Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR)
2020 Outstanding Leadership Award Recipient
We are very pleased to announce that the LCWR 2020 Outstanding Leadership Award recipient will be Patricia Chappell, SNDdeN.
Patricia has spent nearly 30 years committed to anti-racism training and dismantling white privilege, where she modeled inclusivity and witnessed to the truth of the dignity of the human person. During her nine-year tenure as Executive Director of Pax Christi USA she promoted a spirituality of non-violence and asked each bishop in the United States to affirm active nonviolence as a core Christian principle. She has worked with countless religious congregations and lay groups on diversity-racism issues, including the Ignatian Solidarity Network. In 2017 she served as keynote speaker at the 2017 Ignatian Family Teach-In for Justice. At the 2019 LCWR Assembly Patricia was one of three panelists who helped members explore the connections between three critical justice issues which LCWR members identified in their discernment of the 2019-2022 assembly resolution: the intersection of systemic racism, forced migration, and the climate crisis.
Patricia was one of the founding members of the Black Sisters Conference and served as its president from 1996-2001.
A member of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur, Patricia served on the provincial leadership team. Recently she was elected to the leadership team of the East-West unit based in Baltimore, MD.
We look forward to honoring Patricia at this year's LCWR assembly in Dallas and learning more about her groundbreaking leadership.
Our deep appreciation goes to the LCWR Awards Committee for compiling all the feedback that was provided from you, the LCWR members, about candidates for this award and making a recommendation for this year's recipient.
Sincerely,
Jayne Helmlinger, CSJ
Elise García, OP
Sharlet Wagner, CSC
Repair Our Democracy
As members of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, we stand with the other more than 1300 leaders of Catholic sisters nationwide as we make this statement:
The Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR) joins with the world in praying for peace after witnessing the violence and lawlessness yesterday in our nation’s capital. We are deeply concerned about the state of our country and the future of our democracy. Our hearts ached as we watched these despicable actions that threaten not only to destroy the seat of our government but to rend the bonds that unite us. We commend and thank the members of Congress who courageously continued their service to the nation last night even amid the chaos.
In our increasingly divided nation, we renew our commitment to the common good and pledge to take up the challenge to use our energy to repair our democracy and contribute to the work of building a more perfect union. We invite all people of good will to join us and we call on our elected leaders to point the way.
LCWR Virtual Assembly 2021
This year LCWR is able to make recordings of the major LCWR assembly presentations available for viewing on the public side of our website: https://lcwr.org/2021-lcwr-assembly. The recordings are of:
- Presidential address and responders
- Keynote address (in Spanish) and responders
- Testimonials by three LCWR members
- Role play for the Discernment of Our Emerging Future
- Lifetime Achievement Awards
Also on the site are texts from the addresses in English and Spanish, a summary of the assembly you can use for your own communications, and a 4 ½ minute video of the assembly highlights.
LCWR Resolutions to Action - Winter 2020
Written by our own Judy Connor!
Continental Stage of the Church’s Synod Process
You may be aware that a new stage has been added to the church’s synod process. The continental stage consists of time of listening and discernment on a continental basis that will lead to a series of continental assemblies.
More information on this stage as well as a working document that can be downloaded in multiple languages are available here.
LCWR Denounces Administration's Decision to Rescind TPS for Hondurans
The Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR) is deeply troubled by the decision of the Trump administration to terminate Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for more than 57,000 Hondurans. Honduras is the seventh country whose citizens have been stripped of their right to protection by this administration.
“Rescinding TPS from human beings under continuing threat of violence of all types is inconsistent with the values and traditions of this nation and with our belief in the God-given dignity of all persons and their inalienable right to life,” said Carole Shinnick, SSND, interim executive director of LCWR.
The TPS program is designed to protect people from being returned to harm. That is precisely what Hondurans will face if they are forced to return to a country racked by violence, roiled by political repression, and plagued by continuing environmental challenges.
Hondurans have been contributing members of our communities for 20 years. They have raised families, paid taxes, and contributed to the growth and development of this country even as US foreign policy has added to the endemic poverty and persistent violence that continue to afflict Honduras.
The cancellation of TPS for Hondurans brings to approximately 315,000 the number of our neighbors, friends, parishioners, co-workers, and colleagues whose gifts will be lost to us all. The short-sighted decision to rescind TPS protection for the citizens of Honduras, El Salvador, Haiti, Nepal, Liberia, Nicaragua, and Sudan places us all at risk. Ending their protection promises to tear families apart, fragment our communities, disrupt local economies, and places their well-being at risk.
Catholic sisters will continue to heed the scriptural command to welcome the stranger and care for those in need. We urge the Trump administration to reconsider its decisions and we call on Congress to work in a bipartisan manner to develop legislative solutions to protect vulnerable people.
LCWR Resolutions to Action - Winter 2021
Congratulations to Carmen González Arias, CDP, for her piece Crises in Puerto Rico: US Policy and the Resilience of the People which explores the troubled relationship between the federal government of the United States and the people of the Common Wealth of Puerto Rico.
Volunteers Needed at Southern Border
March 23, 2021
First, I want to express my deep gratitude for the generosity of over 40 Congregations of women religious who have reached out to help with the national eviction crisis and the ongoing needs of families who have lost their homes and livelihoods as a result of floods and fires in the midst of the pandemic.
