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NRL News
Page 28
September 2009
Volume 36
Issue 9
Dinner
Honoree Was Inspiring Example;
Catholic Bishops Being Urged to Abandon Principled Stance
By
Anthony J. Lauinger, Vice President, National Right to Life
As the
National Right to Life Educational Trust Fund’s October 6 Proudly
Pro-Life Awards Dinner in New York City approaches (for
reservations, please phone (202) 626-8827), a battle is brewing that
was sparked by the event that led to the selection of this year’s
honoree.
Mary Ann
Glendon, Harvard law professor and former U. S. Ambassador to the
Vatican, had been invited to receive Notre Dame’s highest honor, the
Laetare Medal, at the university’s May 17 commencement, but
subsequently declined the Notre Dame award when it became apparent
that her appearance was being cited by the university as
justification for Notre Dame’s honoring of pro-abortion President
Barack Obama on the same stage.
Ambassador Glendon was in good company in denouncing this act of
public scandal by Notre Dame: more than 80 Catholic bishops did
likewise. Many of the 83 bishops, archbishops, and cardinals who
spoke out referenced the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’
document, “Catholics in Political Life,” which states: “The Catholic
community and Catholic institutions should not honor those who act
in defiance of our fundamental moral principles. They should not be
given awards, honors or platforms which would suggest support for
their actions.”
This
policy was adopted by a virtually unanimous vote of the U.S.
Catholic bishops in 2004. Sadly, some Catholic colleges and
universities have reacted, not by resolving to avoid the same error
that Notre Dame made but, rather, by seeking to influence the
bishops to change or abandon the policy. Since May, the pressure
has been building on the bishops either to weaken the rule, or else
to abandon the guideline altogether.
Ambassador Glendon, in her letter to Notre Dame President Father
John I. Jenkins, C.S.C., declining the Notre Dame award, pointed out
that President Obama is “a prominent and uncompromising opponent of
the Church’s position on issues involving fundamental principles of
justice.” The bishops’ 2004 statement about not honoring such
individuals, she wrote, “seems to me so reasonable that I am at a
loss to understand why a Catholic university should disrespect it.”
It is
crucial that pro-life Americans, whether Catholic or not, convey
their appreciation and encouragement to America’s Catholic bishops
for their unwavering commitment to life. The Catholic bishops,
under constant assault from the secular culture, have served as a
bulwark against the destruction of the human family’s most
vulnerable little members. Through the darkest hours of the
decades-long battle against the slaughter of our nation’s unborn
children, the Catholic bishops have been steadfast in defending the
sanctity of innocent human life.
Now they
are being pressured by the same secular influences, pro-abortion
faculty interests, misguided college-administrator attitudes, and
mindless appeals to “academic freedom” that undermined Notre Dame’s
commitment to pro-life and Catholic values in the Obama-commencement
disaster. The unborn child in America needs the Catholic bishops.
It is we who are called to make sure that the bishops feel the
appreciation of pro-life citizens, and receive the encouragement to
ensure that institutions which call themselves “Catholic” are, in
fact, pro-life.
Mary Ann
Glendon, who was at the eye of the storm at Notre Dame, was the one
who emerged from that tragic scandal with her honor and integrity
unscathed, and her stature enhanced. For her edifying example,
uncommon courage, and selfless devotion to the protection of
innocent human life, the heroine of the Notre Dame tragedy will
receive National Right to Life’s highest honor at the formal Proudly
Pro-Life Awards Dinner October 6 at New York’s Waldorf-Astoria
Hotel. For reservations, please phone (202) 626-8827 or (202)
378-8842, or see the coupon below.
Mr.
Lauinger has served as Vice President of National Right to Life
since 1995. He and his wife Phyllis entrusted their eight children
to Notre Dame. The youngest graduated in May. |