The occasional, often ill-considered thoughts of a Roman Catholic permanent deacon who is ever grateful to God for his existence. Despite the strangeness we encounter in this life, all the suffering we witness and endure, being is good, so good I am sometimes unable to contain my joy. Deo gratias!


Although I am an ordained deacon of the Catholic Church, the opinions expressed in this blog are my personal opinions. In offering these personal opinions I am not acting as a representative of the Church or any Church organization.

Showing posts with label Christendom College. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christendom College. Show all posts

Sunday, July 31, 2011

Warren Carroll, R.I.P.

On July 17 Warren Carroll died at the age of 79. A pioneering Catholic educator and a brilliant historian, Dr. Carroll founded Christendom College in Front Royal, VA in 1977. Christendom is one of the "new" Catholic institutions of high education founded in recent decades in what has so far been a laudable and successful effort to counteract the declining Catholicity of so many supposedly Catholic colleges and universities. Georgetown University, Boston College, Notre Dame University, and too many other once-Catholic institutions have become victims of a form of identity theft in which their Catholic identity has been erased by administrations committed to making them no different than their secular counterparts.

Though his founding of Christendom College, Dr. Carroll joined Thomas Aquinas College in Santa Paula, CA, Thomas More College in Marrimack, NH, Franciscan University of Steubenville OH, and many other similar institutions in offering their students a rigorous educational experience while at the same time remaining faithful to the magisterial teachings of the Church.

I never met Dr. Carroll, although we have several mutual friends who all thought the world of him. I had hoped to meet him when our family stopped by Christendom College in the late 1980s while on a trip to visit my in-laws in Florida. Our elder daughter was "college shopping" at the time and wanted to take a look at Christendom. Unfortunately Dr. Carroll was out of his office that day, but we did enjoy our brief tour of the campus. As it turned out our daughter ultimately decided to attend Thomas Aquinas College in Santa Paula, California. Subsequently, however, I had the pleasure of being educated by Dr. Carroll through his remarkable and massive (five large volumes) History of Christendom. I've included a link (left) to the first volume of this series. It is a beautifully written history which I recommend to anyone interested in the history of Christendom from its beginnings in Old Testament revelation.

Warren Carroll left a lasting legacy not only in the college he founded, but also in the lives he touched through his writings and, in particular, the lives he touched in the classroom. He will be missed.

Requiescat in pace, Dr. Carroll.


You can read more about Dr. Carroll here: Christendom College Founder Warren Carroll Dies.

Saturday, May 15, 2010

Our "New" Catholic Colleges and Universities

Sean Cardinal O'Malley, the Archbishop of Boston and a man for whom I have much love and respect, visited Florida last week and received an honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters from Ave Maria University during their commencement ceremony. Ave Maria is a relatively new Catholic university located in Ave Maria, Florida, near Naples. If you would like to read Cardinal Sean's comments on his visit, you can do so by visiting his blog: Cardinal Sean's Blog. (In the spirit of full disclosure, let me add that Cardinal Sean -- then the Bishop of Fall River -- ordained me and my class of brother deacons back in 1997.)

Ave Maria University has grown rapidly since it first opened its doors in 2003, thanks to the vision and generosity of Tom Monaghan, the founder of Domino's Pizza. Like so many of the new Catholic colleges and universities that have sprung up around the country, Ave Maria is faithful to the magisterial teaching of the Church and committed to providing its students a solid liberal arts education guided by Catholic principles. The school now has nearly 800 students on its Florida campus, plus another 500 in Nicaragua. It also has a law school located in nearby Naples. One of our parishioners, a bright young man who is graduating from Trinity Catholic High School in Ocala, Florida, will attend Ave Maria University in the fall. I know he and his family are thrilled that he has been accepted and will become a part of this thriving Catholic educational community.

As I mentioned above, Ave Maria University is just one of a number of relatively new Catholic colleges that were formed to fill the void created when so many of our ostensibly "Catholic" colleges and universities decided to sever their Catholic roots and become instead secular institutions with Catholic-sounding names. This decision to separate themselves from the Church and repudiate their duty of obedience to her was a conscious decision made in 1967 when the major Catholic universities declared their autonomy from the Catholic Church in the Land O’Lakes Declaration.  The declaration was the brainchild of Notre Dame's Fr. Theodore Hesburgh who believed that Catholic colleges and universities, to be "effective," should no longer submit to the Church's teaching authority. This was clearly stated by the declaration:
To perform its teaching and research functions effectively the Catholic university must have a true autonomy and academic freedom in the face of authority of whatever kind, lay or clerical, external to the academic community itself.
As a result, these schools, acting like rebellious teenagers, quickly began to dismantle their core curricula and separate themselves from the teachings of Mother Church. Within a few short years they became indistinguishable from most secular institutions. This left the believing Catholic with few choices when it came to higher education...until Ave Maria University and other similar schools arrived on the scene.

In addition to Ave Maria, this new crop of colleges and universities includes: Franciscan University of Steubenville -- (1946) Steubenville, OH; Thomas Aquinas College -- (1971) Santa Paula, CA (from which our elder daughter graduated in 1993); Christendom College -- (1977) Front Royal, VA; Magdalen College -- (1974) Warner, NH; Thomas More College -- (1978) Merrimack, NH; Wyoming Catholic College -- (2007) Lander, WY...and many others whose names escape me right now. If you're unfamiliar with these schools, just visit their websites and you'll quickly recognize how different and how Catholic they truly are.
Over the past 30 years or more I've watched these schools, and others like them, grow and flourish, supported by those who realize there is a great, unmet need for rigorous Catholic higher education that still maintains a strong Catholic identity. This, of course, is exactly what Pope John Paul II demanded in his apostolic constitution, Ex Corde Ecclesiae ("Out of the Heart of the Church"), which he issued twenty years ago in August 1990. It's a wonderful document that places the Catholic institution of higher learning in its proper context where the search for the truth and its transmission are the institution's primary responsibility. This is a responsibility that makes little sense to many of those who lead and teach in our secular institutions where relativistic thinking has made the search for truth meaningless.

I encourage all faithful Catholics not only to support these institutions and others like them, but also to encourage our young Catholic students to consider them as they make their plans for higher education.

Blessings...