CBS/AP/ June 18, 2012, 12:31 PM

Nun group sets off on bus tour to protest Republican budget proposal

Sister Simone Campbell, executive director of Network, speaks during a stop on the first day of a nine-state Nuns on the Bus tour June 18, 2012, in Ames, Iowa.

Sister Simone Campbell, executive director of Network, speaks during a stop on the first day of a nine-state Nuns on the Bus tour June 18, 2012, in Ames, Iowa. / AP Photo

(CBS/AP) DES MOINES, Iowa - A group of Roman Catholic nuns are embarking on a two-week bus tour to advocate against Republican federal budget proposals that they say hurts low income and vulnerable populations.

The Nuns of the Bus tour is headed towards Ames, its first stop. The tour will directly target the current House Republican budget, authored by Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis. They will stop by nine states -- Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Maryland and Wisconsin -- before they are scheduled to finish in Washington July 2.

The nuns will visit Catholic-sponsored social service agencies and the offices of Republican members of Congress, including Rep. Steve King's office in Ames, House Speaker John Boehner's office in Chester, Ohio, and Rep. Eric Cantor's office in Richmond, Va.

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The tour was organized by Network, a Washington-based Catholic social justice group criticized in a recent Vatican report that said some organizations led by nuns have focused too much on economic injustice while failing to promote the church's teachings on abortion and same-sex marriage. The Vatican asked U.S. bishops to look at Network's ties to another group of nuns it is reorganizing because of what the church calls "serious doctrinal problems."

But, one thing both the nuns and the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) are aligned in their opposition of the Republican budget proposal.

"The Vatican recently criticized Catholic Sisters in the U.S. for spending too much time working for social justice instead of speaking out on issues such as gay marriage and abortion. Despite the controversy, Catholic Sisters stand with the Bishops in criticizing the Ryan budget and are committed to staying faithful to their mission to serve those in need," Nuns on a Bus said in their press release.

Sister Simone Campbell, Network's executive director, said while the tour may appear to have been organized to counter recent criticism of social activist nuns by the Vatican and American bishops, it was not. The timing was in response to consideration of the federal budget in Congress, she said.

"We're doing this because of what's happening on the Hill," she told The Associated Press in an interview. "We're desperate to get the word out, that's why we're doing it now."

But if the 14 nuns who will rotate on and off the bus during the next two weeks weren't trying to counter the Vatican, they likely did little to ease its concerns about social activism.

The tour kicked off with a rally that had the feel of a political event. About 20 supporters brought flowers and balloons and sang, "Alleluia," as the nuns boarded a modern tour bus decorated with bright-colored graphics.

The mandate to crack down on socially active nuns upset some church parishioners who turned out to support the nuns.

"They want to bully these nuns and shut them down and tell them: `Get back in your place, ladies.' No, it's not going to be that way anymore," said Mary Ann McCoy, of Des Moines, who attends St. Ambrose Cathedral.

She said the Vatican and bishops speaking so harshly of nuns has split the church.

"They're women of courage," McCoy said. "Back in the Old Testament they talked about prophets. A prophet is somebody who speaks for God and these are the things that God talked about: injustice, the poor, the marginalized, woman. Jesus was the greatest prophet when he went out and he shook things up a lot. Well, I think the sisters are walking the walk and talking the talk and that's what's important to us."

While the Vatican has criticized Network, church officials have not ordered a full-scale overhaul of it as is being done with another group, the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR). After a two-year investigation, the Vatican concluded the conference had undermined Roman Catholic teaching with radical feminist themes and taken positions that undermined Catholic teaching on the all-male priesthood, marriage and homosexuality. They claimed that the nuns were taking a liberal approach to core doctrine and promoting "radical feminist themes." Three U.S. bishops, including Seattle Archbishop J. Peter Sartain, have been given five years to reorganize that group.

The Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR) which represents 57,000 U.S. Catholics nuns -- about 80 percent of the group -- said the charges were "based on unsubstantiated accusations and ... a flawed process." They asserted that the Vatican's decisions was creating a greater rift in the U.S. church.

