No; they're already "married" to God. They can't marry anyone (else) until they leave their order. Which can happen, but it's not the usual thing. What makes a woman a Catholic religious sister is her vows or promises which are three: poverty, chastity, and obedience. All three imply that the person making the promises will never marry, so that is the basis of their vocation. To get married would mean that she wasn't a Catholic religious sister, an oxymoron.
The Sisters employed at a Catholic School live in a house (called a convent) next to the school.
Our Lady of Loretto is a Roman Catholic religious order of sisters. That should answer your question.
Preisthood, Single, Religious Life, and Married
They weren't that religious, but they were good Catholics and expected to be married, shriven and buried by a Catholic priest.
Yes the catholic church in Africa does not allow their fathers and sisters to get married.
The title Sisters of St. Joseph applies to several Roman Catholic religious congregations of women. Each group has made different contributions to the Catholic Church. For more information visit the link below.
Nuns are solemnly professed religious sisters who live in a monastery, usually called an Abbey. Please note that Nuns are NOT Sisters. Sisters in the Catholic Church are religious women who take perpetual or simple promises, and usually live in a convent, teaching or nursing.
Roman Catholic AnswerSisters of Mercy is a Catholic religious order founded by Catherine McAuley, an Irish heiress to used her fortune to found the Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy in 1831 to help people who suffer from poverty, sickness and lack of education. From their home page: Sisters of Mercy are an international community of Roman Catholic women religious vowed to serve people who suffer from poverty, sickness and lack of education with a special concern for women and children.
Religious Sisters of Mercy was created in 1973.
Religious Sisters of Charity was created in 1815.
Religious Sisters of Mercy are Catholic lay women. There are close to 4,000 Sisters of Mercy in the United States (reputed to be 10,000 worldwide) who minister to those in need, such as the homeless, the disabled, the sick, the hungry and the uneducated. Most of their ministries are within the education, health care and social services sectors.
The Sisters of Mercy, a Roman Catholic religious order for women, was founded in Dublin, Ireland in 1827, by Catherine Elizabeth McAuley. This means that the order is in its 182nd year.