The abiding esteem of our Catholic Charities members for the sisters was evident last week during a meeting we had with our agency directors who are responding to the huge numbers of unaccompanied migrant children and families crossing the southern border right now. During the call, one of the directors asked, “Do you think the sisters would ever be willing to volunteer to come to the border to help us again?” I responded that I would certainly have a conversation with you to see if we might be able to do a “repeat” of the LCWR/CCUSA collaboration at the border a couple years ago. Realizing that there are many complications this year with COVID, I said this would also depend on sisters being vaccinated and that the CDC guidance on domestic flights is lifted. Sisters who speak Spanish are especially needed.
The 19 Catholic Charities border sites in California, Texas, New Mexico and Arizona are all facing the challenges of caring for many families and children. The specific points of entry are fluid. As of now, Laredo, McAllen, Tucson, Yuma, San Antonio, and San Diego are facing significant numbers of arrivals, but that can change tomorrow. Currently, the most urgent needs are volunteers who speak Spanish and financial aid to buy clothes for the children. We suggest that donations be made via the Catholic Charities USA website: www.catholiccharitiesusa.org
As we did last time, our staff at CCUSA is happy to help with logistics should any sisters wish to volunteer. Our contact person is Kristan Schlichte. Her email is: kschlichte@catholiccharitiesusa.org.
Please feel free to use this information in any way that you think is appropriate. Just know how proud I am to be one among such faithful, wonderful women!
Gratefully,
Donna J. Markham OP, PhD, ABPP
President & CEO
Catholic Charities USA
2050 Ballenger Avenue, Suite 400
Alexandria, VA 22314
The Sacred Right to Vote
On this national holiday honoring the life and work of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr, the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR) and the National Black Sisters' Conference (NBSC) have issued a joint statement calling on the Senate to do everything within its power to strengthen our democracy and protect every person’s sacred right to vote by passing the Freedom to Vote: John R. Lewis Act. The full statement can be found on the LCWR website here.
We expect the Senate to take up the House Message, which the passed last week, on Tuesday. We encourage you to share this statement with your Senators first thing on Tuesday morning. You can send the link via email, tweet or by contacting your Senators via their webpage messaging system.
LCWR Virtual Prayer Space for US National Conventions and Election
CLICK HERE for more information. If members of your institute/congregation can participate in this commitment, please use the following link to indicate the hours of your commitment: LCWR Virtual Prayer Commitment Sign Up
LCWR Calls for End to Gun Violence
The recent mass shootings in our country impel us to once again beg all citizens and all elected leaders to end the rampant rage and division that have overpowered the nation and too often result in mass, indiscriminate violence. We are a nation that promises a life free from fear, and yet we seem unable to stop the epidemic of hate that has overwhelmed us. As we have been carrying in our own hearts the pain being endured by families who have lost loved ones and those wounded through gun violence, we bring in as well those impacted by these latest attacks.
What we are witnessing today is being called stochastic terrorism -- the use of mass public communication, usually against a particular individual or group, which incites or inspires acts of terrorism which are statistically probable but happen seemingly at random. The demonization of groups through mass media has been shown to result in violent acts because some who hear this speech interpret it as promoting targeted violence. We insist that society be protected from such acts of terrorism. We are called to confront rhetoric that stokes racism and hatred of anyone perceived to be “different” than we are. We are all responsible for monitoring our own language and actions and calling attention when the language and actions of others cross the line.
We implore all legislative bodies to pass legislation that effectively prevents gun violence. We call for the passage of laws that ban assault weapons, require universal background checks for all gun sales, provide funding for gun violence prevention research, and makes the trafficking in weapons a federal crime.
While mass shootings capture our attention, we cannot forget that they are only part of the pervasive violence perpetrated by use of firearms. Most major cities see shooting deaths regularly, and suicides, domestic violence, and accidents caused by guns are pervasive in all parts of the country. According to the Gun Violence Archives, so far this year more than 8,734 people were shot to death and more than 17,300 people were injured in more than 33,000 incidents. Those numbers do not include firearm suicides. While the horror of mass shootings captures our attention, gun violence persists day after day and its massive scale goes unnoticed.
The deeper causes of violence must be addressed by us as a nation, and we must put our resources there immediately. Only by focusing on the multi-layered foundations of violence will we succeed in making our nation a safer and less fearful place for all.
As the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR), we pledge our support to end the scourge of rage and hatred that has gripped our nation and we will be unfailing in our efforts to call for legislation that works to end gun violence quickly and effectively.
LCWR is an association of leaders of congregations of Catholic sisters in the United States. The conference has nearly 1350 members, who represent more than 44,000 women religious in the United States. Founded in 1956, LCWR assists its members to carry out their service of leadership to further the mission of the Gospel in today’s world.
Contact: Sister Annmarie Sanders, IHM; LCWR Director of Communications
asanders@lcwr.org | 301-588-4955
The Many Faces of Contemplative Engagement
CLICK HERE to find a series of documents. Each document explores a different aspect of leadership and the way in which attentiveness to contemplative engagement can assist you in living this particular aspect of leadership in a practical way. The documents are formatted so that they can be easily saved, printed out, or duplicated.
LCWR Stands Against Racism and Misogyny
The Leadership Conference of Women Religious condemns racism and sexism in all their harmful forms whether the violent acts of white supremacists and misogynists or the daily acts of hate and discrimination that diminish us all.
We grieve with the citizens of Atlanta and the Asian-American and Pacific Island communities. We mourn with those who have lost loved ones to hateful acts of violence, with all who live in fear, and with all whose dignity is threatened by xenophobia and chauvinism. We lament the racism and sexism that continue to afflict our communities, threaten neighbors and denigrate all we hold dear.