On June 12, the nuns met with the head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith and the American bishop tasked by the Vatican to reform the group, Cardinal William Levada, Sartain, and two other church officials. LCWR president sister Pat Farrell said the meeting was "open," and they were able to directly state their concerns. Farrell said she was "grateful for the opportunity for open dialogue" and said she and executive director Sister Janet Mock would now report back to the LCWR board "to decide how to proceed from here."

Father Michael Amadeo, who attended the rally and is pastor of Holy Trinity Church in Des Moines, said that although the Vatican may have issues with the LCWR, he doesn't think the bus tour conflicts with church teachings.

"These are Catholic social teachings which we've had for decades," he said. "What they're trying to highlight both to communities as well as legislators is what our Catholic social teachers are, and they are about not only charity work but asking the tough questions. Why are these people homeless? Why are they in shelters? Why are they on food stamps? Part of our social justice teaching is asking questions about justice."

Amadeo said 300 people turned out Sunday night for a send-off prayer service for the nuns at his church. He said that's an indication of support and there are plenty of people committed to working for justice and helping the poor.

"Hopefully this will be a groundswell as it heads across the nation," he said.

King's office responded with an email faulting "the failed policies of President Obama and Nancy Pelosi," vowing to repeal the president's health care reform law and promising to pass a balanced budget amendment. The email did not say anything specifically about the nuns.

Ryan's spokeswoman also did not mention the nuns when she responded to a request for comment by sending several Internet links to interviews and opinion pieces he's written on the budget. One was published April 25 in the National Catholic Register and is posted on his website.

"Our budget ends welfare for those who don't need it, but strengthens welfare programs for those who do. Government safety-net programs have been stretched to the breaking point in recent years, failing the very citizens who need help the most," he wrote. "... We rightly pride ourselves on looking out for one another and government has an important role to play in that. But relying on distant government bureaucracies to lead this effort just hasn't worked."

Boehner's office and the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops did not immediately comment on the bus tour.

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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WhttevrrWorks says:
This is great! Who is gonna insult Nuns?

What amazes me most is that they are the only ones willing to point out the heresy of subsidiarity without subsidium. While local charity is great, it is not meant to be done in a vacuum.

Subsidiarity is about the individual acts of charity. Subsidium is about the state support of the local people. Now I know I've just used state and support in the same sentence; but it does not equate into socialism, communism or anything like that.

While Machiavelli was right that it is better to be feared than loved, he also noted that "One should avoid being despised and hated." So, yeah, rugged individualism is a great concept to shoot for. But for those who have fallen through the cracks, there should be support. A great society is inevitably judged on how it treats the weakest amongst its populace.

And most importantly, subsidiarity without subsidium is indeed a form of heresy that is being openly supported by many of our leaders.

http://whateverworks4you.blogspot.com/2012/04/subsidiarity-without-subsidium.html
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ludvig1-2009 says:
I called the local Repuglican Congressional Office a few years back and I can tell you what they'll hear when they talk to the Repuglican Congressmen It's "Hem, Haw, Hem, Haw, Hem, Haw, ad infinitum.
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WendyS1964 says:
Boehner's office is in WEST Chester, Ohio -- that's the name of the city. For goodness sakes, CBS - please hire a fact checker!!! This mistake is in ALL of your stories!!
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CareyWinslowe says:
One wonders if these bible thumpers aren't worrying more about the charity they live live on than charity for the unfortunate.
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parrots7 replies:
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Yeah the Nuns are soo wrong for this - they should be supporting the very rich and clamoring for more tax breaks to create more jobs ....... Dumb DUmb Repugs !!
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hillzhavays says:
by tonyatq June 18, 2012 3:16 PM EDT
Mitt Romney has never been poor he can't related to the working poor, I am not talking about the lazy poor but the people who go to work everyday and still can't make ends meet. I have a friend who has been working on the same job for over 20 years and only makes $10 an hour. Mitt's advice would be find another job or go borrow money from your parents and go to college.
__________________________________________

A productive adult should be making more than what teens make for a summer job. If your friend is only making $10 an hour after 20 years of work, the fault doesn't lie with Mitt or the rich, it lies with your friend. Every adult in a market economy is accountable for making their own way in life.

