What Would Benedict Say?

I knew the had gone 'round the bend of late, but this is just bizarre.

The [] Rev. Lynne Smith is believed to be the first woman in the United States to join a monastery founded by Roman sisters without converting from her original religion.

(Thanks, Open Book)

Update: The original news story link no longer works, so here's another version.

First U.S. ecumenical community for women

Lynne Smith describes herself as a new monastic for the new millennium. Smith is a Benedictine — not just a baptized , but an ordained minister in the church. She is also a novice in the ecumenical community of Benedictine women of Madison.

Funky Dung

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Comments 4

  1. steve wrote:

    Well, we've come a long way from thinking that all non-Catholics are hell-bound (or in my case thinking that Catholics were, in fact, so bound). I suppose that good ol' St. Benedict would at least have to comply with the teachings of Vatican II. It sounds like the Presbyterian reverend/sister is in genuine (yet presumably imperfect) fellowship with the mission and spirit of the monastery.

    So in short: Yes, the sky is falling. But I don't take this as one of the evidences.

    Cheers

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    Posted 05 Oct 2004 at 8:15 pm
  2. Emily wrote:

    enough said…

    "…so the St. Benedict Center was reborn as a retreat center and ecumenical gathering place."

    Sounds sort of like the grounds of the convent here in Pittsburgh where my brother made his Buddhist retreat.

    But I'm surprised - could there actually be worse out there than the Joan Chittister-supporting Erie Benedictines??

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    Posted 05 Oct 2004 at 9:04 pm
  3. Tom Smith wrote:

    Ugh, this watered-down, pot-smoking hippie Catholicism is not what we need right now.

    And people are still afraid to come out and speak against The ever-revered Spirit of Vatican II.

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    Posted 06 Oct 2004 at 4:48 am
  4. Tom Smith wrote:

    "Smith said she was attracted to the sacraments and regular prayer of Catholic monastic life, but didn't have a way of living that life within the Protestant tradition."

    Why doesn't she just convert, instead of being pretend-Catholic?

    . . . not that this particular convent is terribly Catholic, anyway.

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    Posted 06 Oct 2004 at 4:52 am

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