Monterey Herald

High court nominee served as ‘handmaid’ in religious group

- By Michelle R. Smith and Michael Biesecker

WASHINGTON >> Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett served as a “handmaid,” the term then used for high-ranking female leaders in the People of Praise religious community, an old directory for the group’s members shows.

Barrett has thus far refused to discuss her membership in the Christian organizati­on, which opposes abortion and, according to former members, holds that men are divinely ordained as the “head” of both the family and faith, while it is the duty of wives to obey them.

Portions of two People of Praise directory pages for the South Bend, Indiana, branch were shared with The Associated Press by a former member of the community on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivit­y of the issue and because this person still has family members in People of Praise. A second former member, Gene Stowe, who left the South Bend branch on good terms several years ago, confirmed the authentici­ty of the directory pages. He said he could not say precisely what year the directory was from, but that it had to be 2013 or earlier because one of the people listed had by then moved to another state.

All the top leaders within People of Praise are male, but in each of the group’s 22 regional branches a select group of women is entrusted with mentoring and offering spiritual guidance to other female members. Until recently, these female leaders were called “handmaids,” a reference to Jesus’ mother Mary, who according to the Bible called herself “the handmaid of the Lord.” The organizati­on recently changed the terminolog­y to “woman leader”

because it had newly negative connotatio­ns after Margaret Atwood’s dystopian novel “The Handmaid’s Tale” was turned into a popular television show.

The leaders run weekly mens’ or womens’ groups of about half a dozen people where they pray and talk together, and where the leaders offer advice and guidance. They will also organize to help others in the community, such as providing meals when someone gets sick. Under the organizati­on’s rules, no female leader can provide pastoral supervisio­n to a man, former members said.

Belief system

People of Praise’s belief system is rooted in the Catholic Pentecosta­l movement, which emphasizes a personal relationsh­ip with Jesus and can include baptism in the Holy Spirit. As practiced by People of Praise, that can include praying in tongues to receive divine prophecies, heal the sick and cast out evil spirits, according to documents and former members.

Founded in 1971, the nonprofit organizati­on has 22 branches across North America. It is not a church, but a faith community that includes people from several Christian denominati­ons, though most of its roughly 1,800 adult members are Roman Catholic.

The existence of the directory listing Barrett’s name as a handmaid was first reported by The Washington Post late Tuesday. The AP reported last week that a 2006 issue of the group’s internal magazine, Vine & Branches, included a photograph showing that Barrett had attend a national conference reserved for top female leaders in People of Praise.

The group had deleted copies of that magazine and other back issues mentioning Barrett and her family from its website in 2017, when her name first emerged on President Donald Trump’s short list for potential nomination to the Supreme Court.

Back issues of the magazine, tax returns and other documents showed Barrett’s father served as the principal leader of People of Praise’s New Orleans branch and was on the group’s all-male Board of Governors as recently as 2017. Her mother also served in the branch as a handmaid.

Lived with co-founders

Other records uncovered this week also showed that both Barrett and her husband, lawyer Jesse M. Barrett, had lived in the home of two of the group’s cofounders while they were young law students at Notre Dame in the 1990s.

Barrett did not disclose her decades-long affiliatio­n with People of Praise on her voluminous Senate judiciary Committee questionna­ires filed last month and three years ago, when the Notre Dame law professor was appointed by Trump to a seat on the 7th U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Donald Trump adjusts the microphone after he announced Judge Amy Coney Barrett as his nominee to the Supreme Court in the Rose Garden at the White House in Washington on Sept. 26.
ALEX BRANDON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Donald Trump adjusts the microphone after he announced Judge Amy Coney Barrett as his nominee to the Supreme Court in the Rose Garden at the White House in Washington on Sept. 26.

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