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  2. Enclosed religious orders - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enclosed_religious_orders

    Benedictine monks, for instance, have often staffed parishes and been allowed to leave monastery confines. Although the English word nun is often used to describe all Christian women who have joined religious institutes, strictly speaking, women are referred to as nuns only when they live in papal enclosure; otherwise, they are religious ...

  3. Nun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nun

    Traditionally, nuns are members of enclosed religious orders and take solemn religious vows, while sisters do not live in the papal enclosure and formerly took vows called "simple vows". [4] As monastics, nuns living within an enclosure historically commit to recitation of the full Divine Office throughout the day in church, usually in a solemn ...

  4. Angeline of Marsciano - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angeline_of_Marsciano

    With a 1903 lift of papal enclosure, a wider apostolate was again permitted, and the congregation became known as the Franciscan Sisters of Blessed Angelina. In 1750, it consisted of 11 houses and 80 members. [4] In 2000, it has houses in Brazil, Madagascar and Switzerland, as well as in Italy. [5]

  5. Religieuses Victimes du Sacré-Coeur de Jésus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religieuses_Victimes_du...

    The brown habit of the nuns bears a depiction of the Sacred Heart of Jesus on the scapular. The community of about 20 nuns lives in papal enclosure and mainly from the products from their own agriculture. In September 2016 the convent sold their monastery in Marseille [1] to Chavagnes-en-Paillers in order to find more quiet. [2]

  6. Religious institute - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_institute

    Thus, the nuns of some contemplative orders are subject to papal enclosure. [ 3 ] Other religious institutes have apostolates that wherein their members interact with the secular world, such as in teaching, healthcare, social work, while maintaining their distinctiveness in communal living .

  7. Religious sister - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_sister

    They lived under cloister, "papal enclosure", and recited the Liturgy of the Hours in common. [4] The Code used the word "sister" (Latin: soror) for members of institutes for women that it classified as "congregations"; and for "nuns" and "sisters" jointly it used the Latin word religiosae (women religious). [14]

  8. Order of the Visitation of Holy Mary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Order_of_the_Visitation_of...

    The Order of the Visitation was founded in 1610 by Francis de Sales and Jane Frances de Chantal in Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.At first, the founder had not a religious order in mind; he wished to form a congregation without external vows, where the cloister should be observed only during the year of novitiate, after which the sisters should be free to go out by turns to visit the sick and poor.

  9. Consecrated virgin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consecrated_virgin

    The consecration of virgins for nuns who made their final profession of vows outlasted times in various forms and without discontinuation in bestowal. The 1983 Code of Canon Law and the 1996 Apostolic Exhortation Vita Consecrata by Pope John Paul II speak of the reflourishing Order of Virgins ( Ordo Virginum ), the members of which represent an ...