We acknowledge our own complicity in institutional racism and sexism. We commit ourselves to cleanse our hearts and rid our land of these twin evils. We promise to continue to use our voice and our energy to build God’s beloved community where all are one.
LCWR is an association of leaders of congregations of Catholic women religious in the United States. The conference has more than 1300 members, who represent more than 38,800 women religious in the United States. Founded in 1956, LCWR assists its members to collaboratively carry out their service of leadership to further the mission of the Gospel in today’s world.
2017 LCWR Assembly Materials
We invite you to view the various materials available for you on the LCWR website following this year's assembly (https://lcwr.org/calendar/lcwr-assembly-2017). You are encouraged to share these widely with your own members, associates, or anyone else who might benefit from them. While some materials are still in process, eventually you will have available to you:
- The texts of the presidential address by Mary Pellegrino, CSJ and the keynote addresses of Chris Pramuk and Jan Richardson. Thanks to the generosity of the Sisters of Bon Secours and the Sisters of Charity of the Incarnate Word of San Antonio, all three addresses will be translated into French and Spanish and will be posted on the website.
- The remarks of Constance FitzGerald, OCD after receiving the LCWR Outstanding Leadership Award. These too will be translated into French and Spanish.
- The press release about the assembly. Please feel free to use or adapt this release as you share with your own members and publics about the assembly. (https://lcwr.org/media/lcwr-assembly-explores-call-embody-love-sake-world)
- The public statement issued by LCWR on the escalating tensions between the governments of the United States and the Democratic People's Republic of Korea. (https://lcwr.org/media/lcwr-assembly-statement-us-dprk-crisis)
- Information on ordering CDs and DVDs of various assembly events.
- A short video capturing highlights of this assembly. Please feel free to share this video on your own social media platforms. (https://animoto.com/play/WMAxoiTam4bAoBDcLeGD5A?autostart=1)
You will receive a separate message that contains the link to the evaluation of this assembly. Please be sure to complete it since your feedback is invaluable as we plan future assemblies.
Please contact us if you have any questions.
National Office
Leadership Conference of Women Religious
Digital March on Washington
The Leadership Council for Women Religious (LCWR) invites us to join a digital and social media "march on Washington" on June 20. This virtual event is designed to show how systemic racism, poverty, ecological devastation, and more impacts the lives of poor and low-wealth persons.
LCWR Embraces the Call to Respect Diversity and Work for Inclusion and Equity for All
The Provincial Leadership Team of the Marie de la Roche Provinces supports the LCWR statement on diversity. As stated in our Directional Statement of our 2016 Provincial Chapter, "…we commit ourselves to be in right relationship with one another and all of creation…Mindful of the brokenness within our global community, we commit ourselves to be prophets of hope and agents of healing…"
We are living at a moment when society is discovering the vast breadth and depth of both the richness and the challenges inherent in the diversity that exists within the human family. That diversity entails a rich mix of differences and encompasses all the dimensions that make each person unique including: ethnicity, race, age, gender and gender identity, beliefs, sexual orientation, and more.
As the world community grapples to understand diversity, we, the members of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, wholeheartedly join in this exploration. We recognize that this is a difficult journey that requires enormous capacity to transcend ideas that may have shaped our thinking over the course of decades, if not millennia. We acknowledge our need to continuously educate ourselves to understand differences – informed by science as well as theology, to patiently listen in a non-judgmental way to people who suffer because of who they are, and to commit to an unceasing reconsideration of our own ethical judgments in light of new understandings. Furthermore, we recognize that we must grow in our capacity and willingness to experience the pain and struggle of people who have been excluded or subjected to violence by others because of who they are. We know that the more we can see life from the perspective of others, the greater will be our capacity to grasp what they experience and learn from it.
As we work to understand the differences among us, we also pledge ourselves to work towards both inclusion and equity. We believe that all people need to feel valued and connected, and that they belong. All people thrive in environments where their inherent worth is respected, and where they are safe to express their authentic selves. Inclusion helps us all know that we belong to something bigger – the reign of God, in our view as religious. At the same time, we will work to guarantee a society marked by fairness, equal access and opportunity, and justice for all people.
As we continue this lifelong work of non-judgmentally walking along side persons whose ways of being may differ from our own, we anticipate that at times we will fail. We ask for forgiveness when we close our hearts, unconsciously exclude, or speak or act in ways that disrespect another. Like many in society, we know that we do not yet fully understand the diversity among us and that we have much work ahead of us. We believe, however, that the work to comprehend and appreciate what it means to be human in all our glorious diversity -- each one made in the image of God -- may be one of the most important contributions we can make at this critical moment of evolutionary change and growth for the entire global community. As women of faith, we are committed to it.
2024 LCWR Assembly
We invite you to participate in Who Shall We Be: A Contemplative Prayer for the World, a prayer experience that will take that will take place on Friday, August 16 from 2:00 – 3:00 PM ET during the LCWR assembly in Orlando, Florida.
The link to the livestream is: (10) LCWR Assembly 2024 Who Then Shall We Be? A Contemplative Prayer for the World - YouTube.
A copy of the prayer service, a commitment card, and a recording of the prayer will also be available HERE on the LCWR website. We hope that as many people as possible will choose to participate, thus increasing the power of our collective prayer, presence, and response.
