<http://catholicexchange.com/2009/03/19/116831/>What’s 
the Difference Between Sisters and Nuns?

http://catholicexchange.com/2009/03/19/116831

March 19th, 2009 by 
<http://catholicexchange.com/author/cathy-caridi-jcl/>Cathy 
Caridi, <http://catholicexchange.com/author/cathy-caridi-jcl/>J.C.L.

Q: My children go to a Catholic school that is 
run by nuns.  Or at least I always assumed they 
were nuns. Recently I walked by the principal 
while she was talking to another parent on the 
street, and I heard her correcting him, “No, no, 
we are not nuns.” I didn’t want to be rude so I 
just kept walking. But I wanted to stop and ask 
her, how can they not be nuns? They wear veils 
and they all live together in a convent! –Mark

A: The term nun is casually used today to refer 
to all women religious. But in reality, very few 
of the women we address as “Sister” are actually nuns.

As was mentioned in the 
<http://catholicexchange.com/2008/11/20/114501/>November 
20, 2008 column, the Church’s laws on religious 
life are extremely complicated, not only because 
of the huge number of different religious 
institutes in existence, but also because they 
were founded at various times in the 2000-year 
history of the Church for widely differing 
reasons. At the same time, there are very few 
canons in the Code of Canon Law pertaining to 
these institutes, since each is regulated by its 
own, specific proper law, approved by church authorities.

Nevertheless, it is still possible to make a few 
general statements about the different broad 
categories of women religious, which will be 
valid for all. As a rule, for example, all women 
religious make vows and live a fraternal life in 
common (c. 607.2). Their houses must have been 
established with the approval of either the 
diocesan bishop or of the Pope himself. (If a 
group of Catholic women decide independently that 
they wish to live celibate lives together in the 
same house and maintain a common prayer life, 
that may very well be a laudable decision, but in 
itself it does not make them women religious in 
the Church’s sense of the term.)

But while all women religious share this in 
common, their similarities often end right there. 
We all know that the members of different 
religious institutes engage in a wide variety of 
ministries. Many sisters are teachers, while a 
large number are nurses or are otherwise engaged 
in hospital ministry. Others may be employed in 
more humble sorts of work, as parish secretaries 
or housekeepers for the clergy. But no matter 
what these sisters are doing, they are all 
involved in active work in the world. One might 
run into them not only praying in church, but 
also on the street, in the grocery store or at 
the gas station. They live a communal life 
together in a convent, but can and must leave it 
regularly in order to perform their ordinary, daily duties.

Very different is the daily life of those women 
religious who embrace the contemplative life. 
Certain religious institutes were founded so that 
their members may spend their entire lives 
removed from the world, engaged in prayer. Those 
women who make permanent vows in such institutes 
are voluntarily agreeing to spend the rest of 
their lives shut away in a cloister, away from 
the outside world, and as a general rule they are 
unable ever to set foot outside their convent 
walls again. If cloistered women religious attend 
a Mass in a church that adjoins their convent, or 
receive visitors, there is ordinarily a metal 
grille that physically keeps them separated from other people.

The Church makes legal distinctions between these 
two basic categories of women religious. Women 
religious who are actively engaged in some sort 
of apostolate are referred to as sisters, and 
those who leave the world and willingly embrace 
the monastic life are nuns.  This gets confusing 
because either a sister or a nun is ordinarily 
addressed directly as “Sister X.” Thus people 
tend to think that the two terms are 
interchangeable­but they aren’t. While a 
cloistered nun is called “Sister,” this does not 
mean that all sisters are nuns!

Canon 667.3 notes that monasteries of nuns who 
are wholly devoted to the contemplative life must 
observe what is called papal enclosure. The norms 
governing their cloister are actually established 
by the Vatican itself. On the other hand, those 
sisters who work out in the world­who are not 
nuns­still have as a rule an obligation to live 
in a convent, in common, but their separation 
from the world is not nearly so strict as that of nuns.

So what happens when a nun in a cloister breaks 
her leg, or needs emergency heart-bypass surgery? 
Under such urgent circumstances, of course, a nun 
is permitted to leave the cloister for the 
hospital­once the appropriate superior gives 
permission. Similarly, while nobody from the 
outside world is permitted to enter a cloister, 
superiors routinely give permission to priests 
who come to minister to a dying nun; doctors and 
other medical workers who must attend a sick nun; 
and plumbers, electricians, and other 
construction workers who have to make repairs 
inside the monastery. There are normally no other exceptions.

During World War II, the cloistered Poor Clare 
nuns in Assisi took a large number of Jewish 
Italians inside their cloister, to protect them 
from the German Nazis who had occupied that part 
of Italy. This was the first time that their very 
strict rule of enclosure had been violated since 
the monastery’s establishment in the 13th 
century! Even the Nazi soldiers (many of whom 
were Catholics who had been involuntarily drafted 
into the German army) were loathe to enter the 
nuns’ cloister to check for hidden refugees, and 
this enabled the Church to protect the Jews until 
arrangements could be made for their escape to 
safe locations outside German-held territory. 
Needless to say, the law of charity rightly 
triumphed in this case over the nuns’ proper 
law­but it was in fact an extraordinary technical 
violation of the Poor Clares’ rule, and it was 
done with permission of their superiors. This 
concrete example should give us an indication of 
the seriousness with which papal enclosure is regarded by the Church.

To return to Mark’s question, it is safe to say 
that even without knowing which religious 
institute the school principal belongs to, she 
was absolutely correct to say that she is not a 
nun. Any sisters working outside their convent 
cannot possibly be cloistered, and therefore 
those working in his children’s school are 
definitely not nuns. It is not necessarily 
insulting to refer to such sisters as nuns, but 
it is inaccurate, and the school principal was 
probably using the conversation with the other 
parent as a classic “teaching moment.”

Cathy Caridi, J.C.L. is a licensed canonist who 
practices law and teaches in the Washington, D.C. area.

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