Is she a nun or is she old order Menonite?
Can't tell can you?
Nice modified habit there "sister".
Adventures in Albion
The Church hopes that its manga comic, with pictures of nuns and monks playing pool and surfing the internet, will help to improve the image of the vocation, which leaders believe is seen as "monotonous and boring".
The minimum age to enter a seminary is 18, but children as young as 10 are being targeted by the recruitment drive, which is encouraging them to consider life as a parish priest or in a religious order.
Fr Paul Embery, the Church's Director of Vocations, admitted that persuading
teenagers to commit to a life of poverty, chastity and obedience was not an easy
sell, but said that the Church was desperate to reach younger candidates for
ordination.
"The Church was desperate to reach younger candidates"...
Then give them the Faith. Can't be all that desperate can ye? Can't be so desperate that you would actually stoop to trying the religious approach?
It's very simple really. The Catholics don't have the Faith. Tough to get vocations out of them when they're not Catholic in any way but a name on a baptismal register.
For forty years, you've given them warm blacmange, Hallmark greeting card mottoes and hugs instead of the answers they wanted. Why is this so very difficult for them to understand? Do they really expect to get vocations to the priesthood and religious life from people who don't know why they ought to believe in God? What sort of people are they trying to attract?
oh. wait. I get it.
People like themselves.
"We realise that this kind of commitment is counter-cultural. It requires great
sacrifice, and a lot of people see it as monotonous and boring, but actually it
is an extremely fulfilling job," he said.
"an extremely fulfilling job."
Ok. I've got it.
Of course. We dumped the icky and offputting religious part of Catholicism. That sort of stuff was a downer man. The kids don't groove to it. You gotta meet them where they are, man. You gotta talk to them about fulfillment.
Ugh.
One of the most powerful attractions in Oriental doctrines is something we
have as well at home [in the Christian West] but too quickly grow out of and
repress - the reality of spiritual presences. Carlyle described it
trenchantly:
To speak in the ancient dialect, we 'have forgotten God'; - in the most
modern dialect and very truth of the matter, we have taken up the Fact of this
Universe as it is not. We have quietly closed our eyes to the eternal substance
of things, and opened them only to the Shows and Shams of things. We quietly
believe this Universe to be intrinsically a great, unintelligble 'Perhaps.'
Contrasting this with real religion, he said:
Religion [to the monks of St. Edmundsbury] is not a diseased
self-introspectino, an agonising inquiry; their duties are clear to them, the
way of supreme good plain, indisputable, and they are traveling on it. Religion
lies over them like an all-embracing heavenly canopy, like an atmosphere and
life-element, which is not spoken of, which in all things is presupposed without
speech.
* ~ *
Among ordinary working Christians, the spiritual element is inconspicuous
by its presence. Nowadays we get self-consciously and deliberately "unreal"
every once in a while in the hope that thereby we become more "spiritual." We do
not see one and the same event as bathed in the natural and the supernatural
at once.
Music is the one incorporeal entrance into the higher world of knowledge
which comprehends mankind but which mankind cannot comprehend.Ludwig Van Beethoven
Weep, weep O Walsingam, Whose dayes are nightes,
Blessings turned to blasphemies, Holy deedes to dispites.
Sinne is where our Ladye sate, Heaven turned is to helle;
Sathan sitte where our Lord did swaye,
Walsingam, oh, farewell!