We bring you a trilogy of articles that should be required reading for all members of the Notre Dame family. In these articles, two of the University's leading scholars exchange contrasting views respecting the question whether Notre Dame's Catholic identity is threatened because of the precipitous decline in the proportion of Catholics on the faculty.
We have previously sent you the first essay, The Faculty Problem, by Father Wilson Miscamble, C.S.C., which appeared recently in America. The rejoinder, Catholic Enough? by John T. McGreevy, was published in Commonweal. The final essay is a privately circulated paper by Father Miscamble that he has given us permission to distribute.
In combination, these articles disclose why Notre Dame's Catholic identity is at risk, how this risk materialized, and how difficult it will be to turn it aside. We offer the following comments that we hope will be helpful.
All students of the secularization of colleges and universities concur with Father Miscamble's thesis that the fundamental cause is the loss of religious identity of the faculty. Dr. McGreevy does not disagree, nor does he deny that Catholics are close to becoming a minority on the Notre Dame faculty. (He does note that more than 50% of those hired last year were Catholics; but he does not dispute Father Miscamble's estimate that, in view of the heavily Catholic proportion of retirees, the rate must be well over 60% to arrest the decline.)
Their fundamental disagreement seems clearly to be over the Mission Statement's declaration that Notre Dame's Catholic identity "depends upon" the "continuing presence of a predominant number of Catholic intellectuals" on the faculty - a requirement that has always been taken to mean a solid majority. For Father Miscamble, this is the starting point for analysis. For Professor McGreevy, it is not worth mentioning.
Professor McGreevy's silence is perhaps not surprising. As Father Miscamble observed in his initial article:
"There are now 32 members of the history department, only 12 are Catholic. This past year we hired three additional faculty members, only one of whom is Catholic. This is hardly the way to maintain a predominant number of Catholic intellectuals. In fact, we hired in exactly the reverse proportion needed."
What, then, does Professor McGreevy say? First, that it's hard to find enough Catholic scholars, and, second, that things are fine as they are.
As the title of Father Miscamble response implies - "Are There Any (Really Good) Catholic Scholars Out There" -- he addresses this contention directly. We add that it is useful to think of this problem in terms of actual numbers. With a faculty of about 1,000 and assuming a generous turnover of 10%, increasing Catholic hires by 10% would require finding a mere ten additional qualified Catholic scholars a year. To suggest that this is beyond reach for the pre-eminent Catholic university in the country seems questionable, to put it conservatively. Other factors must be in play.
One of them -- enthusiasm for the status quo -- is evident from the principal parts of Professor McGreevy's article. He not only ignores the Mission Statement but also makes a mere passing reference to the value of students' having the "witness of Catholic intellectuals." It is the contribution made by "Protestants, Muslins, Jews, [and] unbelievers" that he values and that he faults Father Miscamble for ignoring - a criticism Father Miscamble answers in his concluding essay.
Perhaps the most telling part of Professor McGreevy's article is his detailed description of courses that, in his view, provide "an education built upon the university's Catholic identity." The reader might suppose that, notwithstanding the reduction in Catholic faculty, this is a core body of courses taught by Catholic scholars reflecting the Catholic intellectual tradition. The reader would be wrong. The majority are taught by non- Catholics. That is not to suggest, of course, that these scholars and their courses are not as worthy as Professor McGreevy says. It is to suggest that for Professor McGreevy, in terms of the school's Catholic mission, a majority of non-Catholics serves quite well.
Professor McGreevy is one of the most respected Catholic scholars at the University. If he discounts either the importance or the practicability, or both, of having a predominantly Catholic faculty, what of the nominal and dissident Catholics and the non- Catholics not committed to the school's mission? In both of his illuminating articles, Father Miscamble provides the worrisome answers.
