Don’t Disown Catholic Mission

By Luke Carter

Published: Friday, September 21, 2012

Updated: Friday, September 21, 2012

Last week, Nate Tisa (SFS ’14) wrote an interesting column (“Distorted Religious Identity Divides GU,” A3, Sept. 14, 2012) in which he explored how Georgetown can more fully express its Catholic identity. With this piece, Tisa did a great service to our campus community, and people are now talking about what it means to live and work at a Catholic university.

Tisa astutely identified contentious areas where more work is needed for Georgetown to live out its Catholic mission: De facto segregation indeed threatens the campus community, true political discussions are rare outside the classroom and the administration should consider removing undue barriers to student speech.

Yet while Tisa was right to draw attention to these issues, some of his recommendations were off the mark. He argued that Georgetown should formally recognize student organizations that advocate for issues directly in conflict with Catholic teachings and claimed that by not granting these groups full benefits, the university stifles meaningful debate. But in reality, granting university recognition and resources to these groups would not enhance Georgetown’s Catholic identity; it would detract from it. This point is better explained by exploring a broader question that Tisa addresses: What does it mean to be a Catholic university?
As a Catholic institution, Georgetown formally professes its belief in the teachings of the Catholic Church. It maintains that these teachings are both true and comprehensible. Each individual obviously need not agree with all of these teachings to attend a Catholic university and be a valued member of its community, but the official tenets of Catholicism are — or at least should be — the guiding force behind every major university decision. As long as the university claims to support the Catholic Church in mission, it must also do so in action.

Tisa is absolutely right that the university cannot shy away from dialogue with those who disagree on fundamental issues. That is why Georgetown invites speakers who are pro-choice and pro-gay marriage to campus. In the Georgetown College video “Jesuits at Georgetown,” Fr. Ryan Maher, S.J., says, “We welcome diversity, because we’re not afraid of questions and we’re confident in the answer.” The moment Georgetown ceases to hold this value will be the moment when it stops being a university at all.

Georgetown also has a unique mission. As the theologian Fr. Erich Przywara, S.J., notes, Jesuit universities have a mission both to interpret the Church to the world and to interpret the world to the Church. This means that, while Georgetown should foster open dialogue on all issues, it must never withdraw its support for the most challenging claims of the Catholic faith. As long as the Catholic Church maintains that abortion is a moral evil and that marriage can exist only between one man and one woman, Georgetown cannot grant funds or benefits to groups that explicitly argue otherwise without ignoring the Church’s mission.

Groups like H*yas for Choice certainly make valuable contributions to the campus community. They should continue to express their views through their right to free assembly and free speech. As Tisa rightly notes, a Catholic university should never suppress the views of students simply because they disagree with specific Church teachings.

And while this university cannot directly support such groups without betraying its Catholic identity, productive dialogue is not impossible. By inviting all students into an ongoing conversation about the significance of Georgetown’s Catholic identity, we can help our university better live out its unique mission. That is a goal that all members of Georgetown’s community, Tisa and myself included, should work toward every day.

Luke Carter is a junior in the College.

Comments

6 comments
Anonymous
Wed Oct 24 2012 12:08
Perhaps those hostile to GU's catholic tradition should have chosen a different university. Maybe it's not too late for them to transfer. I'm about 100% the loss of such students would be negligible.
Anonymous
Sat Sep 22 2012 12:27
Wow. This article is just as imbecilic, hopeless, and anti-Catholic as Tisa's.
Anonymous
Fri Sep 21 2012 22:59
I agree that this isn't a democracy, but at the same time its not a church. Certainly the University has a Catholic Identity, nobody would deny or disparage that fact. At the same time, the University can not pretend that it speaks for its student's. Certainly many are Catholic, but I would argue that there are a majority of students who either practice a very different form of it than what the Vatican officially ordains. Further, there are students both international and american who are Hindu, Buddhist, Muslim, Athiest, Humanist, etc. By allowing groups representing secular viewpoints or just simply ideas in conflict with Catholicism, the University is not endorsing or affiliating itself with the ideas being purported, but simply acknowledging the fact that these are legitimate viewpoints worth being discussed on an equal footing with all other ideas. By not allowing these groups the same rights as groups that do not conflict with Catholicism, it creates an atmosphere where they become "fringe" groups- almost an "us against them" mentality where they are just not as valid or legitimate as a true Georgetown Club, that they perhaps should not be considered as fully. I think that this can come of as a weakness for the University, and is not in the spirit of a well rounded, liberal arts education that forms the core of our attending Georgetown in the first place. A University should strive to be a forum for all, and I think that it would show a security and confidence in it's mission and identity.
Anonymous
Fri Sep 21 2012 19:29
This isn't a democracy, it's a university. It's designed to take uneducated learners and teach them how to think about important issues. Thus the university is allowed to hold beliefs of its own, beliefs it wants its students to know and wrestle with.
Anonymous
Fri Sep 21 2012 18:34
At what point do the interests of the student body override the Catholic identity/interests? If the students favor contraceptives, gay marriage, and other viewpoints that do not coincide with Catholic doctrine, should Georgetown step aside and let the opinions of its students rule the day?
2005 Graduate
Fri Sep 21 2012 12:15
Agreed.
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