Wednesday, February 8, 2012 4:53pm EST
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Every President since President Eisenhower has been invited to speak at Notre Dame's commencements. So, why has President Obama's invitation created such a row? It depends on who you ask.
First, many of those who oppose his invitation do so ostensibly based on Catholic social teaching and a doctrinal dedication to Catholicism. That is, they claim that one, who supports abortion rights and stem cell research and thus oppose catholic teaching, should not be honored with an invitation to speak at commencement or with an honorary degree. As a practicing Catholic I say fair enough. I would assume then that any President who opposed any tenant of Catholic teaching would not be granted this honor. My assumption is incorrect and thus the argument is flawed.
To be sure, the Obama commencement controversy is not the first. One wonders though why the amount of vitriol did not reach a fermented brouhaha when Bush'41 was given the honor to deliver the Notre Dame Commencement address. After all, Catholic teaching extols the sanctity of human life without exception and makes no distinction whatsoever. Yet Bush'41 supported the death penalty and thus made the decision that "the sanctity of human life has exceptions." Ignoring the life question, he said in his address, "Today's crisis will have to be addressed by millions of Americans at the personal, individual level for governmental programs to be effective. And the federal government, of course, must do everything it can do, but the point is, government alone is simply not enough. So perhaps the vitriol depends on the political content of the speech as well as the political leanings of the protestors.
Bush '43 faced protest because of his stances on among other things, labor and the death penalty. He said in his speech, "This University is more than a community of scholars, it is a community of conscience." Neither Terry nor Keyes was present with gallows in tow.
Second, the analysis and discussion concerning the President's invitation proves the power of the chattering class to define Obama's Presidency in "post-racial" discourse. Whether we choose to acknowledge it or not, unlike all of his predecessors, the President is Black. Thus, if Notre Dame did not extend the invitation; the punditry would have certainly accused Notre Dame of being racists for refusing to extend the invitation. "Post-racial" discourse is powerful because of its ability to ignore race and elevate "value-based" twaddle.
Third, let's not forget that the very nature of a university is that it provides a platform for discourse even when all in the university community do not agree with the views of the speaker. Are those in opposition to the invitation suggesting that there should be a litmus
test for commencement speakers? Should that litmus test be that no speaker should be invited to speak at commencement unless the speaker is in complete agreement with each and every tenet of espoused values of the University? Commencement then would be relegated to an intellectual merry-andrew buttressed by politically correct indoctrination.
Moreover, universities would have to engage in a purging of "intellectual and doctrinial miscreants" where each and every member of the University community who does not agree with those espoused values are asked to unceremoniously exit the University. The University then would create a list of those in opposition and then "burn them at the proverbial stake" To be sure; Notre Dame is both Catholic and a university. Thus, the fundamental question is whether Notre Dame and others like it are Catholic universities or universities that happen to be Catholic. This is not a merely an academic question nor is the difference a distinction without a difference. Perhaps, some doctrinal and dogmatic soul searching may be in order.
The fact is that there is no university community in which all members live the espoused values of the university without deviation. To suggest otherwise is intellectually bankrupt at worst and unrealistic at best. I am not suggesting that religious universities should not have the freedom to invite those who share our religious values to celebrate commencement. In fact the opposite is true. I am suggesting that religious universities in modern day America live work and teach in an America that is increasingly secular, political and diverse. I am also suggesting that if were honest, we would admit that economics dictate that we cannot survive and thrive in an increasingly secular America if we do not find a way to interrogate secularity. So, perhaps, the question is at what cost.
Fourth, the reality is that the Republican Party is in ataxia and they have used this invitation as a way to rally social conservatives. Both Randall Terry and Alan Keyes were arrested as part of the protest against the President's invitation. My research did not indicate that either Terry or Keyes is members of the Notre Dame University community. Their pushing dolls in carriages despite it comic relief prove this fact. Let's not forget that Keyes is the proverbial political bridesmaid and self-promoter.
Finally, abortion is a social and political issue that continues to divide modern day America much like slavery did. Thus, while I do not question the religious devotion of anyone involved in this debate, I do question the motives of those who have sought to politicize this invitation while pretending not to do so.
The reality is that this invitation is shrouded in religion, politics and policy; I just wish that all sides would admit it rather than adopting the supercilious "holier than thou, post-racial" moniker buttressed by pretentious posturing that prevents serious debate in modern day America.
Dr. Christopher J. Metzler is associate dean at Georgetown University and the author of The Construction and Rearticulation of Race in a Post-Racial America.
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