Appeal helps religious communities care for aging members

A group of sisters work in a garden at the Monastery of St. Clare in Travelers Rest. The Poor Clares receive financial support from the Retirement Fund for Religious so they may care for their older members.

WASHINGTON, D.C.—The annual Retirement Fund for Religious collection will be held Dec. 7-8 in the Diocese of Charleston. The parish-based appeal is coordinated by the National Religious Retirement Office (NRRO), and proceeds help hundreds of U.S. religious communities care for aging members. Some 30,000 senior sisters, brothers and religious order priests benefit.

Last year, the diocese donated $131,310.91 to the collection. One of the orders that benefited in 2019 was the Monastery of St. Clare in Travelers Rest, which received financial support made possible by the Retirement Fund for Religious.

The 2018 appeal raised $27.7 million, and 360 religious congregations across the nation received funding. Distributions are sent to each eligible congregation’s central house. Communities combine this assistance with their own income and savings and apply it toward various retirement expenses, such as medications and nursing care. 

“We are humbled and profoundly grateful for the countless Catholics who honor the service and witness of senior religious through their prayers and generosity,” said Presentation Sister Stephanie Still, the NRRO’s executive director. 

Catholic bishops of the United States initiated the fund in 1988 to help address the profound lack of retirement savings among religious communities. Since the collection’s launch, U.S. Catholics have donated $872 million to the annual appeal. 

Despite this generosity, many congregations still struggle to provide for aging members. Most older religious served others for low wages that did not include retirement benefits. Today, numerous communities face a critical shortage in retirement savings. Moreover, retired religious now outnumber wage-earning members, resulting in declining income and a rising cost of care.  

Proceeds from the annual collection allow the NRRO to offer assessment tools, educational programming, services, and resources that enable communities to evaluate and prepare for long-term retirement needs. The NRRO also coordinates an extensive network of volunteer consultants, including experts in eldercare and financial planning, to help congregations lower costs while enhancing care. 

“Donations to the Retirement Fund for Religious enable our office to provide financial assistance for an array of direct needs,” Sister Still said. “They also underwrite education and resources that help religious communities stretch retirement dollars and plan for the future.”  

Visit retiredreligious.org to learn more.