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The '''Cardinal Newman Society''' is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt, nonprofit organization founded in 1993 and dedicated to what it calls the renewal of [[Catholic]] identity on the campuses of colleges and [[university|universities]] in the [[United States of America|United States]]. The organization is guided by its particular interpretations of John Henry Cardinal Newman's ''The Idea of a University'' and [[Pope John Paul II]]'s 1990 [[Apostolic Constitution]], [[Ex Corde Ecclesiae]]. The organization claims to have a membership of more than 20,000.
The '''Cardinal Newman Society''' is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt, nonprofit organization founded in 1993 and dedicated to the renewal of [[Catholic]] identity on the campuses of colleges and [[university|universities]] in the [[United States of America|United States]]. The organization is guided by [[John Henry Newman|John Henry Cardinal Newman]]'s ''The Idea of a University'' and [[Pope John Paul II]]'s 1990 [[Apostolic Constitution]], [[Ex Corde Ecclesiae]]. The organization claims a membership of more than 20,000.


The society officially claims a four point mission: to--
The society claims a four point mission: to--


*Assist and support education that is faithful to the teaching and tradition of the Catholic Church;
*Assist and support education that is faithful to the teaching and tradition of the Catholic Church;

Revision as of 19:02, 18 August 2010

The Cardinal Newman Society is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt, nonprofit organization founded in 1993 and dedicated to the renewal of Catholic identity on the campuses of colleges and universities in the United States. The organization is guided by John Henry Cardinal Newman's The Idea of a University and Pope John Paul II's 1990 Apostolic Constitution, Ex Corde Ecclesiae. The organization claims a membership of more than 20,000.

The society claims a four point mission: to--

  • Assist and support education that is faithful to the teaching and tradition of the Catholic Church;
  • Produce and disseminate research and publications on developments and best practices in Catholic higher education;
  • Advise and assist students, alumni, trustees, campus officials, faculty and others engaged in renewing and strengthening the Catholic identity of Catholic colleges and universities and Church-affiliated ministries at non-Catholic colleges and universities; and
  • Study and promote the work of John Henry Cardinal Newman, especially as it relates to Catholic higher education and the unity of faith and reason. [1]

It should not be confused with the Oxford University Newman Society, or with the Society for the Study of Cardinal Newman,[2] or with Newman Centre, the name often used to designate Catholic campus ministry centers at state and other non-Catholic universities.

The society's board of directors includes Media Research Center founder L. Brent Bozell III. The society's national advisory board includes Rev. Benedict Groeschel, CFR, Rev. Robert Levis, Rev. C. John McCloskey, III, Rev. Michael Scanlan, TOR, Dr. Alice von Hildebrand, and Rev. Peter Stravinskas.

Founding

The society was founded in 1993 by Fordham University alumnus Patrick Reilly. After decisions by Fordham to recognize pro-choice and gay student clubs and create a counseling helpline which referred pregnant students to an abortion provider,[citation needed] Reilly used his position as editor of the school paper to express his opinions in defense of his understandings and applications of Catholic teaching on sexuality and abortion. [3] Reilly launched the society with the help of other recent Catholic college graduates. The society's leadership included prominent conservative commentator L. Brent Bozell III. It was Bozell, founder and president of the conservative media-watchdog group Media Research Center, who suggested use of direct mail marketing to invigorate the organization at a time when it existed "primarily as letterhead." [4]

According to Reilly, “It took a while, but there was such a need, more and more, to engage students and working with alumni and working with faculty and as we went on, it became clear that they were all looking for some kind of national voice to express the concerns that very many faithful Catholics had about the state of Catholic education.” [5]

One prominent supporter of the group is Fr. Benedict Groeschel, who wrote the forward to their "Newman Guide" and has spoken publicly in support of a stronger presence of the Christian culture of life on Catholic campuses, famously quipping that some secular colleges provide a better Catholic formation than their purported Catholic counterparts. Another supporter of the group is Fr. Joseph Koterski, a conservative Jesuit at Fordham who is on record as having told Fordham students that he "couldn't see how [a Catholic] could [vote for Obama] in good conscience after knowing the facts."[6]

Activities

The society sponsors conferences and speakers as well as producing Campus Notes and The Renewal Report, the society's newsletters. Its website indicates an emphasis on "researching activities both on campus and in the classroom;" the research leads to numerous press releases publicizing scandals in Catholic higher education, particularly what it regards as departures from orthodoxy or tolerance of ideas, activities and presentations it considers not in keeping with Roman Catholic teaching. The organization also produces "The Newman Guide to Choosing a Catholic College: What to Look For and Where to Find It" [7] claiming "to show students where they can learn and grow in a genuine Catholic environment without the nonsense that has overtaken even some of the most well-known Catholic universities." They identify 26 Catholic colleges and universities in the United States and abroad (and online) where, in their view, "students can reasonably expect a faithful Catholic education and a campus culture that generally upholds the values taught in their homes and parishes."

An important initiative includes monitoring speakers at Catholic universities, and providing a mechanism for online reporting of what it believes to ve scandalous commencement speakers and honorees they believe to "have taken public positions contrary to Catholic values or teaching."

The organization is often at the center of controversy, as for example when it solicited donations to "finance a major effort to expose the heretics within our Catholic colleges," an effort which was called "red-baiting in ecclesiastical garb" by the Rev. John Beal, canon law professor at Catholic University of America. It has been criticized for "McCarthyite tactics and fundamentalist agenda"[8]. Charles L. Currie, president of the Association of Jesuit Colleges and Universities said that the society's "attacks can no longer go unchallenged," and characterized their work as "a long trail of distorted, inaccurate, and often untrue attacks on scholars addressing complex issues." Michael James, vice president of the Association of Catholic Colleges and Universities, said the society is "destructive and antithetical to a spirit of unity in our commitment to serve society and the church." [9] Reilly has been referred to in Catholic publications as the "self-appointed ayatollah to Catholic academia in this country." [10]

The organization partners with conservative groups like The Heritage Foundation to sponsor such events as their joint forum on academic freedom[11][12] It has a large presence on the Web, issuing "Catholic Higher Education Alerts" to publicize not only what it considers scandalous programming at universities, but in opposition to the ACLU, judges it deems activist or with whom it disagrees, and what it perceives as "liberal bias" more generally.[13]

The organization has stated that "a Catholic bishop contacted Patrick Reilly to discuss how he could put the screws to a wayward Catholic college in his diocese, including ways of encouraging the removal of dissident theology faculty;" Reilly declined to identify the bishop, citing confidentiality. Rev. James Keenan, a priest and professor at Boston College who was targeted in a fundraising letter sent out by the society, said "Hopefully, someday our bishops will call us to end this awful conduct, which hurts not only those of us targeted, but more importantly, the unity of the church itself."[14] Another of the targets, Fr. John J. Paris, said of Reilly "I think he is a fraud, a charlatan, and a snake-oil salesman" and of the society, that its purpose is "whipping up right-wing types to open their checkbooks."[15]

In 2009, the society was one of the primary organizations that criticized the University of Notre Dame for inviting the President Barack Obama to receive an honorary doctorate of law and deliver the commencement speech, due to his pro-choice position and record in support of abortion. The society garnered more than 367,000 signatures to its online petition of protest. [16]

The organization also deplored a commencement address given at Belmont, California's Notre Dame de Namur University, by Sr. Helen Prejean, a nun opposed to capital punishment and author of Dead Man Walking, claiming the Josephite nun "is out-of-line with church teaching on, of all issues, capital punishment."[17]; the organization faulted Prejean's critique of a "loophole" in the Church's teaching which permits capital punishment under limited circumstances.

See also

External links