Home Christian News These Catholic Nuns Are Raised up on Eagles’ Wings

These Catholic Nuns Are Raised up on Eagles’ Wings

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Sister Margaret decorated to show off her Eagles support, including doorways, jerseys, tickets, personal photos and other paraphernalia around the office. Courtesy Sister Margaret

(RNS) — Sister Margaret Fagan, principal of St. Aloysius Academy for Boys in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, a half hour west of downtown Philadelphia, is so sure the local team will win the Super Bowl on Sunday that she’s already designated Monday a school holiday.

Fagan’s decision to give the kids an extra day off isn’t only for her students: It’s rooted in her own deep affection for the Philadelphia Eagles, who will face the Kansas City Chiefs in the NFL title game in Arizona this weekend. Growing up, Fagan and her brother were such devoted Eagles fans that they used to attend the team’s training camps.

Many Catholic nuns, in the Philadelphia area as elsewhere, are known to be among the country’s most rabid sports fans.

“I’m sure the sisters in Kansas City are praying as hard,” Fagan said wryly.

Though anecdotal, Catholic sisters’ high rate of interest in sports is well-documented, even if some of the fascination is fed in part by the unusual juxtaposition of, say, a habit-wearing religious with a wicked curveball.

“I’m a little sports-crazy,” confessed Sister Kathleen Moriarty, of the Sisters of St. Joseph of Philadelphia, a congregation of some 550 nuns in the city’s Chestnut Hill neighborhood.  Though her own favorite sport is rodeo — in the St. Joseph convent her nickname is Rodie — Moriarty takes a truly catholic approach to fandom. With family all over the country and jerseys, hats and other gear to prove it, the 81-year-old calls herself a “walking advertisement” for numerous teams.

Football itself has often been compared to a religion or a cult, with its own particular observances (the Super Bowl is one) and rituals. The Eagles, who went decades without a championship before defeating the New England Patriots in 2018, have been offered as a prime example of fandom-as-faith in Jere Longman’s 2009 book, “If Football’s a Religion, Why Don’t We have a Prayer?: Philadelphia, Its Faithful, and the Eternal Quest for Sports Salvation.”

Sr. Kathy Boyle, now an administrator for the Sister of St. Joseph of Philadelphia, said that when she was a teacher in nearby New Jersey, she used to enjoy playfully pitting Eagles fans against New York Giants enthusiasts when it came to school food drives.

But Catholic sisters who shared their Super Bowl preparations with Religion News Service this week also talked about an analogy between their identity as a community of believers and the synergy behind a championship season.

“I really love this Eagles team because they are like a community where they really support each other and care for one another,” said Boyle, 68. “They are also so committed to outreach and to helping people less fortunate. God gives us gifts, not just for ourselves, but for others. They are using them.”

Football, both on the field and off of it, helps bring people together in a world with many trials and tribulations, said Deborah Krist, a 62-year-old member of the Sisters of St. Francis of Philadelphia in Aston, Pennsylvania, and director of mission advancement for the order’s foundation. “Franciscans are very relational by nature,” she said. “This is something we can be light about. It unifies us.”