Livestream Links
Wednesday, August 14
9:25 - 10:10 AM
Presidential Address by Maureen Geary, OP
https://youtube.com/live/wiQ3hM4-9QY?feature=share
2:05 - 2:50 PM
Keynote: Bryan N. Massingale
https://youtube.com/live/tEGQQK6U4zk?feature=share
Thursday, August 15
9:20 - 10:05 AM
Keynote: Maricarmen Bracamontes
https://youtube.com/live/_3WINsEYMtA?feature=share
11:20 - 11:50 AM
Reflectors: Who Do We Need You to Be for the World?
https://youtube.com/live/8aPfMAEu2DE?feature=share
2:30 - 3:45 PM
Discerning the Emerging Future: What’s Emerging?
https://youtube.com/live/g6T3wYHPYCs?feature=share
Friday, August 16
2:00 - 3:00 PM
Who Then Shall We Be?
A Contemplative Prayer for the World
https://youtube.com/live/P0n_Lv_vv7A?feature=share
8:00 PM (approximation)
Outstanding Leadership Award Presentation to Nancy Schreck, OSF
https://youtube.com/live/tilP36D1N80?feature=share
National Office
Leadership Conference of Women Religious
8737 Colesville Road – Suite 610
Silver Spring, MD 20910
301-588-4955
www.lcwr.org
Hurricane Harvey Relief Effort
The facilities of several congregations of women religious have sustained damages from the fury of Hurricane Harvey. We thank the members of Region XII who have provided us with the contact information for congregations that need assistance and the names of congregations that are offering assistance.
Damage varies in the extent of severity, and the capabilities of the congregations to deal with the expenses vary, also. Most of those who have damaged facilities are still reaching out to help those who have been more severely impacted.
1. At this point, we are aware of these Congregations sustaining the worst damage due to the hurricane Harvey disaster: Cenacle Sisters, in Houston, whose facilities are still underwater and have lost everything. They are now housed at Holy Name Retreat Center in Houston.
- Carmelite Missionaries of St. Teresa, in Houston, who have three inundated convents and no flood insurance.
- Dominican Sisters of Mary Immaculate, in Houston, who have roof damage.
- La Salle Sisters, in Houston, who lost everything.
- Missionary Catechists of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary, in Victoria, who have two inundated convents.
- Schoenstatt Sisters of Mary, in Lamar, TX, whose convent and retreat center were badly damaged.
2. Congregations responding directly to the needs of those impacted by hurricane Harvey are:
- Sisters of the Incarnate Word and Blessed Sacrament (CVI) in Houston and Incarnate Word Academy
- Sisters of the Incarnate Word and Blessed Sacrament in Corpus Christi
- Sisters of the Incarnate Word and Blessed Sacrament in Victoria
- Missionary Catechists of the Sacred Hearts in Victoria Sisters of the Incarnate Word and Blessed Sacrament in Beaumont
- Cenacle Sisters in Houston
Contributions may be made directly to the congregations needing assistance and we provide the contact information for your reference.
Congregation of Our Lady of the Retreat in the Cenacle
(Sr. Pamela J. Falkowski, RC, pamelajeanrc@gmail.com Local Superior)
430 Bunker Hill Road, Houston, TX 77024-6399
Carmelite Missionaries of St. Teresa
(Sr. Victoria Alvarez, victoriaalvarez14@yahoo.com.mx Provincial Superior)
9548 Deer Trail Drive, Houston, TX 77038-3902
Dominican Sisters of Mary Immaculate Province
(Sr. Angela Pham, OP, srangela2012@gmail.com Provincial Superior)
5250 Gasmer Drive, Houston, TX 77035-5716
LaSalle Sisters
(Sr. Thoa Thi Ta, Ls.S, balaovn@yahoo.com Local Superior)
13115 Dogwood Blossom Trail, Houston, TX 770665
Missionary Catechists of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary
(Sr. Midory Wu, MSCH, wumidory@hotmail.com Provincial Superior)
203 E. Sabine Street, Victoria, TX 77901
Schoenstatt Sisters of Mary, SchoenstattLamar@gmail.com
(Donate with Credit card or PayPal account on website Schoenstatt-texas.org or schoenstattlamartx@corpus.twcbc.com )
134 Front Street, Rockport, TX 78382-7800
Contact information for the congregations responding directly to the needs of those impacted by hurricane Harvey follows:
Sisters of the Incarnate Word
(Sr. Lauren Beck, CVI, lbeck@incarnateword.org President, Incarnate Word Academy)
3400 Bradford Street, Houston, TX 77025
Hurricane Harvey Relief Fund
(Sr. Anne Marie Espinosa 361-774-4910)
Sisters of the Incarnate Word and Blessed Sacrament
5201 Lipes Blvd., Corpus Christi, TX 78413
Sisters of the Incarnate Word and Blessed Sacrament
(Sr. Stephana Marbach, IWBS, srstephana@yahoo.com )
1101 NE Water Street, Victoria, TX 77901
Missionary Catechists of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary
(Sr. Midory Wu, MSCH, wumidory@hotmail.com Provincial Superior)
203 E. Sabine Street, Victoria, TX 77901
Sisters of the Incarnate Word and Blessed Sacrament
(Sr. Annette Wagner, IWBS, sawagner@iwbscc.org [for Beaumont])
5201 Lipes Blvd., Corpus Christi, TX 78413
Congregation of Our Lady of the Retreat in the Cenacle
(Sr. Pamela J. Falkowski, RC, pamelajeanrc@gmail.com Local Superior)
430 Bunker Hill Road, Houston, TX 77024-6399
Congregation of Divine Providence
(Sr. Anita Brenek, CDP, abrenek@cdptexas.org )
515 SW 24th Street, San Antonio, TX 78207
Know that whatever support you can offer will be deeply appreciated. We now hold in our thoughts and prayers all who have been and will be affected by hurricane Irma.
