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May 17, 2009 2:11 PM

Obama at Notre Dame: revealing his character

Great essay from last Thursday on why Obama should have withdrawn from speaking at Notre Dame and what his disrespect for pro-life Catholics reveals about his character:

Obama, Notre Dame, and the Character Thing
kengor.pngWritten by Paul Kengor
Thursday, 14 May 2009 13:56

In May 1995, his first year as Pennsylvania governor, Tom Ridge was invited by Gannon University, a Catholic college in Erie, Pa., to give the commencement address and receive an honorary degree. But the distinguished Republican and native son had a problem: he was a pro-choice Catholic.

Erie Bishop Donald Trautman expressed his "concerns." Governor Ridge declined the degree.

"The last thing I would want is for those differences to distract in any way from this wonderful day of recognition for Gannon's class of 1995," said Ridge. His spokesman explained that the decision "came from the governor."

Ridge did the right thing. He did the character thing.

That wasn't the only case. As far back as June 1974, shortly after Roe v. Wade became law, the famous Cardinal Joseph Mindszenty refused an invitation and honorary degree from the University of Santa Clara because of an abortion controversy involving the university. Mindszenty did the character thing.

Obviously, this is relevant because of the situation with President Barack Obama and Notre Dame. On Sunday, Obama will deliver the commencement address and receive an honorary degree from Notre Dame, courtesy of the invitation and insistence of Notre Dame President John Jenkins.

This has caused a tremendous scandal. In fact, Church officials are using precisely that word--"scandal"--which has loaded, pejorative meaning in today's Catholic Church, reserved for the worst offenses. One Vatican official calls the Notre Dame situation "the greatest scandal."

Countless letters and 350,000 signatures from Catholics all over America have flowed into Notre Dame, demanding Jenkins rescind the invitation or resign. Millions of dollars from alumni are in jeopardy. Arrests of protestors have already taken place, with more sure to follow.

Notre Dame's bishop, John D'Arcy, carefully instructed Father Jenkins that his invitation stands in "clear" violation of the American bishops' guidelines, openly articulated in their statement, Catholics in Political Life. Jenkins has rebuffed D'Arcy, who, in turn, will not be attending graduation for the first time in 25 years as bishop.

The other speaker scheduled for the day, the renowned Catholic stateswoman, former ambassador to the Vatican, and Harvard law professor, Mary Ann Glendon, is also staying home, refusing the school's Laetare Medal, which she would have received alongside President Obama. Additional priests and church officials, plus students, are boycotting. Voices condemning Notre Dame range from Norma McCorvey--"Jane Roe" herself, who is now a pro-life Catholic--to Archbishop Raymond Burke, head of the Apostolic Signatura, the Vatican's highest court. (Burke calls Obama "an agent of death.")

I literally cannot think of a single episode in American history where a Catholic university has found itself in such an uproar with a president. Indeed, the previous pro-choice president, Bill Clinton, was not invited by Jenkins' predecessor.

Thus, President Obama should do the right thing--the character thing--and let Jenkins off the hook by not attending. He should take the high road, "No, Father Jenkins, I insist. This is hurting you and your university."

Apparently, Obama will not do that. Why not?

I'm not a mind reader, but I can report on the speculation, and it isn't pretty.

Read entire article here.

Love,
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Posted in Obama Nation, Pro-Life Issues | Permalink

Comments

Hi Barbara. Thanks for posting this article. I have been saying things like this all week. I have heard a number of times over the last few days (both from people I know and from people in the news) that they think that it is a shame that the "protesters" would think that it is acceptable to go and disrupt this day for the graduates. My response is...why is it acceptable for Pres. Obama to disrupt this day??? If the leadership at ND couldn't seem to find a way to withdraw the invitation, why couldn't the Pres. himself just step up and do it? Unless he lives in a bubble he has to completely understand the dismay that his speaking at ND causes!! I think the article probably answers this question better than I can.

Posted by: Jill | May 17, 2009 3:19 PM

There are many who are praying for Obama to realize the great and far reaching effects of abortion, and then to make changes in his administration. We are called to pray for our leaders and I am motivated by those at ND that are doing just that.

Posted by: sandra | May 17, 2009 5:34 PM

Everyday we get a clearer distinction about just who takes priority in Obama's universe. Barak Obama.

Bless all those graduates who had to forgo their own hard earned graduation to stay faithful to themselves, and to God's word. I pray they will all be richly blessed as they go forward and truly make this world a better place.

Posted by: kelly | May 18, 2009 11:16 AM

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