Sr. Deborah Marie Dunevant is a Daughter of St. Paul, and it would be easy for those who aren't familiar with the congregation to make assumptions based on its conservative dress. But the congregation, celebrating its 100th year in 2015, is dedicated to communicating Christ through all forms of media.

GSR Today - We youths are an optimistic (albeit sometimes cynical) bunch. Maybe it’s sheer arrogance that leads us to believe that our chosen paths will continue to be available to us despite all empirical evidence to the contrary. Or maybe it’s a sense that even if the outward appearance of things change, the fundamental values can remain the same. 

This story appears in the LCWR feature series. View the full series.

by Carol Stanton

Contributor

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Analysis - The Catholic church has much to learn from the recent encounter between the Leadership Conference of Women Religious and the Vatican's Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, which recently concluded an investigation into the sisters’ theology, procedures and program choices.

by Joan Chittister

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In late July, while John Kerry sat across a table in Paris from Mohammed Zarif, chief Iranian negotiator for the Iranian-U.S. nuclear treaty, I and six other Americans from the Global Peace Initiative of Women sat across tables from some of the major religious figures in Iran. We were in Qom, the Vatican of Shia Islam.

By focusing on the large cohort of sisters in their 70s and 80s, are we not forgetting the dynamic energy of those sisters in their 20s, 30s, 40s, 50s and 60s? As we look to the emerging future, are these not the sisters, especially those ages 20 through 55, who will develop this future over the next 20 years? If these sisters are relegated to the future, how can they create that future?

by Joyce Meyer

International Liaison, Global Sisters Report

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GSR Today - An exciting part of my work with GSR is the surprises that pop up now and again. For example, recently I met Sister Rosewitha, a Franciscan Sister from Germany, who told me that her congregation had started out in 1241 as a Beguine community in a small town of Dillingen, situated on the Danube River. Having just read Laura Swan’s book The Wisdom of the Beguines I was thrilled.