The number one trusted online resource for Catholic values
Menu
A+ A A-

Mandatum Cover-Up? Part III: Notre Dame

  • TIM DRAKE

Notre Dame students are required to take theology courses. Nevertheless, it's nearly impossible for students and their parents to know which Notre Dame theology faculty teach with the Church and which do not.


aacollegeBrian MacMichael found out the hard way. He said one theology course was enough to make him wonder whether he had made a mistake when he transferred to the school from the University of Florida.

"The course was on the sacraments," MacMichael explained, "and when the professor taught on the Eucharist she taught that Christ was equally as present in the community presence as in the Eucharist."

When MacMichael cited Pope Paul VI's 1965 encyclical Mysterium Fidei (On the Holy Eucharist) to demonstrate that Christ is uniquely present in the Eucharist, he was disregarded.

"She held her ground, reiterating that Christ was just as present in the assembly during Mass," he recounted.

"I was worried that perhaps this was what the entire theology department was like," MacMichael said.

But doesn't the entire theology department have the canon law-required mandatums from the bishop certifying that they teach with the Church? No one there will say.

When the Register called to ask which professors at Notre Dame had canon-law mandatums to teach theology, neither theology department chair John Cavadini, university president Father Edward Malloy nor Bishop John D'Arcy of the Fort Wayne-South Bend Diocese responded.

Leon Dixon of Muncie, Ind., is a 1966 Notre Dame graduate. He recalls his father, a 1948 graduate of the law school, complaining about the loss of Catholic values at Notre Dame. Dixon's daughter, Elesia, just completed her freshman year at the university.

"My daughter's freshman religion teacher was an agnostic," said Dixon. "I can get an agnostic religion instructor anywhere in the world for a boatload less money. If Notre Dame holds itself out, as it attempts to do, as a Catholic university, then it needs to be with the Pope."

Dixon said that he has written to the bishop regarding his concerns about the mandatum.

"This sort of omert� is a Catholic problem," he said. "If Mr. [Gov. Frank] Keating had to resign because he felt the American bishops were acting like a mafia, on the intellectual side [Notre Dame] has a problem that will not be solved by the muzzling of internal Catholic intellectuals or of Notre Dame graduates whose real-world accomplishments and learning dwarf those of the faculty. It exposes their lies regarding 'academic freedom.'"

During his meeting with the U.S. cardinals last year, Pope John Paul II said parents "must know that bishops and priests are totally committed to the fullness of Catholic truth on matters of sexual morality, a truth as essential to the renewal of the priesthood and the episcopate as it is to the renewal of marriage and family life."

The Register is investigating Catholic colleges and universities featured in U.S. News & World Report's college guide, asking: Are parents allowed to know whether those who teach theology even intend to teach in communion with the Church? Or has the opposite happened â is the canon-law mandatum being used to protect dissenters?

Since 1983, canon law has required that a theologian teaching in a Catholic university receive a mandatum from the local bishop, showing his intention to teach with the Church. The requirement was highlighted in a footnote in Pope John Paul II's 1990 apostolic constitution on higher education, Ex Corde Ecclesiae (From the Heart of the Church). U.S. bishops began requiring the mandatum in 2001.

But parents say universities won't say who has a mandatum.

The Gamut

Do theology professors have mandatums at Notre Dame?

Responses from theology faculty, said Michael Garvey, assistant director of news and information, would be predictable.

"Father Richard McBrien will say that it's impossible to have any free thought if you implement it," Garvey said, "and Father Edward O'Connor will say that it's impossible to have any free thought if you do not implement it."

Indeed, the views of some of Notre Dame's theology faculty are well known. Father McBrien declared in the Jesuits' America magazine, "I shall not seek a mandate because the requirement of a mandate compromises the academic integrity of the faculty and the university."

Another theology faculty member, Lawrence Cunningham, has been quoted as saying he "resented" the fact that Catholics should have to take an oath of fidelity to their faith.

"Notre Dame has, for all practical purposes, decided to evade the mandate," Father O'Connor said via e-mail.

The University of Notre Dame is ranked 19th among national doctoral universities by U.S. News & World Report's America's Best Colleges 2003. Overall, the proportion of Catholics on Notre Dame's tenured and tenure-track faculty has fallen to about 55%.


Parents' Rights

Notre Dame Students Find Faith Under Attack


"I don't think anyone here has it [the mandatum]," junior Daniel Rober said. That's the presumption that I take when I look at the content of the course."

Rober described the lower-level theology foundations courses as a "crapshoot." He said he chooses courses carefully based upon the course description and talking with older students who have already taken the classes.

MacMichael said it's worse for theology majors. "The vast majority of theology majors are very impressionable," he said. "Most of them have a genuine interest in the field of theology but do not enter the discipline with a working knowledge of the Catholic faith. It's dangerous because they ask questions believing they are getting the right answers."

