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NRVC NATIONAL ACTION PLAN, approved by the NRVC Executive Board, Feb. 17, 2011.
Letter from Cardinal Rode
Prefect for the Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life
Letter from Cardinal Seán O'Malley, OFM Cap,
Archbishop of Boston, Chair of the USCCB Committee on Clergy, Consecrated Life, and Vocations
Invited Participants to September Symposium
Syposium Schedule
Symposium Talks
Photos from the Symposium
Catholic News Service stories on the Symposium:
Next steps for vocations; Fr. Robin Ryan on young adults (scroll to second story)
GENERAL OVERVIEW
Moving Forward in Hope Project
Catholic Theological Union, Chicago,
IL
September 16-18, 2010
In December of 2009,
the National Religious Vocation Conference (NRVC) was awarded a $47,450 grant
by the GHR Foundation to sponsor a vocation symposium as a follow-up to
the NRVC / CARA Study on Recent Vocation
to Religious Life in the United States. This symposium was to serve as a
think tank composed of highly skilled experts in various fields of church life
and ministry. Currently, there is no structure for a gathering such as this to
occur.
Given the significance
of the study results, the NRVC executive board recognized that we needed to
take the research to the next level. The board asked the question: How can
we constructively use these important findings to help sustain the viability for
religious life for generations to come? Because NRVC is the officially
recognized professional organization for religious vocation directors in the
American Catholic Church, and since NRVC sponsored the study, it only made
sense that this next initiative rest with our organization.
The goals for this
gathering were threefold:
- To review the data and best practices for vocational promotion as outlined in the NRVC/CARA study;
- To suggest creative strategies based on the study's findings to advance religious life from the various disciplines represented in this gathering;
- To develop a strategic plan of concrete action steps that would increase the number of candidates in religious institutes.
A planning
committee was established. The members of this committee included Brother Paul
Bednarczyk, CSC, NRVC executive director, Sister Charlene Diorka, SSJ, NRVC associate
director, Sister Elyse Marie Ramirez, OP, coordinator of religious vocation
ministries for the Archdiocese of Chicago, Father Robin Ryan, CP, director of
Catholics on Call, Brother Sean Sammon, FMS, former superior general of the
Marist Brothers, and Ms. Patrice Tuohy, executive director and publisher of
TrueQuest Communications. Sister Joan
Scanlon, OP, was hired to serve as the symposium facilitator and joined the
planning group in April.
The planning
committee focused on the evidence in the NRVC/CARA study that showed a renewed
interest in religious life found in a segment of younger Catholics. Given this reality, it was agreed that we
definitely needed to champion new perspectives, fresh ideas, and innovative
approaches to vocation ministry by generating new energy in our promotion of
religious life.
Gleaning the wisdom of the 2002 North American Congress on Vocations, the committee compiled a list of potential invitees to this gathering that would be representative of the various diverse constituencies in our Church. The final list consisted of vocation directors, Catholic educators, major superiors, diocesan personnel, parents, youth, young adult and campus ministers, younger religious, media and communications experts, and church researchers and statisticians.
The symposium was held at Catholic Theological Union (CTU) in Chicago, IL,
from September 16-19. It was important that we host this gathering at an
institution associated with religious life. CTU is the largest theological
union in the United States and is also home to the NRVC offices.
Because of the diversity of the participants, after some initial
tone setting on the opening night, an entire day was dedicated to placing the
vocation question within the context of the study's findings, religious life as
it is lived today in this country, and the faith and spirituality of young
adult Catholics, whom we hope to attract. The second day was a work day where,
through a facilitated process, all participants gathered in seven interest
groups: church leadership, religious life, communications and media, youth and
young adults, parents and family, ethnic and cultural diversity, and Catholic
education. The task of each group was to
develop a plan from their given expertise to promote religious life. This was
to be done through the lens of the study's findings of today's candidates, the
characteristics of the communities who receive them, and the best practices of
vocation promotion.
A final report on this symposium with its proposed plans will
be submitted to the foundation by December 31. An executive summary of this
plan will be posted on the NRVC website by Christmas. The NRVC board will
review and promulgate the final plan at the February board meeting.
For those of us who had
participated in this gathering, it was an extraordinary experience. As one
participant eloquently wrote in the final evaluation:
I met other religious with what I perceived to be a differing and even offsetting ecclesiology and approach to religious life from mine. I saw them as "other" and expected them to offer little that would be helpful or instructive. Instead, through speaking and listening, praying and altering my own narrow perspective, I found in that encounter other consecrated persons also committed to lives of ministry, prayer, and community in albeit very different lifestyles. In the course of the days at CTU, I realized that consecrated religious life is a large and amazing tent into which God invites a spiritual menagerie of charisms, communtities, and characters. Who am I-who are any of us-to set ourselves up as ringmasters or ticket-takers at the door of that mysterious tent?
Through honest dialogue and
respectful listening, what started as a vocation symposium became an encounter
with the sacred, which resulted in greater understanding, reconciliation, and
solidarity.
The name for this symposium, the Moving Forward in Hope Project, was
taken from the homily given by Pope Benedict XVI to priests and religious in St.
Patrick's Cathedral in 2008. The Holy Father prayed: "May our Lord Jesus Christ
grant the church in America a renewed sense of unity and purpose, as
all-bishops, clergy, religious, and laity-move forward in hope, in love for the
truth and for one another."
With a renewed union of hearts
and minds, the symposium participants left Chicago with a clearer truth about
religious life and its future, and a mutual commitment to "move forward in
hope" with one another inspired by the wonder of God's Providence.


