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Pope Francis kisses a gift presented to him by a woman religious during an audience with the board of directors of the Conrad Hilton Foundation at the Vatican yesterday (CNS/Vatican Media)

Women religious are meant to be serving the poor, marginalised or vulnerable in society, not be working as servants to members of the Church, Pope Francis said yesterday. Source: CNS.

In the past, little was invested in the formation of religious sisters, “far less than in the formation of the clergy,” he said, “since sisters and other women are thought to be ‘second class citizens’”.

That mindset must stop, he told members of the Conrad Hilton Foundation meeting at the Vatican, “and you as a foundation are helping to bring the Church out of this clerical mindset.”

The Pope met with members of the foundation’s board of directors as well as some sisters who were taking part in a conference dedicated to religious women working in the field of communication. The conference, taking place in Rome, was organised by the Vatican in collaboration with the foundation.

“The need for sisters to pursue continuing education and training is urgent,” the Pope told his guests. “Their work at the borders, on the peripheries and among the poor, requires training and competence.

“The mission of sisters is to serve the least among us. It is not to be servants to anyone,” he told them.

“Often we hear complaints that there are not enough sisters in positions of responsibility, in dioceses, the Roman Curia and universities,” he said. The complaints are valid, and “we need to overcome a clerical and chauvinist mindset.”

“Thanks be to God that now in the Curia we have a woman prefect in the dicastery for religious” as well as women in other top Vatican positions, he said.

“Thanks be to God that the sisters are stepping forward. They know how to do things better than men.”

However, the Pope said, “I also hear bishops say, ‘I would like to appoint nuns in some diocesan offices, but their superiors will not release them’.”

He appealed to the major superiors of communities of women religious to “be generous, cultivate a vision of the universal Church and of a mission that goes beyond the confines of your institute” and allow their members to work elsewhere.

FULL STORY

Pope: Women religious are not servants; they serve the poor, outcasts (By Carol Glatz, CNS via Catholic Review)