National
Catholic Reporter, July 2, 2008
Community supports ousted St. Louis nun
By
Tom Fox NCR Staff
Sister
of Charity Louise Lears, forced out of all church ministerial roles by Saint Louis
Archbishop Raymond Burke, is described by friends and colleagues in near saintly
terms.
They call
her a bright, energetic, compassionate and faith-filled woman. They see her as
a creative, generous and selfless person, a highly effective parish minister.
They say she is first rate teacher and preacher. They view her as a person guided
by the gospels including an unwavering commitment to justice and the local poor.
These
seemingly universal accolades, however, were not enough to save Lears from a severe
interdict by Burke who banished her from all Saint Louis church ministries last
week.
He also
banned her from receiving any of the Sacraments in the archdiocese.
It
was her belief that all church ministries, including womens ordination,
should be open to women. Curiously, this seems to have been only one of many of
her passions and, perhaps, not her central passion, which seems to have been parish
work.
Lears was
shocked twice last week. First, she learned that Burke had judged her guilty of
three grave canonical offenses against faith and church teachings; then, the next
day, she learned that her accuser and judge he had been elevated to a new Vatican
post, prefect of the churchs highest canonical court in Rome.
She
was out; then so was he, at least from Saint Louis.
Lears,
58, for the past three years has been a member of the pastoral team at Saint Cronans
parish in South St. Louis, and a coordinator of religious education in the archdiocese.
Lears
is not speaking to the media, but issued as statement saying she was deeply
saddened by the judgment.
I
love the church. I would never give scandal to the People of God. As a faith-filled
woman, I root my life and ministry in scripture, Eucharist, and Jesus gospel
message of nonviolence and justice. As a Sister of Charity, I vow my life to God
with whom I walk in humility, simplicity, and charity.
While Lears
primary identification is that of a member of the Saint Cronan pastoral team,
she is or has recently been a member of a number of other organizations. She is
past president of the board of the Center for Survivors of Torture and War Trauma
in St. Louis, a board and finance committee member for the Family Care Health
Centers in St. Louis, a member of Winter Outreach to Homeless there, also a member
of the WEARTH Housing Coalition, a coalition led by low-wealth women in
the Forest Park Southeast neighborhood in St. Louis.
She
is also an adjunct faculty member in the Department of Theological Studies at
Saint Louis University specializing in medical ethics and spirituality nonviolence.
Mark
Chmiel, also an adjunct professor in the department, had this to say about his
colleague:
Sister
Louise Lears has made availability and accompaniment a way of life. I have seen
how much thoughtful attention and encouragement she gives to her students at Saint
Louis University in her popular course, Spirituality of Nonviolence. Several times
our community in Saint Louis traveled to the annual School of Americas vigil in
mid-November, and I was always touched by Louise's calm and compassionate presence
over those long weekends.
She
also participated in our direct-action efforts to raise awareness and provoke
responsible action about the U.S. government use of torture in Iraq and at Guantanamo.
In such wise, wherever she is, she continually nurtures a community of conscience
as naturally as she breathes.
Gina
Meyer, a former student in Lears' class, Spirituality of Nonviolence, said, "The
class completely reoriented my view of human relationships. We learned about Ghandi,
Martin Luther King, Jr., Jesus of Nazareth, and many other peacemakers. Beyond
that, though, Sister Louise showed us exercises and gave us challenges in our
daily lives that made me realize how much my own language and behavior affect
those around me.
Nonviolence
is a true way of life and I learned if from Sr. Louise. She taught me how to be
a more loving and peaceful Christian, and I am so happy that I was able to learn
from her."
NCR
contacted a number of her other colleagues who spoke with a mixture of outrage
and mourning, anger at what they called the injustice of the action taken against
Lears and sadness as they pondered the loss of her talents to the archdiocese.
Sister
of Saint Joseph of Carondelet Jean Abbott recalled the time Lears arrived to help
her set up a center to receive victims of torture coming from Guatemala. Abbott
had found an old tavern, but it was Lears who imagined how it could be transformed
into a vibrant center and set the wheels in motion. I had very little money,
Abbott said. Louise had an eye for organization. She brought the place to
life.
She
has a keen sense of justice, Abbott said.
The
Saint Cronan parish council last week seemed equally vexed and saddened. The council
issued a statement criticizing Burkes action while defending Lears' pastoral
work wholeheartedly. (We have) been edified by her depth of
caring for the people of this parish, our children, the children of our neighbors,
and the men and women who call the Forest Park Southeast neighborhood of St. Louis
home.
The
statement added that Lears has been a model of compassion and of non-violent
resolution of conflict. She has encouraged us to live more fully the Gospel of
Jesus. It saddens us deeply that she has been singled-out for prosecution in a
church court.
Echoing
these expressions, Abbott said, I feel tremendous compassion for Louise
and Im extremely sad for the church.
Jerry
King, a member of the parish and member of the Center for Theology and Social
Analysis in Saint Louis, an organization he and Lears belong to, found irony in
the Burke censure. Louise was not spoiling for a fight; she really did not
want a fight; she wanted resolution. He said she just wanted to be a pastor
and has been very good at it, very active in her commitments
to the parish, which he described as a last stop for people disaffected
from the church.
King
and others now worry the disaffected are now going to drop out altogether.
Ellen
Rehg, another member of the parish, disagrees. She called Lears a nonviolent
saint adding, I dont say that lightly.
She
will continue to live nonviolently, maintaining her integrity. You know Ive
hardly ever heard of canon law until recently. Shes going to make it. So
will we. Shes taught us to trust in the gospels.
Louise
Lears Photo by Jim Tobin
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