Joan Marie Steadman, CSC
Executive Director
2019 LCWR Assembly Video - August 13-16, 2019
To view the video, visit: https://animoto.com/play/rH2r0s1bUH0OcSuSli3itg
LCWR Election Results 2023
Balloting for the LCWR president-elect and national board opened on Monday, June 5 and closed on Friday, June 23.
We are happy to announce that Sue Ernster, FSPA is our new president-elect. She will join Maureen Geary, OP and Rebecca Ann Gemma, OP in the LCWR presidency.
It is also our pleasure to announce our three new LCWR board members:
- Rose Martin, RSM
- Veronica Esparza Ramirez, OP
- Celeste Trahan, CCVI
Congratulations to Sue, Rose, Veronica, and Celeste. They will join Kathleen Brazda, CSJ; Laura Bregar, OSU; Pushpa Gomes, CSC; Nkechi Iwuoha, PHJC; Patty Johnson, CSJ; and Sean Peters, CSJ on the LCWR national board.
The terms of our newly elected leaders will begin at the conclusion of the national assembly in August.
A special thanks to our other gifted candidates: Maryanne King, CSR, LaDonna Manternach, BVM, Maryann McMahon, OP, and Corinne Sanders, OP for their generous offering of self in service of religious life and LCWR.
Thanks to all who participated in this year’s nomination and election process.
With prayers and best wishes for our newly elected leaders,
Laura Bregar, OSU
Anna Marie Reha, SSND, Chair
Mary Soher, OP
Anne Victory, HM
LCWR Nominations and Elections Committee
2024 LCWR Assembly Materials
CLICK HERE to access the materials and resources from the 2024 LCWR Assembly.
To view a video of the highlights from the Assembly CLICK HERE.
National Black Sisters' Conference and LCWR Issue Statement on Conviction of Derek Chauvin for Murder of George Floyd
The following is a joint statement issued by The National Black Sisters’ Conference (NBSC) and the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR) in response to the conviction of former police officer Derek Chauvin for the murder of George Floyd.
We, the National Black Sisters’ Conference and the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, stand together in our commitment to the sacred dignity of each human person as emphasized in Catholic Social Teaching.
In the aftermath of the guilty verdict in the trial of Derek Chauvin for the murder of George Floyd, we recommit to working for real and sustained systemic change in the struggle to end institutional racism in every aspect of our society.
Sadly, we know that the trend of fatal police shootings has only escalated in this country over the last four years. The rate of fatal police shootings among Black Americans is much higher than that of any other ethnic group. Starting with the savage beating of Rodney King in Los Angeles in 1991 up to the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis, the trend of abuse at the hands of law enforcement has alarmingly increased.
In 2020 there were 1,021 fatal police shootings, and in the first three months of this year 213 people have been shot by the police; 30 of whom were African Americans. Police brutality is only one of the many manifestations of systemic racism; but it is one that too often ends in the death of too many young African Americans.
We believe that we are at a crucial moment in race relations in this country. We must acknowledge and work to eradicate the sin of White Privilege that seeks to affirm the false superiority of Anglo-Saxon culture and way of life.
We must as Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. admonished us “learn to live together as brothers (and sisters) or perish together as fools.” Therefore, we call upon all people of good will and especially people of faith to join us in working for real and sustainable solutions to the racial divide in our country.
We will not rest and our work will not be done until the belief that all people are created equal and entitled to the promise of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, is a lived reality for every American citizen.
LCWR Mourns the Death of Former LCWR President Theresa Kane, RSM
With sadness we note the death on August 22, 2024 of Theresa Kane, RSM who served in the presidency of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious from 1978-1981. She was also the recipient of LCWR’s Outstanding Leadership Award in 2004, the second person to ever receive this honor.
The Sisters of Mercy recognized Theresa's natural leadership skills soon after her entrance to their order. She was appointed councilor and secretary for the New York Province of the Sisters of Mercy at age 29. Four years later she was elected the provincial administrator, a position she held for seven years until her election as president of the Religious Sisters of Mercy of the Union at age 40.
One year later, she was elected president of LCWR and, in that capacity, greeted Pope John Paul II during his visit to the Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington, DC on October 7, 1979, speaking publicly from the sanctuary. Her courageous statement asking for greater involvement of women in the Catholic Church, spoken because of the yearning she had heard expressed by hundreds of women who were looking for equality in the world and church, drew international attention. As noted at the time in The Sacramento Bee, “It must have taken enormous courage for her to stand before the pope at an internationally televised prayer service and make her appeal. We have rarely heard such quiet, measured language of such force.”
Her action made an undeniably important contribution – it focused worldwide attention on the crucial question of the rights of women. Over the years since that time, Theresa gave her life’s energies, time, and skills to fostering religious life, creating peace, and working for the rights of women and the rights of people who are impoverished. She was a founding member of the Intercommunity Center for Justice and Peace in New York, a chair of LCWR Region 2, a US representative to the International Union of Superiors General, board member and president of the Washington Office on Latin America, founding member and first vice president of the board of the Association for the Rights of Catholics in the Church, among other actions of service.
