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More Young Women Find a Calling in Catholic Order
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<blockquote data-quote="Butchi" data-source="post: 98578" data-attributes="member: 7"><p><strong><p style="text-align: center"><span style="font-size: 15px">More Young Women Find a Calling in Catholic Order</span></p><p></strong></p><p>[MP3]https://server1.vnkienthuc.com/files/3/Media/se-ed-catholic-teaching-order-13jan11.mp3[/MP3]</p><p>This is the VOA Special English Education Report.</p><p></p><p>For years, the Catholic Church in America has [A]struggled[/A] to find new clergy. The average age of priests and nuns is [A]seventy[/A] and rising. But some Catholic orders are having more success than others.</p><p></p><p>The Dominican Sisters of Saint Cecilia are mainly a teaching order. They are based at a convent in Nashville, Tennessee. And they just [A]celebrated[/A] their one hundred fiftieth year.</p><p></p><p>The sisters are active across the United States and in Australia. There, they teach more than thirteen thousand students in [A]thirty-four[/A] schools.</p><p></p><p>Today, Saint Cecilia's has its largest number of postulants in many years. A postulant is a [A]candidate[/A] for admission into a [A]religious[/A] order.</p><p></p><p>Sister Catherine Marie, a [A]spokeswoman[/A], says the current group of first-year students [A]represents[/A] ten percent of the whole order.</p><p></p><p>SISTER CATHERINE MARIE: "There are two hundred seventy of us and our growth of late has been rather [A]extensive[/A]. This year we had twenty-seven young women enter. Last year, it was twenty-three. Great blessings to us."</p><p></p><p>Nearly one-third of the women in the order are under thirty.</p><p></p><p>Sister Catherine says she thinks these young women are looking [A]deeper[/A] into their faith in reaction to changes in society.</p><p></p><p>Participation in [A]organized[/A] religion is falling among Americans under age thirty. That was the finding of a national [A]survey[/A] last year by the Pew Research Center.</p><p></p><p>A different group, the National Opinion Research Center, recently found that seventeen percent of Americans do not [A]identify[/A] with any faith. And another poll found that this was true of almost twenty-five percent of first-year university students.</p><p></p><p>Sister Kelly Edmunds is a first-year [A]postulant[/A] at Saint Cecilia's. She says she came to the order out of a [A]desire[/A] to serve others. She had seen Dominican sisters serving at the University of Sydney.</p><p></p><p>SISTER KELLY: "Just to watch them, walking down the main boulevard of campus wearing their [A]habits[/A] -- it was just such a powerful witness. I had friends in engineering who were, like, they knew I was Catholic so they would say to me ‘Who are these nuns on campus?' And so it was a really great [A]witness[/A] to me of the power of religious life."</p><p></p><p>Sister Victoria Marie is in her second year. She came to the convent with a degree in civil engineering. She says she had discovered that people were more [A]interesting[/A] to her than roads or bridges.</p><p></p><p>SISTER VICTORIA: "So it was a big shift in my life to go from utility to relationship, from ‘What am I going to do? ' to ‘Who am I going to be for the Lord?' "</p><p></p><p>A postulant's day [A]includes[/A] work, study and prayer.</p><p></p><p>Sister Victoria says it requires a lot of [A]energy[/A].</p><p></p><p>SISTER VICTORIA: "For a couple weeks after I entered, I thought, ‘I just want to lay on the [A]couch[/A] for the day, and I don't think they do that here, you know.'"</p><p></p><p>But Sister Kelly says she was [A]surprised[/A] by how much time she has gotten to simply enjoy life.</p><p></p><p>SISTER KELLY: "There have been a lot of fun moments just to be [A]outside[/A] and enjoy the beauty of the world and [A]creation[/A]."</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Butchi, post: 98578, member: 7"] [B][CENTER][SIZE="4"]More Young Women Find a Calling in Catholic Order[/SIZE][/CENTER][/B] [MP3]https://server1.vnkienthuc.com/files/3/Media/se-ed-catholic-teaching-order-13jan11.mp3[/MP3] This is the VOA Special English Education Report. For years, the Catholic Church in America has [A]struggled[/A] to find new clergy. The average age of priests and nuns is [A]seventy[/A] and rising. But some Catholic orders are having more success than others. The Dominican Sisters of Saint Cecilia are mainly a teaching order. They are based at a convent in Nashville, Tennessee. And they just [A]celebrated[/A] their one hundred fiftieth year. The sisters are active across the United States and in Australia. There, they teach more than thirteen thousand students in [A]thirty-four[/A] schools. Today, Saint Cecilia's has its largest number of postulants in many years. A postulant is a [A]candidate[/A] for admission into a [A]religious[/A] order. Sister Catherine Marie, a [A]spokeswoman[/A], says the current group of first-year students [A]represents[/A] ten percent of the whole order. SISTER CATHERINE MARIE: "There are two hundred seventy of us and our growth of late has been rather [A]extensive[/A]. This year we had twenty-seven young women enter. Last year, it was twenty-three. Great blessings to us." Nearly one-third of the women in the order are under thirty. Sister Catherine says she thinks these young women are looking [A]deeper[/A] into their faith in reaction to changes in society. Participation in [A]organized[/A] religion is falling among Americans under age thirty. That was the finding of a national [A]survey[/A] last year by the Pew Research Center. A different group, the National Opinion Research Center, recently found that seventeen percent of Americans do not [A]identify[/A] with any faith. And another poll found that this was true of almost twenty-five percent of first-year university students. Sister Kelly Edmunds is a first-year [A]postulant[/A] at Saint Cecilia's. She says she came to the order out of a [A]desire[/A] to serve others. She had seen Dominican sisters serving at the University of Sydney. SISTER KELLY: "Just to watch them, walking down the main boulevard of campus wearing their [A]habits[/A] -- it was just such a powerful witness. I had friends in engineering who were, like, they knew I was Catholic so they would say to me ‘Who are these nuns on campus?' And so it was a really great [A]witness[/A] to me of the power of religious life." Sister Victoria Marie is in her second year. She came to the convent with a degree in civil engineering. She says she had discovered that people were more [A]interesting[/A] to her than roads or bridges. SISTER VICTORIA: "So it was a big shift in my life to go from utility to relationship, from ‘What am I going to do? ' to ‘Who am I going to be for the Lord?' " A postulant's day [A]includes[/A] work, study and prayer. Sister Victoria says it requires a lot of [A]energy[/A]. SISTER VICTORIA: "For a couple weeks after I entered, I thought, ‘I just want to lay on the [A]couch[/A] for the day, and I don't think they do that here, you know.'" But Sister Kelly says she was [A]surprised[/A] by how much time she has gotten to simply enjoy life. SISTER KELLY: "There have been a lot of fun moments just to be [A]outside[/A] and enjoy the beauty of the world and [A]creation[/A]." [/QUOTE]
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