ChristianityToday.com
Home CT Mag Church/Ministry Bible/Life Communities Chat Entertainment Schools/Jobs Shopping Free! Help
Subscribe to Men of Integrity Magazine

HomeArchivesCurrent CTContact Us

Search

Subscribe

News and Commentary from a Biblical Perspective

Subscribe to Christianity Today
Save 58%


Hot Issues
Faith & Thought
Churches & Ministry
Culture & Technology
International

Weblog
Movies
Columns

Message Boards


ChristianBibleStudies.com



Should evangelicals lobby on global warming?

 • No, there is no such thing.
 • No, our priority should be evangelism.
• No, the science is still unclear.
 • Yes, it is our job to care for creation.
 • Yes, concern for the climate is neighbor love.
 • Yes, we need to address all social issues.
 • I don't know.

Take the poll


HOLIDAYS & EVENTS
CTI Celebrates 50 Years!
HOT ISSUES:
Christian Soldiers
Shopping
Books & Culture
Christian History &
  Biography

Faith in the Workplace
Subscribe to CTDirect
Free headlines to your e-mail inbox or RSS reader.

CTDirect (daily)


CTWeekly


XML  RSS Feed
XML  More Feeds


New Today
Olsen: Latter-day Complaints

Weblog: Top Courts in N.Y., Ga. Uphold Gay Marriage Bans

Bookmarks: Turning Around The Mainline

New This Week


Home > Christianity Today Magazine > Columns > Books & Culture Corner

Christianity Today, Week of January 16

Books & Culture's Book of the Week
Making—and Breaking—Vows
A compelling memoir from the son of a priest and a former nun.
Reviewed by Jenny Schroedel | posted 01/17/2006 09:30 a.m.

Vows

Vows:
The Story of
a Priest,
a Nun,
and Their Son

by Peter Manseau
Free Press,
400 pp.; $25

One summer my husband, John, an Eastern Orthodox priest, worked as a chaplain at a Catholic hospital. The nuns invited him to dine free in the hospital cafeteria. One day they told him he could bring me along for a meal, under one condition—that he not tell anyone that I was his wife.

We snuck into the cafeteria together like a couple of stowaways. I ate my tuna sandwich and drank my soda uneasily, certain the nuns could spot the scarlet PW on my forehead. But history, at least, is on my side. Eastern Christians have retained the earlier tradition of allowing married men to be ordained priests, although our bishops do come from the ranks of celibate monk-priests.

Within the Roman Catholic Church, clerical celibacy has been debated since at least the fourth century. In the 11th century, Pope Gregory VII enforced clerical celibacy in an effort to end simony (the sale of church offices). During the next century, the first and second Lateran Councils made the policy more clear and universal. Many Catholic theologians say this is primarily a matter of discipline, not doctrine. From this soil, however, a great forest of piety has grown up, so that some Catholics still view a married priest as no priest at all.

Enter Peter Manseau's memoir, Vows: The Story of a Priest, A Nun, and Their Son. It tells the story of his father Bill and mother Mary Doherty. Both loved the church and desired to serve. When an older priest recognized a vocation in him, Bill sublimated his desire to marry and have children to his greater desire for priestly ministry.

Mary Doherty's relationship with the church was mixed. She found solace and comfort in the services, but she suffered abuse at the hands of her parish priest, Fr. Gerard Creighton, who was a very sick man (imagine a milder version of the sociopath in The Devil the White City). To this end, Vows contains a nauseating scene that involves unwarranted dental extractions and priestly groping. It's the stuff that nightmares are made of, but Mary never stopped loving her church.

Bill and Mary met years later while serving in a struggling Boston neighborhood. Bill began to discern a call to be a married priest and courted Mary, who left the convent. The couple married—and waited for several decades for ecclesiastical affirmation that never came.

Meanwhile the clergy sex scandals had broken on the evening news. Mary and Bill watched with horror and tears. In one of the book's most gripping scenes, Mary tracks down the graying Fr. Creighton and asks him why.

Manseau's own journey has led him full circle to a Trappist monastery, where he contemplates taking his own vows. His deeply joyful experience there offers a nice counterbalance to his parents' more negative experiences at the seminary and convent. "It's quite a life," a priest at the monastery tells him, "Sweet joy, it really is."

This book is a great read, but from an Eastern Orthodox perspective it has some notable omissions. Bill and Mary are struggling toward a marriage loosely resembling the historical situation the East has retained, which is part of why I had hoped for a reference to Eastern Orthodoxy or Byzantine Catholicism (a rite under the Pope which allows for married clergy). Our context requires a commitment to lifelong marriage or celibacy before ordination. Both are considered paths to holiness.

Manseau also occasionally lacks nuance. His barbs against the Roman Catholic Church sometimes dug into my enjoyment of the narrative. Don't expect an objective account, although perhaps it is unrealistic to hope for one when a young man pens the story of his parents—especially the heartbreaking story of the abuse his mother endured. How could he not be angry?

I would recommend Vows to anyone who wants to better understand the tensions that shaped the Roman Catholic Church of the past century, and the recent clergy sex scandals in particular. Recovery groups say that we are as sick as our secrets. Perhaps Vows, in the sharing of many secrets, has the potential to bring about healing.