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
This Month
Month Archive
Login
|
Should Anyone Care if Non-Catholics Predominate on Notre Dame's Faculty?
by
Bill Dempsey
on Wed 24 Oct 2007 06:08 PM EDT | Permanent Link
Comments
Re: Should Anyone Care if Non-Catholics Predominate on Notre Dame's Faculty?
by
Ed Bode
on Mon 29 Oct 2007 10:21 PM EDT | Profile | Permanent Link
The only effective way to implement an increase in Catholic faculty is for the administration to take meaningful steps to implement its mission statement on Catholic faculty.
Re: Should Anyone Care if Non-Catholics Predominate on Notre Dame's Faculty?
by
Tim Dempsey
on Mon 05 Nov 2007 08:39 PM EST | Profile | Permanent Link
POSTED ON BEHALF OF MICHAEL MCINTIRE
Father Miscamble's logic and arguments are irrefutable, as Prof. McGreevy impliedly acknowledged by his inability to engage them. But Fr. Miscamble misses the point. The point is that Notre Dame’s PUBLISHED Mission Statement is NOT an accurate statement of the “Mission” under which the University is actually operating. The true, operative “Mission Statement” is the Land O’Lakes Statement promulgated by Fr. Hesburgh and the trustees in 1967, the fullness of which has not been widely published. The Land O’Lakes Statement stands in contradiction to the Mission Statement which the University holds out for public consumption. The Land O'Lakes Statement proclaims that Notre Dame is now a "contemporary catholic university" and defines the philosophy which governs such a place. That philosophy is consistent with what Pope Leo XIII in 1897 condemned as a heresy (which he called "Americanism.") and which Pope St. Pius X in 1907 again condemned as the summation of all heresies (which he termed "Modernism."). Land O’Lakes adopted or at least accomodated most of these heretical views as the working philosophy of a "contemporary catholic university” and therefore, of Notre Dame. First and foremost, Land O'Lakes withdrew Notre Dame's allegiance to the authority of the Roman Catholic Church. The University was to be free to be a participant in the "total life of our times", modern "in the full sense of the word" and therefore able to provide an "education geared to modern society." In the Land O'Lakes Statement, "modern" means "permissive." Students are to learn to "understand the actual world" by being given unrestricted exposure to all aspects of it. The university is to impose "no barriers or restrictions" on this exposure, nor may any of it be "outlawed". The student is to be free to develop himself without restrictions, free from constraints of doctrine or discipline. They are to be free to "express Christianity" in "a variety of ways and live it experimentally and experientially" and thereby discover "new forms of Christian living." Land O'Lakes encourages liturgical experimentation so that students "will find the meaning of the sacraments for themselves" by the way they experience them, freed of dogmatic constraints. But in all this permissiveness, there is one absolute prohibition. Under Land O’Lakes, all religion and religious theories are to be given equal weight, to be sorted out as the student decides. Thus, as a "contemporary catholic university," Notre Dame cannot institutionally proclaim or teach as “truth” that there is an Absolute Truth, that that Truth reposes in its fullness in the Roman Catholic Church, or that the Catholic Church is the “one, true, catholic and apostolic Church” founded by Jesus Christ. Land O'Lakes brands such a teaching as "theological imperialism" and, as such, the truth of the Catholic faith is the only theological view which is expressly prohibited. There is little in the governing philosophy of a “contemporary catholic university” which is not within the definition of "Americanism" or "Modernism”. Returning to Father Miscamble’s well taken point, it is evident that a predominantly catholic faculty is neither needed for, and may in fact impede, the transformation of Notre Dame from a Roman Catholic University into a “contemporary catholic” one. The contemporary scholars, both pro and con, who wrote of Land O'Lakes in the years following its adoption by virtually all mainline "catholic" universities were clear about what Land O'Lakes was and what it intended. The Land O'Lakes Statement (1) was a formal declaration of university independence from the Roman Catholic Church; (2) proclaimed the “contemporary catholic university” to be judge, critic and counselor of the Church; (3) asserted that the university had both the right and obligation to define what is and what is not authentic catholic teaching; and (4) thereby created a schism between the magesterium of the Church and the magesterium of the University. In 1986, Fr. Hesburgh, a principal author and promoter of the Land O’Lakes Statement, defiantly wrote in a published article that a true university cannot allow the Church to define what is and what is not Catholic teaching. For greater detail and citations to authority, see McIntire, "Has Notre Dame Lost Its Catholic Credentials", St. Austin Review, Sept./Oct. 2007. The Land O'Lakes Statement is the REAL Mission Statement to which the University administration, in its actions, has been consistently faithful. There is nothing that has happened at the University, especially including the diminution of the numbers of authentically catholic faculty, reduction or elimination of courses on Catholic Apologetics, theVagina Monologues, Queer Film Festival and the rest, that is inconsistent with Land O'Lakes. Since 1967, the alumni have been infected to a greater or lesser degree with this theological virus, and are therefore unable or unwilling to perceive a problem with the character of the faculty, or even with the preservation of the Catholic character of the University, or such of it as remains. Re: Re: Should Anyone Care if Non-Catholics Predominate on Notre Dame's Faculty?
