In a Wall Street Journal feature opinion essay titled "The Weekend Interview: Rev. John I. Jenkins, Catholicism, Inc., deputy editor Naomi Schaefer Riley provides an illuminating description of her interview with Father Jenkins in anticipation of the Pope's address to college and university presidents.
It should be noted preliminarily that, as may be evident from the article, Ms. Riley knows a good deal about Notre Dame. She devoted an entire chapter to the University in her well-received book, God on the Quad.
Ms. Riley opens with Father Jenkins's account of Father Hesburgh's offer of a teaching position to the young Father Joseph Ratzinger, but she then wonders "whether such an offer would be made today [and] more significantly, whether someone with the Pope's beliefs about Catholic higher education could accept."
Noting a "slow drift toward secularism" in Catholic higher education, Ms. Riley writes, "Catholic colleges are on the front lines of a battle for the soul of the church." She reports that,though Father Jenkins calls Ex Corde Ecclesiae -- Pope John Paul II's Apostolic Constitution on Catholic higher education -- a "superb document," "most Catholic college leaders, including Father Jenkins, have not implemented it to the extent that they expected they would have to."
Thus, for example, "Father Jenkins can claim total ignorance about which members of his own theology department are approved by the church."
Again, Ms. Riley reports, "Despite the Vatican's clear condemnation of liberation theology, a Marxist approach to Christianity, the doctrine is still proudly taught at Notre Dame" -- though Father Jenkins says that "the situation is not so clear cut."
Ms. Riley pays special attention to Father Jenkins's decision to approve the student on-campus performance of The Vagina Monologues. That decision, she reports, "made headlines;" and while a few other Catholic college presidents have taken the same action, Father Jenkins's "nod of approval is deeply symbolic." She notes the student protests and says that "people familiar
with the university are not surprised that it was the kids, not the grown-ups, who registered the strongest objection."
Observing that "only half the faculty is Catholic now," Ms. Riley offers this bleak conclusion: "The students are probably the most religious part of Notre Dame."
We encourage you to read Mr. Dempsey's comments which have been posted by the Wall Street Journal and submit comments of your own in support of our mission to protect Notre Dame's Catholic identity.
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Would today's Notre Dame welcome a Professor Ratzinger on its faculty?
by
Bill Dempsey
on Mon 14 Apr 2008 06:15 PM EDT | Permanent Link
Comments
Re: Would today's Notre Dame welcome a Professor Ratzinger on its faculty?
by
Marianne Murphy
on Wed 16 Apr 2008 01:24 PM EDT | Profile | Permanent Link
Bill Enjoyed hearing ND and Project Sycamore have made it into the Wall Street Journal . The question as to whether Pope Benedict would be welcomed as part of the ND faculty can be answered with a big "NO" . He's to conservative to allow the V-Monologues, Thank God !! I'm so proud of the students who walked out on the preformance. Youth like these will help secure a true Catholic faith to continue at Notre Dame. Hopefully they can influence the adults around them including Father Jenkins. God Bless you Bill and all the others involved with Project Sycamore. I enjoy reading your articles and being kept current on the happenings around campus and in the Catholic community in our world. Re: Re: Would today's Notre Dame welcome a Professor Ratzinger on its faculty?
by
Nancy Danielson
on Thu 17 Apr 2008 12:09 PM EDT | Profile | Permanent Link
An addition to the faculty of a Professor Ratzinger would certainly help Father Jenkins in his quest to secure authentic Catholic teaching at Notre Dame. However, as long as dissenting views continue to be given any merit at the University, the problem of securing authentic Catholic teaching would continue, despite the addition of a Professor Ratzinger.
There is no conservative or liberal view of Truth. Truth is not a matter of opinion nor is it a matter of compromise. Truth is consistent, yesterday, today, and always. Either you get Truth right, or you are simply wrong. ( this is no different in Math or Science ) Holy Pope Benedict knows that Charity, out of Love for Christ and His Church, requires that we desire Salvation for everyone. This is the Gift of Christ's Passion, the Gift of Perfect Love, desiring Salvation for everyone. Only Christ's Sacrifice, His Passion, Has the Power before God, the Blessed Trinity, to Forgive Sin and Lead us to Salvation. This is the Power of the Union of God's Love and His Mercy. The University of Notre Dame is in the unique position where it can lead by example. We must continue to pray that we have the courage to be Catholic. Re: Re: Re: Would today's Notre Dame welcome a Professor Ratzinger on its faculty?
by
Nancy Danielson
on Sun 20 Apr 2008 07:11 PM EDT | Profile | Permanent Link
( this is no different in Math or Science ) By this I mean, once you introduce a false assumption, the truth gets distorted.
Re: Re: Re: Would today's Notre Dame welcome a Professor Ratzinger on its faculty?
by
Marianne Murphy
on Mon 21 Apr 2008 12:54 PM EDT | Profile | Permanent Link
I'm praying daily for people to muster up the courage to be truly Catholic .
Enjoyed reading your remarks. Re: Would today's Notre Dame welcome a Professor Ratzinger on its faculty?
by
Aaron Kreider
on Tue 22 Jul 2008 03:27 PM EDT | Profile | Permanent Link
I wonder what role economics has played in the secularization of the university?
Notre Dame is becoming more of an elite school. It is harder to get in, and more expensive to attend. The University compares itself to Ivy League schools. Part of the reason tuition is more expensive, is that the university is paying administrators (and top level professors) at the same rates as "fellow" Ivy League schools. By contrast, staff wages are lower as they are compared to South Bend (where wages are depressed since the loss of Studebaker in the fifties/sixties and subsequent deindustralization). While the article says that 50% of Catholics under 40 in the US are Hispanic, Notre Dame is only 10% Hispanic. Clearly ND is failing to serve the US Catholic youth population - and I suspect the cost of tuition, ND's elite acceptance requirements, and the failure of US inner-city public schools are at the heart of the problem. Re: Would today's Notre Dame welcome a Professor Ratzinger on its faculty?
where can I find "The Weekend Interview: Rev. John I. Jenkins, Catholicism, Inc."
Very good site, excellent content, I will recommend to my group of readers in the university, I found very interesting article on the internet, including this ... I will leave an input ----> Weight Lifting for Beginners isn't hard. Re: Re: Would today's Notre Dame welcome a Professor Ratzinger on its faculty?
by
Bill Dempsey
on Sun 03 May 2009 09:32 PM EDT | Profile | Permanent Link
The link to the Wall St Journal article is in the first line of this news bulletin above.
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