LCWR echoes the words once spoken by Theresa’s long-time mentor and friend, Sister of Mercy Betty Carroll, who noted, “A picture of Theresa must embrace a Theresa who smiles in adversity, and who responds to closed doors with a consistent but gentle plea for civilized discourse and dialogue.” We are grateful for her perseverance in consistently working for a more just world and persisting with such graciousness.
Funeral arrangements are pending. The Sisters of Mercy will post them here when they are finalized. We join in prayer with these sisters and all who were touched by Theresa during her 87 years of life.
National Office
Leadership Conference of Women Religious
8737 Colesville Road – Suite 610
Silver Spring, MD 20910
301-588-4955
www.lcwr.org
LCWR letter to the presidential candidates
CLICK HERE to read and sign the letter
LCWR Calls for the Welcome and Humane Treatment of Arriving Migrants
The Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR) is deeply troubled by President Trump’s continued denigration of those fleeing untenable situations in their home countries. These are mothers and fathers, sisters and brothers who have been forced from their homes by unimaginable violence and insecurity; runaway corruption; and droughts and floods linked to climate change. These are women and girls fleeing intolerable situations of domestic violence. These are young men and women who have no access to quality education and no hope of economic opportunity.
These are courageous people who have rejected cultures of corruption and exploitation. They are traveling the same road trod by our forbearers who fled tyranny and violence in search of the American dream. They are people of hope and promise who only want the opportunity to contribute their toil and talent to this nation.
We reject the president’s rhetoric of fear and policy of division that poisons our politics. We choose instead to embrace a dream for America that is filled with hope for a nation united in service of the common good. We stand with Pope Francis who calls us to “promote the dignity of all our brothers and sisters, particularly the poor and the excluded of society, those who are abandoned, immigrants and those who suffer violence and human trafficking.”
We urge the administration to manage refugee arrivals humanely and in a manner that respects their dignity and rights under US and international law and to:
- Allow migrants to approach our border and ask for protection in the United States and to be admitted for processing in a timely manner.
- Ensure that asylum seekers have access to legal counsel and receive a fair resolution of their claim.
- Guarantee that parents and children stay together after they are apprehended. Holding families indefinitely in detention or detaining parents while releasing their children violates the values of this nation and the standards set forth in the Flores settlement.
- Eschew detention of those awaiting adjudication of their asylum petitions in favor of alternatives that are more humane and more cost efficient.
- Direct Homeland Security to cooperate with faith-based and humanitarian organizations who are prepared to assist asylum-seekers.
The United States has a long and proud history of welcoming immigrants and sheltering refugees. Women religious have been blessed to be able to accompany and serve migrant communities across this country for a very long time. We will continue to welcome them as our national history demands and our faith requires.
LCWR is an association of leaders of congregations of Catholic sisters in the United States. The conference has nearly 1350 members, who represent more than 45,600 women religious in the United States. Founded in 1956, LCWR assists its members to carry out their service of leadership to further the mission of the Gospel in today’s world.
Contact: Sister Annmarie Sanders, IHM | LCWR Director of Communications| asanders@lcwr.org|301-588-4955
LCWR Stands in Solidarity with the People of the Middle East
Since we first heard of the loss of life, violence, imprisonment, and war in Israel and Gaza, we, at LCWR, searched for a way to respond that was true to our commitment to work on the root causes on injustice from a stance of intersectionality and the transformation of consciousness. In the days that have passed, we have reached out to interfaith leaders, representatives of organizations on the front lines in Israel and Gaza, and particularly the Jewish communities in the United States to ask them, "What do you need at this time?”
With alarming consistency, we have heard the call to be cautious in our words, to avoid escalating the crisis with rhetoric that assigns simplistic blame or solutions, and above all to call for an intolerance of the propensity towards violence in communities of faith within our borders, particularly towards Jewish communities. With these admonitions in mind, we share the following response to the Israel-Gaza crisis.
Included with the response are resources for use in the ongoing education of your members that can help us all understand this war from the perspective of those whose communities are most impacted. Please feel free to distribute these resources as widely as you wish.
We stand together in our commitment to the urgent work of transformative justice and the discipline of contemplative prayer that we trust can help heal the pain of loss, wounds, and division.
Sincerely,
National Office
Leadership Conference of Women Religious
8737 Colesville Road – Suite 610
Silver Spring, MD 20910
301-588-4955
www.lcwr.org
Tere Maya, CCVI to Address USCCB at Spiritual Discernment Day
We would like you to know that the United States Catholic Conference of Bishops (USCCB) invited LCWR past president Teresa Maya, CCVI to address the entire body of bishops at their spiritual discernment day on Monday, November 12.
As you may know, the USCCB changed the agenda of their annual assembly in light of the clergy sexual abuse situation. Knowing that true discernment begins by listening, the bishops have planned a day of discernment and prayer that will provide opportunities for them to listen to the tradition of the Church, as well as to the people. To that end, they will conduct their day of prayer as an experience of lectio divina. Readings from the tradition of the Church will be followed by reflections from two abuse survivors who will address the bishops from their personal experiences, a young mother who will speak about the responsibility of the Church to future generations, and Tere, who will have 15 minutes to address the bishops. Tere will speak in the afternoon, following the last reading of the day which is from Charles Borromeo.