by
Tom Wich '63
on Wed 08 Apr 2009 09:34 AM EDT | Profile | Permanent Link
The death of Notre Dame
I am not here to encourage you but to be encouraged Why should we still care? I believe it is all over but the shouting and that may feel good but I don’t believe it will do any good Notre Dame has chosen a path that I cannot agree with. I am interested in Catholic and football and that is why my dad sent four of his sons there. That is why my daughter went there. Most likely my grandchildren will not be smart enough nor will their parents be rich enough for them to attend. Why should they want to if both the Catholic part and the football part is an embarrassment for us? Father Hesburgh and the Land O’ Lakes statement changed it forever. Cheer, cheer for old academic freedom Tom Wich ‘63 Re: Should Anyone Care if Non-Catholics Predominate on Notre Dame's Faculty?
by
Phinehas
on Thu 09 Apr 2009 12:56 AM EDT | Profile | Permanent Link
There is a keenly effective gatekeeping function that makes the progress of scholars and researchers who are also deeply Catholic, very difficult. All that need be done to eliminate a graduate student or post-doctoral fellow is for a mentor to remove his foot from the gas pedal of that student's career: the mentor need not even apply brakes, although that too can be done effectively with a few damaging phone calls. Young scholars are checked for their credentials regarding topics of socialism, abortion, homosexuality, feminism, stem cells, deconstruction, etc. If not passing the test, they are eliminated. The faculties and fellow students effectively shun such a student. Scholarship is a communal activity--even more a fiefdom of small specialized communities with funding and reviewing powers. Being ostracized quickly kills a career of such a would-be scholar who is Catholic just as depriving a plant of water will cause it to wither. Consider the careers of many of those few stellar academics and intellectuals who do happen to now be Catholic. Many of them were atheists, Marxists, liberals and bitter non-Catholics before a conversion event. This gave them cover while their careers took off. Well, thank God for their conversions--any conversions, but this is not a reliable means of populating Catholic universities and colleges with an army of Catholic professors. Part of the problem is that conservatives and faithful Catholics in America have a mild disdain for the academy unless it is slathered rather heavily with layers of football icing. And it is nice when the young ones finally graduate from business, engineering, law or medical school, but certainly not impractical disciplines like paleontology, literary criticism, and cosmology. In harboring this attitude, Catholics have ceded their rightful and historical preeminence in education and the sciences, especially. Slowly realizing, since the 1960s, that there were problems in academia, the disdain of conservatives for all things that smacked esoteric and "egg-headed" intensified even further. Again, more ground was yielded. What Catholics failed to realize was that these legitimate, but popularly viewed as "esoteric" disciplines, were the stuff of what professors do. Those professors educate the children of Catholics and Catholics created a void in higher education that was happily filled by those hostile to the faith. Unfortunately Catholics have steadily descended into a state of cultural immune deficiency. Confusion created by decades of effete pacifism from the pulpit and episcopacy has disabled the ability of the laity and young clerics to stand their ground on important principles. Too many are reduced to conditions of being simpering apologizers. First, Catholic institutions need to cut their ties to Federal monies. Hillsdale College has accomplished this effectively at that scale of institution. We need to do so as well. This will have initial costs, it is true, with respect to research funding, but this can cure itself as society is detoxified of the all-pervasive Federal interference. This is a long-term, painful project, to be certain. Second, Catholic institutions and societies need to employ the power of the internet to recruit Catholic intellectuals to events, conferences, philosophical societies, lecture clubs, and institutes. Just as the internet has proven an extremely useful means for Catholic singles to meet, communicate and span isolation and