Joseph Bottum: At the Gates of Notre Dame

Still, opposition to abortion is hard and real, the signpost at the intersection of Catholicism and American public life. And those who””by inclination, or politics, or class distinction””fail to grasp this fact will all eventually find themselves in the situation that Fr. Jenkins has now created for himself. Culturally out of touch, they rail that antagonism must derive from politics or the class envy of their lesser-educated social inferiors. But it doesn’t. It derives from the sense of the faithful that abortion is important. It derives from the feeling of Catholics that, however far they themselves may have wandered, the Church ought to stand for something in public life””and that something is opposition to abortion.

“There is a political game going on here, and part of that is that you demonize the people who disagree with you, you question their integrity, you challenge their character, and you brand these people as moral poison,” Fr. Kenneth Himes, chairman of the theology department at Boston College, told the Boston Globe about the controversy at Notre Dame. As James Taranto of the Wall Street Journal noted, this was the same Fr. Himes who in 2006 wrote the faculty letter objecting to an honorary degree for Condoleezza Rice””a letter that read, “On the levels of both moral principle and practical moral judgment, Secretary Rice’s approach to international affairs is in fundamental conflict with Boston College’s commitment to the values of the Catholic and Jesuit traditions and is inconsistent with the humanistic values that inspire the university’s work.”

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2 comments on “Joseph Bottum: At the Gates of Notre Dame

  1. Katherine says:

    An excellent article. The analogy is not exact, but religious liberals in TEC are said to be surprised by the extent of the uproar over Gene Robinson. This one thing turned out to be the key to discontent over many liberal trends in the church. For Catholics, this incident may be a similar event; certainly it shows, as do other university incidents, that the identity of Jesuit and some other schools as “Catholic” is in serious question.

  2. Paula Loughlin says:

    Notre Dame is a Holy Cross schoo, if memory serves. Besides that I agree with the Katherine.