According to Tere, the USCCB invited her to speak because of what LCWR was able to accomplish at its LCWR assembly this past August - provide hope to its members while also discussing delicate and challenging issues with honesty and transparency.
Portions of the day will be live-streamed via the USCCB website at http://www.usccb.org/live.
We assume that there will be media coverage of this day and we wanted you to be aware that this was happening. We apologize that we were not able to let you know of this sooner, but we were honoring USCCB's decision to not release the names of those addressing the assembly until now.
We are very grateful to Tere for accepting this important challenge, and for the courage it requires. Please join us in prayer with and for Tere, the other speakers, and for the body of bishops during this important assembly.
Sharlet Wagner, CSC, LCWR president
Jayne Helmlinger, CSJ, LCWR president-elect
Carol Zinn, SSJ, LCWR executive director
LCWR Mourns the Passing of Cokie Roberts
September 18, 2019
[Silver Spring, MD] With so many others – nationally and globally – the Leadership Conference of Women Religious grieves the death of journalist Cokie Roberts. We stand as witnesses to what has been reported worldwide about her professional expertise, as well as her unfailing kindness and generosity. Our organization, as well as many of the women religious we represent, has deeply appreciated all that she brought to the world she served.
Cokie was educated by the Religious of the Sacred Heart in their Bethesda, Maryland high school and was deeply influenced by the spirit and dedication of these women. It was the start of life-long friendships with women religious and an intense interest in the history of Catholic sisters since their arrival in the early 1700s to the United States via New Orleans, Cokie’s birthplace. When LCWR produced the documentary, Women & Spirit: Catholic Sisters in America, Cokie was clearly the person we believed could best serve as the film’s narrator. Cokie immediately and enthusiastically agreed to the task. When she had to postpone by a day the narrative taping session in Washington, DC to fly to California to deliver the eulogy at the funeral of Betty Ford, a promise she had made to the former first lady years earlier, we saw firsthand how Cokie was able to balance the many relationships, connections, and responsibilities she cherished. That capacity to treat each person and each commitment with equal respect and reverence is among the qualities that defined her extraordinary presence.
Cokie’s remarkable upbringing in a family steeped in politics and strong Catholic values clearly shaped her own dedication to creating a more just and moral world for all. We were moved, nonetheless, when she also credited the Catholic sisters in her life for inspiring her faith and dedication. In 2009, Cokie addressed the assembly of our organization, and said in part, “The official numbers of women religious in this country might have fallen--but it’s safe to say that the number of religious women who are acting on their faith to serve society is higher than ever before in human history. Those of us who feel that calling feel it because of you.”
Clearly, Cokie was one who felt that calling and acted on it throughout her whole life. Her dedication to creating a better world for all made her a true sister to our organization and to women religious throughout the country. Earlier in 2019, Cokie was interviewed by LCWR for its journal, Occasional Papers, and was asked this question: What are some of the great questions of our time that capture your imagination, that stretch your thinking? Her response, in part, was: “Man’s inhumanity to man remains one of the greatest challenges. I very firmly believe that every human is made in the image and likeness of God and believe that we have to operate on that principle both in our personal relationships and in public policy. Anytime we might be thinking that we are getting beyond inhumane behavior, new disasters rise up – like what we are seeing in the Middle East, Africa, and right on our own border. Man’s inhumanity to man remains a constant source of inquiry. How does it happen?”
Her life-long pursuit of this question remains a deep source of inspiration to us. We are grateful for Cokie’s many decades of exploring and probing how we can make the world a more just and moral setting for all people. Her tireless work as a reporter, commentator, analyst, columnist, speaker, and book author kept the most important questions facing humanity in our consciousness. The authenticity and integrity of her work will be appreciated for years to come.
Contact:
Sister Annmarie Sanders, IHM | Communications Director
Leadership Conference of Women Religious
8747 Cameron Street, Suite 610 | Silver Spring, MD 20910
asanders@lcwr.org | 301-588-4955
Towards a More Perfect Union: 2020 Election Reflections
CLICK HERE for resources prepared by other organizations including voters’ guides, strategies for resisting voter suppression, civility pledges, and voter registration and “get out the vote” materials.
Discernment on the Future of Religious Life
Discerning Our Emerging Future is an initiative created by LCWR to support institutes of women religious as we explore together how collectively to organize for mission at a time of dramatic change. The initiative provides a path into the future marked by collaboration and creativity, as well as support and solidarity.
The accelerated pace of change in religious institutes points to an urgent need to work across religious institutes to create new sustainable structures that assure a future for religious life. Leaders are strongly urged to seriously consider the implications of the current reality of large numbers of aging members in religious communities, along with the entrance into religious orders in the United States of approximately 200 women each year. There is a clear call to our generation of leaders to create new ways to organize the body of US women religious for mission and service.
For more information, visit: https://lcwr.org/discernment-future-religious-life
Updated LCWR Response and Prayer for the Middle East
We begin our week cognizant of the struggles for peace in so many corners of the globe, in our own communities, and in our own lives. LCWR, through the work of transformation of consciousness, is finding ways to take seriously our collective commitment to contemplative action, awareness, and engagement in the conflicts around us.
We have updated the LCWR response to the crisis in the Middle East that we shared with you last week. While not a statement of policy or position, this response invites each of us to willingly refuse violent rhetoric, find resources to support our understanding, and recognize the complexity of healing the polarities that shape the root causes of the division among us. The work of transformative justice impels each of us into a response. The LCWR response has been updated to reflect our inclusion of all those who experience the consequences of violence in the current conflict in the Middle East and around Earth.
