by Joyce Meyer

International Liaison, Global Sisters Report

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GSR Today - Each day we read about the religious wars in various parts of the world, people claiming their dedication to God and God’s favor of them over others. How will we ever learn to respect and appreciate that God is One and that we all share commitment to that One but in different ways?

by Joshua J. McElwee

News Editor

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jmcelwee@ncronline.org

From NCRonline.org - The theme of the recent 60th annual assembly of the College Theology Society was "God has begun a great work in us: The embodiment of love in contemporary consecrated life." The focus on Catholic religious life was partially in the light of the Vatican's continuing criticism of an umbrella group of U.S. Catholic sisters known as the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR).

While Auxiliary Bishop Eusebio L. Elizondo of Seattle was in El Salvador recently, an immigration-reform advocate shared his view on the topic that was the focus of the bishop's trip: the increase in unaccompanied minors making the often dangerous journey from Central America and Mexico into the United States.

by Rachel Myslivy

Contributor

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Over the course of two years, I had the great pleasure of interviewing more than 40 Catholic sisters on environmental issues. Interviews with these “green sisters” radically changed my conception of religious life and broadened my own understandings of environmental issues, peace, justice and Catholic theology.

Rachel Myslivy holds a master's degree in Religious Studies and a graduate certificate in Environmental Studies. Her research focuses on the intersection of religion and ecology as seen in religious communities in Kansas. She is working to expand the scope of the Green Sisters in Kansas Oral History Project and eventually publish the collected stories.

The work of novitiate is that of soul searching.  It requires digging deep, meeting yourself and God head on, facing your true self, learning about what religious life is, nurturing a deeper prayer life, learning to live intentionally and with constant discernment, and prayerfully considering if the call to live in this way with a specific congregation in their manner of being is right for you. Suffice it to say, you don’t get weekends off.

Film review - In this striking and often beautiful film, Polish director Pawel Pawlikowski has given us much for reflection and much to savor. The independent drama, “Ida,” shot in black and white, follows the life and decisions of a young Polish novice living in a cloister in the early 1960s.