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NOTRE DAME, IN - Should Anyone Care if Non-Catholics Predominate on Notre Dame's Faculty?
We bring you a trilogy of articles that should be
required reading for all members of the Notre Dame
family. In these articles, two of the University's leading
scholars exchange contrasting views respecting the
question whether Notre Dame's Catholic identity is
threatened because of the precipitous decline in the
proportion of Catholics on the faculty.
We have previously sent you the first essay, The Faculty Problem, by Father Wilson
Miscamble,
C.S.C., which appeared recently in America. The
rejoinder, Catholic
Enough? by John T. McGreevy,
was published in Commonweal. The final
essay is a privately circulated paper
by
Father
Miscamble that he has given us permission to
distribute.
In combination, these articles disclose why Notre
Dame's Catholic identity is at risk, how this risk
materialized, and how difficult it will be to turn it aside.
We offer the following comments that we hope will be
helpful.
All students of the secularization of colleges and
universities concur with Father Miscamble's thesis
that the fundamental cause is the loss of religious
identity of the faculty. Dr. McGreevy does not disagree,
nor does he deny that Catholics are close to
becoming a minority on the Notre Dame faculty. (He
does note that more than 50% of those hired last year
were Catholics; but he does not dispute Father
Miscamble's estimate that, in view of the heavily
Catholic proportion of retirees, the rate must be well
over 60% to arrest the decline.)
Their fundamental disagreement seems clearly to be
over the Mission Statement's declaration that Notre
Dame's Catholic identity "depends upon"
the "continuing presence of a predominant number of
Catholic intellectuals" on the faculty - a requirement
that has always been taken to mean a solid majority.
For Father
Miscamble, this is the starting point for analysis. For
Professor McGreevy, it is not worth
mentioning.
Professor McGreevy's silence is perhaps not
surprising. As Father Miscamble observed in his initial
article:
"There are now 32 members of the history
department,
only 12 are Catholic. This past year we hired three
additional faculty members, only one of whom is
Catholic. This is hardly the way to maintain a
predominant number of Catholic intellectuals. In fact,
we hired in exactly the reverse proportion
needed."
What, then, does Professor McGreevy say? First, that
it's hard to find enough Catholic scholars, and,
second, that things are fine as they are.
As the title of Father Miscamble response implies -
"Are There Any (Really Good) Catholic Scholars Out
There" -- he addresses this contention directly. We
add that it is useful to think of this problem in terms of
actual numbers. With a faculty of about 1,000 and
assuming a generous turnover of 10%, increasing
Catholic hires by 10% would require finding a mere
ten additional qualified Catholic scholars a year. To
suggest that this is beyond reach for the pre-eminent
Catholic university in the country seems questionable,
to put it conservatively. Other factors must be in
play.
One of them -- enthusiasm for the status quo -- is
evident from the principal parts of Professor
McGreevy's article. He not only ignores the Mission
Statement but also makes a mere passing reference
to the value of students' having the "witness of
Catholic intellectuals." It is the contribution made
by "Protestants, Muslins, Jews, [and] unbelievers" that
he values and that he faults Father Miscamble for
ignoring - a criticism Father Miscamble answers in
his concluding essay.
Perhaps the most telling part of Professor McGreevy's
article is his detailed description of courses that, in his
view, provide "an education built upon the university's
Catholic identity." The reader might suppose that,
notwithstanding the reduction in Catholic faculty, this
is a core body of courses taught by Catholic scholars
reflecting the Catholic intellectual tradition. The reader
would be wrong. The majority are taught by non-
Catholics. That is not to suggest, of course, that these
scholars and their courses are not as worthy as
Professor McGreevy says. It is to suggest that for
Professor McGreevy, in terms of the school's Catholic
mission, a majority of non-Catholics serves quite
well.
Professor McGreevy is one of the most respected
Catholic scholars at the University. If he discounts
either the importance or the practicability, or both, of
having a predominantly Catholic faculty, what of the
nominal and dissident Catholics and the non-
Catholics not committed to the school's mission? In
both of his illuminating articles, Father Miscamble
provides the worrisome answers.
This message and the articles are posted on our blog
site. We invite your comments and we urge you to
forward this message to everyone you think might be
interested (see "Forward email" link at the bottom of
this page).
Sincerely,
Project Sycamore Officers and Directors
Officers
William H. Dempsey ('52)
President
Joseph A. Reich, Jr. ('57)
Vice President
George L. Heidkamp ('52)
Treasurer & Secretary
Directors
Richard V. Allen ('57, '58)
Dr. Daniel M. Boland ('56, '61)
Timothy M. Dempsey ('89)
Dr. John A. Gueguen, Jr. ('56, '58)
Dr. Susan Biddle Shearer ('88)
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