The Forever Virgins

http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/magazine/articles/2009/05/24/the_forever_virgins/?page=full
 



Even before the Catholic Church had nuns, it had consecrated virgins. 
And, today, women like Kathy Reda are choosing and reviving this 
largely forgotten vocation. They're walking down the aisle and 
betrothing themselves to God.

http://www.boston.com/video/viral_page/?/services/player/bcpid14094180001&bctid=23967863001

By 
<http://search.boston.com/local/Search.do?s.sm.query=Liz+O%27Donnell&camp=localsearch:on:byline:art>Liz
 
O'Donnell
May 24, 2009

It was a large wedding, even by modern-day standards. Some 600 guests 
filled the pews at Dedham's imposing St. Mary of the Assumption 
Church on a Friday evening last August. The clergy had turned out in 
full force: 10 priests, a bishop, and Cardinal Sean O'Malley, head of 
the Boston Archdiocese, processed up the main aisle -- said to be the 
longest of any in Massachusetts -- some sprinkling incense as the 
choir sang. At last came the bride, dressed in white lace, her only 
jewelry a simple gold cross on a chain. She smiled widely and carried 
a single red rose, and when she reached the front pew, she took a few 
deep breaths, as though to steady herself.
Kathy Reda, a 42-year-old nurse, prays daily at the chapel she
  (Christopher Churchill) Kathy Reda, a 42-year-old nurse, prays 
daily at the chapel she created in her home. She became a consecrated 
virgin last year in a ceremony at St. Mary's of the Assumption Church 
in Dedham.


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But no bridegroom waited at the altar. Kathy Reda, an emergency room 
nurse at Newton-Wellesley Hospital, was about to make a promise of 
perpetual virginity and become mystically betrothed to Jesus.

Consecrated virgins have existed in the Catholic Church longer than 
nuns. The tradition died out around the ninth century but has made a 
comeback after the Second Vatican Council, or Vatican II, in the 
1960s emphasized the idea that everyone is called to holiness. Women 
who join the Order of Virgins feel called to Christ, much like a 
priest or a nun does. And, as with priests and nuns, the Catholic 
Church recognizes consecrated virginity as a distinct vocation. 
Unlike nuns, however, consecrated virgins don't take a vow of 
poverty. Instead, they live in their own homes and support themselves 
by working in jobs outside the church. Like Reda, they are women who 
are inspired to make a public commitment to Jesus. They dedicate much 
of their free time to prayer, including reciting the thrice-daily 
Liturgy of the Hours, and volunteer work.

There are about 250 consecrated virgins in the United States and 
about 3,000 worldwide -- the Boston Archdiocese is home to 13 of 
them. The vocation even has its own membership organization, the 
United States Association of Consecrated Virgins, which holds 
conferences and provides information to members and prospective 
members. But the church does not actively recruit women to 
consecrated virginity -- in fact, many Catholics say they have never 
heard of the Order of Virgins. But the church says interest may be on 
the rise. "The number of women inquiring about it is increasing," 
says Sister Marian Batho, O'Malley's liaison for the religious 
communities of the archdiocese. Batho says the membership 
organization has helped build awareness, and that bishops have also 
played a role. "As bishops come to understand it, they can encourage 
women to listen carefully to see if God is calling them to this 
vocation," she says. Those who wish to join the order "are women who 
have never been married or lived in open violation of chastity," says 
Batho. The church doesn't require any proof of virginity -- a woman's 
character determines her eligibility. She can be admitted into the 
vocation by her local bishop and must work with a spiritual director 
before and after her consecration.

Kathy Reda, 42, never planned to marry Christ. In fact, in 1991 she 
vowed never to set foot in a church again. That was the year Reda's 
mother died, two weeks after having heart surgery. Reda, who had been 
raised Catholic, was 24 years old and devastated. "Screw you, God," 
she thought.

Though she'd been planning to get her own place, Reda decided to stay 
with her grieving father. Then, in 1995, her father passed away. At 
age 29, Reda was responsible for a mortgage and keeping her three 
younger siblings together. "My friends were going skiing and my money 
was going toward the gas bill," says Reda. She was bitter; this 
wasn't what she'd planned for her life.

