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Sr. Mary Teresita Richards

Hear My Story

Date of Profession:
August 9, 1987

Influences:
“My mom [Rosalie Richards] would be a great inspiration. I didn’t know when I was younger that my mom would have loved to have been a sister . . . Because of that she prayed that one of her children might have a vocation.”

Interests:
Cooking (especially soup and bread), camping, playing guitar, and researching the life of the foundress of the Sisters of Notre Dame, Sister Maria Aloysia Wolbring.

Best thing about being a sister:
“It’s a who, it’s a person . . . our God is deeply, intensely in love with us. You find that and it makes everything different.”

 

Home FAQ's Sister FAQ's Sister Why is that some sisters dress in clerical garb or habits and others do not?

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Why is that some sisters dress in clerical garb or habits and others do not?

Answer

Those who maintain habits today do so for various reasons.  One of the primary reasons is that religious dress is a sign.  The habit is a symbol of faith in God and commitment to Christianity.  Another frequent rationale for religious garb is that it is simple dress and therefore a way to live out the vow of poverty.  A sister who wears religious garb can own just two or three changes of dress and be free of the expense that may be involved in a more extensive contemporary wardrobe.

Some communities have opted to wear street clothes, saying that the most valid sign of Christian faith is lifestyle, rather than garb.  They contend that religious dress creates an undesirable barrier between them and laity with whom they work.  Some Catholics and non-Catholics distance themselves from people in traditional religious dress.  Furthermore, those who have discontinued wearing habits often say the original reason for it was to wear the dress of the common people; therefore, street clothes are the common people's clothes today.

   
 


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