the needy, ill, poor or uneducated.

“Vocations are given by God,” says Sister Eymard Flood, the Vicar for Consecrated life for the Diocese of Orange. “Some women are called to active service, some to contemplative life.” Vows for nuns and sisters are similar, except that nuns vowing to live in enclosed communities take a vow of permanency in which they pledge to remain in a particular convent for life, she adds. “Only Rome can change that for them, while sisters in active communities can be transferred.”

 

Cloistered and open convents serve differently

“Enclosed” is the preferred term (rather than “cloistered”) in reference to religious orders of men and women, explains Sister Eymard. In enclosed religious communities, nuns typically observe vows of poverty, chastity and obedience in addition to permanency. Nuns may decide to dedicate their lives to serving all other living beings, or might be ascetics who voluntarily choose to leave mainstream society and live lives of prayer and contemplation in a monastery or convent.

Enclosed orders of men include the Benedictine and Trappist monks, while enclosed religious orders of women include Dominican, Carmelite and Ursuline nuns. Two of the enclosed orders of nuns closest to Orange County are the Carmelite Sisters of the Most Sacred Heart of Los Angeles and the Poor Clare Nuns in Santa Barbara.

The Poor Clare nuns were founded in the 13th century by Saint Clare under the inspiration and guidance of Saint Francis of Assisi. “Our vocation is a precious gift within the mystery of the Church and a source of grace for the world,” the Poor Clares’ website explains. “Our hidden life is a silent proclamation of God’s existence and says that he is worthy of all our love.”

Women called to contemplative life do more than pray, Sister Eymard explains, but may take on work that comes from outside their convents. Still, nuns are not permitted to leave the convent to run to the store or go to the theater.

In contrast, the sisters most known within the Diocese of Orange are those who teach at many Catholic schools, minister at hospitals and serve in charitable ministries – like the Sisters of Saint Joseph of Orange. Their history began in 1912 when Mother Bernard Gosselin and eight sisters moved from LaGrange, Ill., to serve in the Sacramento diocese. The sisters built a motherhouse in Eureka, then many schools and their first hospital in Orange.

 

Determining a vocation and deciding on an order 

Women interested in religious ministry should pray, think about and fully research the kind of life they are called to lead, advises “A Guide to Religious Ministries for Catholic Men and Women,” a 2009 book that lists the nation’s religious communities. “Learn about the particular organization or denomination in which you anticipate pursuing a career.” Talking with trusted friends, family members and spiritual advisers can help.

Once she identifies her desired order, a woman called to religious life undergoes the process called discernment in which she works with the congregation’s vocations director. During the discernment process, she experiences the order’s culture, receives spiritual direction and may live in the convent for a period of time.

“The discernment process can be different for each ministry and each candidate,” Sister Eymard says. “It depends on the woman’s background, education and age or if she has been married before.” Once she and the order agree that she can join, it may be seven to 10 years before she takes her final vows.

While religious life certainly isn’t for everyone, many women continue to be called to be nuns and sisters in open and enclosed congregations, Sister Eymard says. “There will always be a place in the Church for consecrated men and women,” she says. “As long as there is an opportunity for ministry, people will be committed for life.”

 

MY BIG SISTERS

Each year about this time, around Catholic Schools Week, I thank God for two teachers who remain indelible in my educational memory. Both were nuns who made me decidedly uncomfortable—for distinctly different reasons—but whose lessons stuck.

The first was a towering Holy Cross sister. She was a monolith of black and white topped off by an aggressively starched fluted headpiece, a unique bit of garb that we all imagined was meant to simulate a halo but which looked to us more like a corona of flame when her eyes narrowed. I fell into a deep funk of despair when I learned that she was to be my sixth grade teacher. Rather than drawing the jolly Sister Sebastian or the young, sweet-natured Sister Donald Mary, I got Sister Michael Joseph, the Vince Lombardi of St. Barnabas School.

We learned one bedrock fact very quickly in Sister Michael Joseph’s classroom: if you found yourself in her good graces, life was sweet. Birds sang, the air smelled of honeysuckle and even your sack lunch tasted better. If you managed to get on her bad side, however, everything shriveled to a cinder. I managed to spend the majority of my time nominally in her good books, and when I was sent to public junior high school the next year (over my objections), I found myself an entire year ahead of the curriculum—thanks to Sister Michael Joseph.

The next time I had a nun for a teacher was in college, when Sister Claire presided over my freshman English lit class. She was young, breezy, energetic and knew her subject down to the ground. We would plow through a book nearly every week, but we studied one particular work throughout the entire semester as an ongoing project: James Joyce’s “Ulysses.”

“Ulysses” is not necessarily a book one reads for fun, and it would never in a million years have made it into Sister Michael Joseph’s class. It contains some very Joycean sex scenes. They kept me from falling asleep when reading them late at night at my dorm room desk, but when the time came the next day to discuss them in a class taught by a nun…

Naturally, the most comfortable person in the room was Sister Claire. Audacious as some of the scenes may have been in their time, she told us, Joyce was not writing about sex simply to titillate, but rather to illustrate character, flesh out the story (forgive me) and advance the plot. “Ulysses” was, she asserted, a landmark of modernist literature and worthy of our attention, even if it did create quite a kerfuffle when it was first published in its entirety in 1922. Slowly, with Sister’s easygoing encouragement, we came around, and discussions became brisk and enlightening. We began to see literature through mature analytical eyes.

I have had many teachers who were easy to forget, and a few who remain unforgettable. The pair of nuns who graced my education in the most unexpected ways are always before me.

 

Patrick Mott, Editor, Orange County Catholic