After her parents died, Reda spent her time working at the hospital, 
checking in on her siblings, and helping out her friend Paul McMurtry 
at his Dedham video store. She'd met McMurtry in high school, and 
though their relationship was platonic, Reda dreamed of marrying him. 
Eventually she got the courage to tell him how she felt. "He said, 'I 
do love you, but I'm not in love with you,' " Reda recalls. "What do 
you do with that?" Soon after, McMurtry started dating another woman, 
and Reda was crushed. Eventually she started dating, too. "I dated a 
guy who was a paramedic and was going to become a fireman. He would 
buy me flowers and bring me coffee prepared just how I liked. But 
then he slept with a woman I worked with. I was left wondering why 
this happened to me." There were other boyfriends after him, but Reda 
never felt any chemistry.

Through all of this, she continued helping at McMurtry's video store. 
One snowy Sunday in January 1998, Reda's car wouldn't start and a 
woman from the Domino's Pizza shop next door offered her a ride home. 
In exchange for the lift, she asked Reda to come to a Mass held by 
Life Teen, a youth group that her son was involved in at St. Mary's. 
Reda went reluctantly and sat alone in the back. Soon, however, she 
started to thaw.

"I loved the live band -- there was a guitar, a piano, and drums. The 
kids were singing and holding hands." She started attending the Life 
Teen Masses every week. On Palm Sunday that year, she had an 
epiphany. That night, the kids staged a Passion play. They turned off 
all the lights except for a single spotlight on the teen playing the 
role of Jesus. He carried a crucifix up the main aisle and stumbled 
under its weight. As he neared the altar, the shadow of the cross 
grew larger on the back wall of the church. The other teens were all 
singing "Jesus remember me." "Something just hit me," explains Reda. 
"I had this strong physical sensation in my chest. Never before did I 
really get it. Jesus died for me. I started to sob. There I was, 30 
years old, and I was watching Jesus die for me."

Reda says she felt the Holy Spirit that night. As her faith grew, she 
looked into becoming a nun, but an informational session turned her 
off. "I just didn't see any joy there," recalls Reda. "The meeting 
was more about what we would have to give up. Not one of the nuns 
described how Jesus made them feel." Eventually the Rev. Matt 
Williams, a priest at St. Mary's at the time, suggested she look into 
consecrated virginity. "My first reaction when Father Matt told me 
about consecrated virgins was no, no, no, no. But I met with another 
consecrated virgin in the archdiocese, and I was on fire when I 
left," she says. "I was excited, full of energy."

When Reda finally made her decision, she dreaded telling her family. 
"My decision was so counterculture," she says. "It was the V-word. 
People are just so hung up on it. It's not considered normal for a 
woman not to want to have sex." In fact, Reda thought about omitting 
the word "virgin" from her invitations for the consecration. "Maybe I 
don't have to use it," she told a friend. "He told me, 'Kathy, I'm 
pretty sure it will be mentioned, like, 50 times during the Mass. I 
think you need to get over it.' "

Two weeks before Reda's wedding at St. Mary's, Alma Bella Solis, now 
53, also married Jesus, at St. John the Evangelist Church in 
Chelmsford. A petite woman with a big smile, Solis wears her hair in 
a simple bob and dresses conservatively. Born in the Philippines, 
Solis came to the United States 20 years ago and today works at a 
home for adults with mental illness. Prior to her consecration, Solis 
lived as a novitiate cloistered nun. She says she liked the life of 
prayer but missed social interaction. In the cloistered setting, she 
couldn't hug anyone. She could call her mother just once a month. 
"Ultimately, I wanted to live in the world, not in the four walls of 
the convent," she says.

