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Home / Vocations / Consecrated Women / Frequently Asked Questions
 
Consecrated Women Frequently Asked Questions
  1. How do I know that I am called to be a Sister?
     
  2. How do I know which community to enter?
     
  3. What is the first step in entering a consecrated community?
     
  4. What are the Vows?
 
When you find your ability to love and to be loved is beginning to take root and grow; when you feel an urge to participate fully in life, to understand different people, cultures and ideas; when you see the poor, the hungry, the lonely the imprisoned and the lost, in need of a hand, a smile, and you answer; when you realize that they look at you and in them you see Christ, you have the gift to serve them.  They need you.  When you find your faith, hope and charity inspire you to devote your life in service of the people, when these charismatic qualities together with other necessary natural endowments such as physical, moral and intellectual fitness meet with the approval of the community, you know.
 
 
The choosing of a specific community is dependent chiefly on your unique gifts, talents, and the field of service where you feel you can best serve Christ.  Sisters are women of the Church able to discover the needs of the people, and flexible enough to respond to them.  Your selection of an active service community may be determined by your call to serve in nursing, education, social work, or other areas of need.  If you feel drawn to a life of prayer and solitude, a contemplative community would be your choice.  You will need to choose among many communities, one where you think you would feel most at home.  It is important to get to know Sisters from various communities before making a choice.  You may be invited by a community to attend a live-in weekend or a retreat.  The Archdiocese Vocation Office also hosts three "Come Away Days" for young women ages 18-35.  At these days of information and input, you will have the opportunity to meet sisters from various communities, and come to know other young women who are also interested in religious life.  Contact the Vocation Office for information regarding the date of the next Come Away Day.
 
 
Generally, a woman must be at least of college age and pursuing a college degree or a career. She must be growing in responsibility, independence and ability to make decisions. Becoming a member means becoming gradually acquainted with a community's members and spirit, and allowing oneself to be known by the community. This means that you will continue to live in your own place of study or work. You will be in contact with the community through prayer, guidance and short periods of experience in community living. This period varies from a few months to a year depending on the needs of the individual and the community's knowledge of the person. During this period you will begin to know your desire and capacity to live a religious life.
 
After this period of contact with the community, when you feel you wish to experience this kind of life more fully, you will enter a training period within the community. The type and length of training will vary with the community. The period usually lasts from one to three years.  The purpose is to initiate you into religious life, to give you an opportunity to live it, and to determine your suitability for this life. Then through a mutual decision, the woman is invited to make vows.
 
A Sister chooses to deepen her baptismal commitment by making three vows:
  • Poverty:  By living her vow of poverty, she demonstrates simplicity of living, supported through community living, with the knowledge that the gifts and talents she has received from God are to be shared with others.
     
  • Celibacy:  The vow of celibacy constantly reminds her that God alone is the center of her life.  Through this vow, the Sister is called to love others deeply, yet non-possessively.
     
  • Obedience:  By the vow of obedience, she promises to listen to and follow Jesus, as the will of God in her life; and to be open and available to be sent wherever she is needed.
 
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