Skip to content
Centre for Inquiry Canada

Centre for Inquiry Canada

Your humanist community for scientific, skeptical, secular, and rational inquiry

  • About
    • About CFIC
    • What Is CFIC?
      • Mission, Vision, & Values
      • Centre for Inquiry Globally
      • Why We Need CFIC
      • History
    • Areas of Focus
      • Secularism
      • Scientific Skepticism
      • Critical Thinking
      • Building Community
    • Our Structure
      • Governance of CFIC
      • CFIC Bylaws
      • Branches
    • Contact
    • Privacy Statement
  • Media
    • Critical Links Newsletter
    • Podcast for Inquiry
    • Search Archives
    • Videos
    • Cost of Religion Report
  • Get Involved
    • Join Us
    • Calendar of Events
    • Find a Local Branch
      • Victoria
      • Regina
      • Saskatoon
      • Winnipeg
      • Ottawa
      • Toronto
      • Montreal
      • Halifax
      • Virtual Branch
    • Volunteer
    • Mailing List
  • Donate
    • Donate to CFIC
    • CanadaHelps
    • PayPal
    • Interac Transfer
  • Become a Member
  • Toggle search form

Nuns or Nones?

Posted on November 30, 2023March 1, 2024 By Critical Links 1 Comment on Nuns or Nones?

Scott Douglas Jacobsen

Nuns — nothing but the purity of virginal self-sacrifice for their Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ, unburdened over the decades by the countless and ubiquitous allegations about the depraved activities of Catholic priests. Until now.

For as long as we can remember, the Catholic Church’s priest class has been facing profound accusations of sexual misconduct. I wouldn’t claim to be a moral exemplar. I, like most of you, am just a Canadian citizen with concerns. It is important, however, to point to systems of power, often unquestioned, and ask critical questions.

In 2004, a commission found over 4,000 priests faced accusations of sexual abuse of youth over the last five decades. Perhaps partially as a result, membership and influence of the Catholic Church has been declining in Canada for decades. The most precipitous decline has been between 2001 and 2021, with 12,793,125 Roman Catholics in 2001 at 43.2 percent of the population and then 10,799,070 in 2021 at 29.9 percent.

How will this affect public policy, politics, and so on? The moral stature of the Catholic Church has been devastated internationally with the effects of these crimes, which have traditionally been deliberately hidden. The above declines in the total number of Catholics in Canada have a corresponding problem with acquisition of a new class of nuns. There were 47,000 nuns in Quebec alone in 1961. That declined to less than 6,000 by 2018.

A spokesperson for the Catholic Archdiocese of Toronto has argued that becoming a nun has an attraction of experiencing faith in a way that is “real and that’s robust” for younger women. But this is opining. We have to be realistic. Not only is this class of women declining precipitously; it has encountered a few recent potshots in the media. As Molly Hayes in The Globe and Mail noted, “A 97-year-old nun has been criminally charged in a historical sexual-assault case connected to a notorious residential school in Northern Ontario.” Brett Forester has reported similar stories. Are we witnessing a descent of nuns to rival that of priests?

Many of us believe that churches could be moral exemplars. They could be institutions representative of a philosophy of love and forgiveness. Yet we’re always disappointed, when this ideal is absent. Regular Canadians are not stupid; they’re just busy with getting by the days of the week at work and at home. They know people who have been affected or know of people who have been affected by the crimes of the Catholic Church.

Canada deserves better; the victims deserve better; Catholic clerics deserve better; and, most importantly, the followers of the Catholic Church deserve better. As a non-religious person, I have hope that the Catholic Church can morally renew itself. Proper accounting for a) crimes of priests and nuns against individuals and b) crimes against Indigenous peoples can be the first major, practical step in doing so.

critical links, Secularism

Post navigation

Previous Post: Science QuickLinks — December 2023
Next Post: December 2023 Dates

Comment (1) on “Nuns or Nones?”

  1. Alex Berljawsky says:
    December 2, 2023 at 10:02 pm

    If the Catholic Church morally regenerates, that might make (remaining) Catholics feel better about their church bureaucracy, not necessarily feeling better about the dictates of their religion.

Comments are closed.

Donate via PayPal
Donate via Interac
Donate via CanadaHelps

Categories

a4a Announcement assistance for apostates Blasphemy Laws Blasphemy Laws CFI Community CFIC Volunteers Climate Change Cost of Religion critical links critical thinking Critical Thinking Week Debate Education Educational Material environment Event Give to CFIC governance health humanism Human Rights Information International Human Rights Living without Religion Media Advisory Medicine philosophy podcast Policy Press Release pseudoscience Quick Links quicklinks Science ScienceChek Science Literacy Secular Check Secularism Secularism in Schools Secular Rescue skeptics slider Think Check volunteer

View Full Calendar

CFI Canada is a CRA-Registered Educational Charity
Charitable Registration Number: 83364 2614 RR0001

Privacy Statement

Copyright © 2025 Centre for Inquiry Canada.

Powered by PressBook WordPress theme