Most days now, Solis attends the 9 a.m. Mass at St. John's. She runs 
errands and goes to work. She prays again before going to bed. On her 
days off, Solis attends Mass and teaches art and religious education 
classes to children. She stopped watching television last June, and 
she doesn't read a newspaper. "I like a lot of silence in my life," 
she says. "A consecrated virgin lives out in God's world, so there 
are more obstacles," she adds. "Sometimes when I am with friends I 
can be tempted to drink too much wine. But I prefer to keep my mind clear."

Since her consecration, Solis says friends and family are always 
asking her if she is lonely. "I am not lonely," she says. "I have my 
friends. I have my books. I have art." And she is never tempted by 
men, she says, although she's been asked for dates since her wedding.

Consecrated virgins live in a world where sex is discussed everywhere 
-- in magazines, on television, among friends, at work. "Our society 
is so wrapped up in sex," says Reda. "I'm surprised there isn't a 
game show about losing your virginity." Celibacy is a commitment, she 
says. "You may have desires, but you don't act on them. I still 
recognize a handsome man when I see one. But sex is not in the 
equation. Commitment and faith help you." She adds: "You don't always 
have to have sex to be fulfilled. I know a lot of people who are 
having sex who aren't fulfilled."

Leading up to her consecration, loneliness was a greater concern than 
celibacy for Reda. Eight months before her wedding, she was at Mass 
and something didn't feel right. "What if I get lonely?" she thought. 
"I started sobbing and sobbing." She still tears up remembering that 
day. "But it was a test. Father Matt told me it would have been 
abnormal if I hadn't had some doubt."

Elizabeth Lee understands these concerns. Lee became the first 
consecrated virgin in the Fall River Diocese when she took her vows 
in 1995 at the age of 33. At that time, there was no nationwide 
membership organization. "I was sort of a pioneer in the field. Even 
the people at my church didn't understand," says Lee. "They thought a 
consecrated virgin was a quasi-religious."

Lee had always been religious in a private way. While attending 
Middlesex College, she was involved in a youth ministry. She 
volunteered with the elderly and the homeless, but her primary love 
was prayer. "I could spend hours in prayer," she says. Lee had dated 
men in college and after graduation. She wanted to make a deeper 
commitment to the church, but she was torn by the idea of never 
marrying or having children. "I wanted to marry and have lots of 
kids. But God wanted me for himself."

Eventually she accepted what she describes as an invitation from God 
into consecrated virginity. Lee says she never felt lonely when she 
was first consecrated, but now there are more challenges. "It's hard 
sometimes. My friends are busy, and it's hard to find the time to get 
together." But her friends' hectic lives give Lee more time to pray. 
"I discovered who I was when I was consecrated. Now I am called to go deep."

Last year, Lee quit her job as a dental assistant to start her own 
business. She publishes informational pamphlets supporting Catholic 
Church doctrine on such issues as brain death, end of life, in-vitro 
fertilization, and stem cell research. Lee speculates that Reda and 
Solis are still in the honeymoon phase of their marriages -- eager 
brides, happy to discuss their spouse and newly married status with 
anyone who will listen. They have not so far experienced any loneliness.

Says Reda: "I used to pray for a family and kids after my mom and dad 
died. Well, I got a family and lots of kids," a reference to her 
involvement with Life Teen. "It's cute. The kids at church call me 
Mrs. Christ."

"Kathy is one of the most selfless people I've ever met," says 
Williams, who oversaw St. Mary's Life Teen program. Today, he heads 
the Office for the New Evangelization for Youth and Young Adults for 
the Boston Archdiocese. "She is well rounded, funny, joyful. She 
loves the Lord. It's a powerful combination."

Even her old friend McMurtry, now a state representative, says he is 
not surprised by Reda's choice. "I can tell it's genuine," he says. 
"She truly loves God and wanted to make a commitment."

When asked if anything is missing from her life now, Reda pauses. "I 
don't know. I feel completely fulfilled," she says, then adds: "Well, 
maybe being a size 4. But I'm trying. I go to Curves.

"I had the choice to do anything. And I choose this. I choose to be 
mystically connected to Jesus but still live in the real world."

Liz O'Donnell is a freelance writer in Dedham. Send comments to 
<mailto:[email protected]>[email protected].
[]


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