Jenny Schroedel, a monthly columnist for Boundless webzine, lives and writes in Chicago.

Copyright © 2006 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.


Subscribe to Christianity Today3 Risk-Free Trial Issues
Subscribe to Christianity Today magazine

Related Elsewhere:

Vows: The Story of a Priest, a Nun, and Their Son is available from Amazon.com and other book retailers.

Peter Manseau is an editor at the religion website Killing the Buddha.

Manseau wrote about losing faith for The New York Times Magazine.

Terry Gross interviewed Manseau about the book on NPR's Fresh Air.

The Boston Globe had an extended review.

SimonSays.com has more information about the book, including an excerpt, interview, and discussion guide.

Books & Culture Corner and Books & Culture's Book of the Week, from Christianity Today sister publication Books & Culture: A Christian Review (want a free trial issue?), appears regularly on Tuesdays at Christianity Today. Earlier editions include:

Coming to a Bookstore Near You | Marsden and Hart, Noll and Stout, and more (Jan. 10, 2006)
Ring Out the Old Year | Some highly subjective awards for 2005. (Jan. 4, 2006)
Not Just Looking | Books for the eye. (Dec. 27, 2005)
The Top Ten Books of 2005 | A charming bedside miscellany, a new novel by P. D. James, and much more. (Dec. 20, 2005)
How to Survive a Bookalanche | Some more keepers from 2005. (Dec. 13, 2005)
'Tis the Season for Books (And Lists of Books) | Part one of our 2005 roundup. (Dec. 6, 2005)
Taizé in the Fall | A parable of community. (Nov. 29, 2005)
'Have Mercy on Me, O God' | A report from AAR/SBL. (Nov. 22, 2005)
The Shrine Next Door | A superb study of Chinese popular religion helps to set the context for the appeal of Christianity in China today. (Nov. 8, 2005)
Dissecting Divorce | A new book by Elizabeth Marquardt offers a child's-eye-view of divorce. (Oct. 25, 2005)
Heavenly Real Estate | A geography of art in New York at the midpoint of the 20th century. (Oct. 18, 2005)
Narnia Etc. | A chronicle of reading. (Oct. 11, 2005)
How Wide the Divide? | A proposal for compromise between "value evangelicals" and "legal secularists" on church-state issues. (Sept. 13, 2005)


Read more... Read more from 'Books & Culture Corner'


Browse More Christianity Today
CT Home Page | Hot Issues | Faith & Thought | Churches & Ministry
Culture & Technology | World Report | Weblog | Columns
Message Boards | Archives | Contact Us


Christianity Today
Try 3 Issues of Christianity Today RISK-FREE!

Name
Street Address
City/State/Zip
E-mail Address

No credit card required. Please allow 4-6 weeks for delivery. Offer valid in U.S. only. Click here for International orders.

If you decide you want to keep Christianity Today coming, honor your invoice for just $19.95 and receive nine more issues, a full year in all. If not, simply write "cancel" across the invoice and return it. The trial issues are yours to keep, regardless.

Buy 1 gift subscription, get 1 FREE!

Subscribe to the FREE CT Newsletters
Get CT headlines direct to your mailbox!

CTDirect (daily)
CTWeekly










Christianity Online Web Content Filter
Seminary &
Grad School Guide
Search by Name


or use:
Advanced Search
to search by major, region, cost, affiliation, enrollment, more!

Search by Region
Northeast U. S.
Southeast U. S.
North Central U. S.
South Central U. S.
Northwest U. S.
Southwest U. S.
Canada/International


The Journey

The Journey

by Billy Graham
Reg: $24.99
Now: $14.99


Discussing The Da Vinci Code, DVD Curriculum

Discussing The Da Vinci Code, DVD Curriculum

by Lee Strobel, Gary Poole
Reg: $19.99
Now: $11.99

Advertising

http://www.screenflex.com

http://www.fuller.edu/

http://www.dts.edu

http://www.denverseminary.edu/

http://www.mhgs.edu

Subscribe to Men of Integrity Magazine

http://www.acfona.org/index.asp?pageId=59

http://www.christianbook.com/Christian/Books/cms_content?page=566927&sp=1002&p=1020949

Christianity Online Web Content Filter
ChristianityToday.com
Home CT Mag Church/Ministry Bible/Life Communities Chat Entertainment Schools/Jobs Shopping Free! Help
Books & Culture
Christian History & Biography
Christianity Today
Church Law Today
Church Treasurer Alert
Ignite Your Faith
Leadership Journal
Marriage Partnership
Men of Integrity
MOMsense
Today's Christian
Today's Christian Woman
Your Church
ChristianityTodayLibrary.com
BuildingChurchLeaders.com
ChristianBibleStudies.com
Christian College Guide
Christian History Back Issues
Christian Music Today
Christianity Today Movies
Church Products & Services
Church Safety
ChurchSiteCreator.com
PreachingToday.com
PreachingTodaySermons.com
Seminary/Grad School Guide
Christianity Today International
www.ChristianityToday.com
Copyright © 1994–2006 Christianity Today International
Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Advertise with Us | Job Openings