When women begin formation in religious life, they are asked a question that sounds simple but carries more weight than it first appears: “What name do you feel the Lord may be calling you to receive?”
In religious life, a name is not just a label or a line on paperwork. It is bestowed at a moment that marks a shift in how a woman is received into a way of life, and how she begins to understand herself within it.
In the months that follow entry into a religious order, names begin to emerge for the women in discernment: saints who have accompanied someone quietly over the years, Marian titles learned early and never quite forgotten, words that seem meaningful before they are fully explained. Some sisters arrive with something already in mind, while others hesitate to write anything down at all.
But in practice, the process is less about reinvention than recognition. As with men who enter religious orders and receive religious names, whether a sister proposes a name or discovers its meaning only later, the moment of naming tends to reflect something already taking shape in her vocation rather than replacing what came before it.