Call to Make October 17 at Day of Fasting and Prayer
The Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, on behalf of the bishops of the Holy Land has asked that people make Tuesday, October 17 a day of fasting, abstinence, and prayer. Please see the notice from the International Union of Superiors General who have asked religious globally to join this effort. We encourage you to ask your sisters, associates, and partners in mission to consider participating. You may want to organize your sisters for a specific time of prayer together.
Resources for Prayer
We would also like to share with you two resources that might be helpful to you as we pray for all those impacted by the violence in the Middle East.
Prayer from World Relief
Lord, You said “Peace, be still,” and the storm was stilled.
We confess that at times, we feel overwhelmed by the storm. But today, we lift our eyes to you — the Maker of heaven and earth. And we ask for a miracle… let your peace fill Israel and Gaza.
We lift our prayer to you,
Lord, hear us.
God, let violence cease in the region. Let there be no more bloodshed. We know your heart breaks for those killed and those left behind — for the orphaned child, the injured elderly, those abducted and families desperate for safety. Lord, speak into this crisis.
We lift our prayer to you,
Lord, hear us.
We pray for those who have lost loved ones. Let your peace and love wash over them. Please protect and provide for those who have been abducted and bring them home safely. Let them be reunited with their loved ones — let them feel the comfort of their embrace.
We lift our prayer to you,
Lord, hear us.
God, we pray that you open doors that allow food, essentials and medical supplies to reach those in need. May first responders be able to rescue the injured, comfort the grieving and help rebuild many lives.
We lift our prayer to you,
Lord, hear us.
God, we pray for your peace and reconciliation to overcome conflict. We ask that you give wisdom and discernment to our global leaders and those in positions of power who have the ability to impact the course of this war. Help us to be bold advocates and agents of peace in our own communities.
We lift our prayer to you,
Lord, hear us.
We pray for people scattered around the globe whose friends and family members have been caught in the crisis. We know you are with them. Help us to express your love to those affected in our communities, churches and workplaces.
We lift our prayer to you,
Lord, hear us.
Lord, we raise Israel and Gaza to you, and pray for those suffering. We ask that you provide peace in this crisis, and protection and comfort for all those who have been impacted.
We lift our prayer to you,
Lord, hear us.
Amen.
Another resource is this video of a virtual choir of 54 young people from 36 countries singing together “Veni Sancte Spiritus” by Taizé from their homes. Although recorded three years ago, the prayer is appropriate as we all seek the presence of the Spirit for our suffering world.
National Office
Leadership Conference of Women Religious
8737 Colesville Road – Suite 610
Silver Spring, MD 20910
301-588-4955
www.lcwr.org
Joint Statement on Election Integrity
LCWR recently collaborated with other faith leaders in issuing a joint statement on election integrity: CLICK HERE.
Launch of LCWR’s Transforming Grace
LCWR’s new initiative, Transforming Grace, runs from now through November 2024. Beginning today, there are resources on the LCWR website during this year-long effort to increase our capacity to live in a world characterized by division, polarization, and fear.
The first season of this initiative takes place during Advent and focuses on Transforming Consciousness. A reflection will be provided for each week of the season that includes suggestions for prayer and an invitation to dialogue. We believe that these 12 months leading to the national election provide a context for this work of contemplation, education, commitment, and response – the work of transformative justice.
The materials will continue to come to you throughout Advent and then will begin again during Lent with a focus on Transforming Presence. We believe that these efforts we are making collectively will lead us into a deeper embodiment of the LCWR Call 2023-2028.
May this season of Thanksgiving ready us to enter into this new initiative with hearts open to the transformation we need as individuals, a nation, and global community.
National Office
Leadership Conference of Women Religious
8737 Colesville Road – Suite 610
Silver Spring, MD 20910
301-588-4955
www.lcwr.org
2024 LCWR Outstanding Leadership Award Recipient
We are pleased to share that Nancy Schreck, OSF has been selected by the LCWR members as the recipient of the 2024 LCWR Outstanding Leadership Award.
Nancy, a Sister of St. Francis of Dubuque, Iowa, is currently the program director of Excel Inc., a community service organization located in Okolona Mississippi.
Nancy previously served in leadership and formation ministry in her congregation, as well as in the LCWR presidency and as a US delegate to the International Union of Superiors General (UISG). She also served for eight years as a member of the council of the Franciscan Handmaids located in New York. Her contributions to LCWR over the years -- including keynote presentations at LCWR assemblies, facilitation of the Leading from Within Retreat and New Leader Workshop, articles, and more – have significantly influenced leaders and members of religious institutes nationally and globally. She is a sought-after presenter and facilitator for many religious groups throughout the United States and beyond.
LCWR looks forward to learning more about Nancy and the leadership she has exercised in many contexts throughout her lifetime when she is presented with the award at the 2024 assembly in Orlando in August.
Special thanks to the committee members who oversaw the selection process: Anna Marie Espinosa, IWBS; Rosemarie Jasinski, CBS; Vicky Larson, PBVM; Anne Munley, IHM; Constance Phelps, SCL; Sharlet Wagner, CSC; and Carol Zinn, SSJ.
National Office
Leadership Conference of Women Religious
8737 Colesville Road – Suite 610
Silver Spring, MD 20910
301-588-4955
www.lcwr.org
2022 LCWR Assembly Materials
CLICK HERE to access the materials.