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  2. Jul 23, 2024 · Both nuns and sisters are women religious and constitute a most beautiful way of serving Jesus Christ and all souls in the Church. A nun takes solemn and public perpetual vows of chastity, poverty and obedience (evangelical counsels), and typically spends her life in prayer and work and silence in a cloistered convent.

  3. The terms "nun" and "sister" are often used interchangeably. However within Roman Catholicism, there is a difference between the two. Here's a simple summary of the differences.

  4. When bound by solemn vows, a woman is a nun but is commonly called “Sister” (although some orders use another formal title, like “Dame” or “Mother”); when bound by simple vows, a woman is a sister, not a nun, and thereby called “Sister.”

  5. Nun and sister are both terms used to refer to women who have dedicated their lives to religious service. However, there are some key differences between the two. Nuns typically live in a convent or monastery and follow a strict religious order, adhering to a set of rules and practices.

  6. Nuns’ lives are spent in prayer and work within their convent or monastery. Sisters are more active in the world, engaging in many different kinds of work, most often for people who are in great need. Sisters call these works “ministries.” Both nuns and sisters are called women religious.

  7. Jul 13, 2016 · Very briefly, a “nun” is a woman who has discerned a call to live within an abbey, a monastery, or priory, as a contemplative religious.

  8. Sep 27, 2013 · Here is the answer. In a practical, everyday sense people have no hesitation about identifying me as a Catholic nun. Yet, in the technical sense of the real definition I am not. So, what am I? I have entered a consecrated life, and I am a woman religious. I am a sister. I’ll explain.

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