Furthermore, if your friend earns less than $30,000 a year, they don't pay any federal taxes (or if they do, they should get another accountant).

This illustrates a point that lefties haven't addressed: Why does someone who has made poor decisions (or just didn't come across the opportunities another did) that led to their economic struggle have a right to the economic equality touted by the Lefties? They demonize the rich, using examples like this friend of yours, as though the rich are responsible for "keeping them down". It is the whole basis of the wealth envy "Tax the Rich" campaign.

No one is supposed to just give you opportunity. That just doesn't reflect reality. And just because the world doesn't work the way you want it to doesn't mean it's someone else's fault either.
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nomorelibs replies:
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Very good point, that will fall on deaf ears.
hillzhavays replies:
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When faced with facts, I find that libs tend to deny, call it LIE!!!! or accuse the person of watching Fox.

It's real amusing to watch them get all bug-eyed and purple with rage, dancing around like little medicine men, screaming and hollering LMAO!!
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Ourdoc1 says:
Send the Romans BACK TO ROME. The Vatican WILL NOT run Americans, and we are ALL closer to God than the POPE is. We talk to God and Jesus, not some pedophile in white and gold robes being carried around like some king having others kiss his ring.

Eye of the needle Pope, enjoy your afterlife in hell.
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credibility2 says:
The nuns are obviously confused. Their gripe is with the Vatican. It won't matter how much they complain about anything having to do with the Republicans. Their cause is a lost cause and they're inconsequential. They're being disobedient to the Pope and Vatican and trying to have doctrine conform to their own views...which is a huge no-no when you're a Catholic and especially when you're a member of the clergy.
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WendyS1964 replies:
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actually the nuns are compliant with Vatican Two -- which happened about 50 years ago and gave them the right to do just what they are doing now. What changed? There is now a church leader who is a hard liner, massive conservative who apparently longs for the days of Borgia as Pope. I think he just dislikes Americans.
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retiredgustav says:
I can see the pope now pushing for the repeal of the 19 amendment.
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rita_p says:
This blog post tells us all we need to know.
http://www.patheos.com/blogs/standingonmyhead/nuns-on-the-run-2

If you care to meet true workers for the poor and oppressed check out these faithful sisters.
http://www.catholicnewsagency.com/news/sisters-of-mercy-doctors-say-lcwr-defenders-use-political-approach-to-faith/
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tonyatq says:
Mitt Romney has never been poor he can't related to the working poor, I am not talking about the lazy poor but the people who go to work everyday and still can't make ends meet. I have a friend who has been working on the same job for over 20 years and only makes $10 an hour. Mitt's advice would be find another job or go borrow money from your parents and go to college.
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credibility2 replies:
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...nor did he ever have to rely on affirmative action programs to get a free ride through college...
hypnotoad72 replies:
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credibility2 -

Neither did most people, unless they were on welfare (regardless of reason).

Or corporations, who got far more of a free ride than most of us put together, and prosper from our time and toil more than we ever will - thank their lobbying efforts, but I could be here all day going into subtle nuances.

But given how much corporations get bailed out by taxpayers, or subsidized (all these decades), and then looking into other situations, the working class has been fleeced time and again and it's really getting out of hand.

And unions, assuming anyone wants to mention that word, are not the problem when non-union private colleges have cashed in with grade inflation and other issues... the problems are so massive and so many people truly are being hurt. I also know this because I actually talk to real people out in the real world, and some of them (who are Republican) call the health care reform "Romneycare" as well, even before I had a chance to point out it was Romney's aides that created it. A pity they won't run for public office...
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