distances, so too must we explore new means of fashioning Catholic intellectuals into an effective community--even force. See now, I would bet that word "force" made many readers uncomfortable. Well, let me help you understand something from the inside of academia: the leftists and Catholic-haters have no problem thinking in terms of force and conquest despite their rhetoric of "peace." Peace is for you to practice while they relegate you to oblivion. By our learning to organize in the present environment of technology, young intellectuals and scholars can then be molded into new or revamped Catholic colleges and universities. Third, Catholics of means need to patronize the work of young and older scholars. These individuals are intellectual soldiers, often braving fierce winds alone. Help such scholars with book costs, relocation costs, and other needs--especially friendship and encouragement. These scholars are not generally motivated by selfishness and "the America Dream." Giving to them is not giving to your competitor. These scholars play a type of priestly role in society and deserve your material support. If they start taking trips to Las Vegas, then you can pull the plug on their party. Catholics give enormous amounts to causes which they believe are worthwhile because the institutional church has identified them as such. My experience with such charities is that they are often worthless for the promotion and defense of the Catholic faith and the preserving of our institutions. Worse, many such even "Catholic" charities ultimately undermine the faith and the social fabric with misguided agendas. Fourth, commit oneself to the higher things of the intellect and faith. Perhaps we could do with a little less of the football fantasies and start to honor, encourage, and respect scholars instead of football players. (I was an rather decent baseball player, by the way, so do not think that I am unaware of the value of athletics.) Fifth, Jewish culture, at least historically, was much more respectful of the intellectual life. It was much more acceptable for a daughter to marry a professor or teacher. It is not clear to me that this has, or is now, true for Catholic culture to the degree that it deserves. I will let the sociologists and historians debate whether Catholic culture suffers from a brutishness or boorishness. Still, regardless of the merits of that particular hypothesis, I do not think that it can be argued that parents could not do a better job in readjusting their hopes and expectations for daughters and sons in marriage to encourage careers in academia. That is correct, if not called to celibacy, the careers of young scholars are much aided by marriage and raising families. Sixth, if you are a scholar or intellectual, mentor young people. There are five young engineers that I mentor at work with readings, books, articles, taking them to Mass, exposing them to cutting edge scientific research--and talking, talking talking. Give then The Intellectual Life by A.G. Sertillanges, O.P. Oh, by the way, read it yourself. I can mentor in this particular way because I am a scientist and a Catholic and this is the place that the Lord placed me. You can do the same in your environments with your intellectual talents. Especially encourage young men to participate and excel in the scholarly life. The masculine spirit is so under attack in society. And do not assume that if a young man is interested in the scholarly life that you must insist on him becoming a priest. Certainly encourage genuine exploration of possible vocations, but if that is not the case, encourage these young people to marrying well and raise sizable families. Yes, we certainly need many more priests...faithful, masculine priests. And where do good, smart, intellectual priests come from? Many will come from parents that are well-educated (I know, there are many wonderful exceptions to this pattern). Remember, Cardinal Newman pressed for a highly educated laity. Seventh, pray. Pray for scholars and intellectuals. Pray that the Church finds more of them.
|
Recent Articles
Recent Visitors
Jerry Beckett - Fri 06 Nov 2009 03:34 PM EST
johnmcginley - Tue 27 Oct 2009 01:05 PM EDT
Bill Dempsey - Wed 14 Oct 2009 11:56 AM EDT
Nancy Danielson - Sun 02 Aug 2009 11:20 AM EDT
Tim Dempsey - Tue 14 Jul 2009 03:00 PM EDT
Search
Search
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||