Ironically, said MacMichael, the school crows about requiring theology courses, but those courses might actually undermine students' faith.

"There was a systematic attempt to undermine what the Church is teaching in the name of academic integrity," said Father Brian Herlocker, a 2000 theology graduate from Notre Dame, describing his theology education at the school.

"We were supposed to look at all sides, but that isn't what happened," said Father Herlocker, who is ordained in the Diocese of Peoria, Ill., and works at the Newman Foundation at the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana. "Instead, if we read Veritatis Splendor [The Splendor of Truth, Pope John Paul II's 1993 encyclical] at all it was to set it up as a straw man or to show how out of touch the Pope was."

Samuel Vasquez, a 1999 theology graduate, agreed.

"My Scripture classes were horrible," he said, "particularly those taught by a Baptist professor. They gut the Scriptures of any transcendent aspects."

Vasquez is currently enrolled in the Institute for Pastoral Theology at Ave Maria University.

Rober said he has been able to keep his faith at Notre Dame and he has hope for its future.

"It's possible to find the right answers," Rober said, "especially among the young priests. Students should not be fearful that Notre Dame is a heterodox place. The more faithful who come here, the better it will get. You learn by having to fight for your faith."

Father Herlocker also had praise for theology department chair Cavadini.

"He [Cavadini] is working in a place that is deeply entrenched and he is trying to make the changes that are needed," Father Herlocker said.

"Notre Dame will change," Vasquez added, "but it will take a generation."

A recent University of California-Los Angeles Higher Education Research Institute survey suggested Catholic colleges, far from instilling the faith in students, are just as likely to cause students to lose their faith. That scares parents who don't want to pay for a Catholic education only to see their child taught that the faith isn't true. That's the concern of Ken and Anne Marie Schroeder of Cincinnati, who want to find a college for their four children.

Their daughter Julie visited Notre Dame in June. While Julie liked the school, her mother was not quite so sure about it.

"We care about the mandatum and the Catholicity of the college," Anne Marie Schroeder said.

A high school senior, Julie is interested in possibly studying biology and genetics. "I would really like to know that Catholic values are being instilled in these areas of study," Schroeder said.

Schroeder said the mandatum has been on her mind at each of the four colleges her daughter has visited.

"You want to know that your child is being taught the truth," she said. "It would be great if the mandatum information was published or somehow made available. At least I would know what we were going into."

David Hoppe, a Notre Dame alum, saw his daughter Katie graduate from the school in May. His son Geoff is currently a sophomore. Non-Catholic professors taught both of his children's freshman theology courses.

"One of the great regrets that I have, as an alumnus, is that the theology department is clearly the weakest department in the university," said David Hoppe, of Burke, Va., who graduated from Notre Dame in 1973. "That should not be. It would be difficult to attend Notre Dame and receive a theology degree and believe that you had learned the Catholic faith."

"I would have thought that it would be important to have a core curriculum course at a Catholic university taught by a Catholic," Hoppe said. "It's not the strongest recommendation one can give a Catholic university when one says to stay away from its theology department."

Still, Hoppe thinks Notre Dame has much to offer.

"You can still find good professors who inculcate the Catholic faith in the subjects they teach," he said. "Students have the opportunity to attend daily Mass in their dorms. It's still a place where it is easy to live and grow in your faith. Notre Dame still has a religious grounding that many of the major Catholic universities have lost."

One of the few professors who has written publicly about the mandatum is Notre Dame law professor emeritus Charles Rice.

Rice, writing for the Observer, the daily newspaper at Notre Dame, said: "It is fair to say that if Notre Dame will not ensure that its required courses in theology are faithful to the Church's magisterium, those courses (and required philosophy courses) should no longer be required. If the professors want to do their own thing, let them and the university abandon any claim that it is the 'Catholic' thing and let the students decide whether to take such courses."

See the full series of articles here:

Mandatum Part I
Mandatum Part II: Georgetown
Mandatum Part III: Notre Dame
Mandatum Part IV: Loyola
Mandatum Part VI: Right to Truth, Right to Know: DeSales Is Proud of the Mandatum
Mandatum Part VII: Taking an oath: Franciscan University of Steubenville

This is Meaghen Gonzalez, Editor of CERC. I hope you appreciated this piece. We curate these articles especially for believers like you.

Please show your appreciation by making a $3 donation. CERC is entirely reader supported.

dividertop

Acknowledgement

Tim Drake. "Mandatum Cover-Up? Part III: Notre Dame.” National Catholic Register. (June, 2003).

This article is reprinted with permission from National Catholic Register. All rights reserved. To subscribe to the National Catholic Register call 1-800-421-3230.

The Author

Tim Drake is an award-winning journalist and author.  He has published more than 600 articles in various publications. He serves as staff writer with the National Catholic Register and Faith and Family Magazine. Tim Drake is the author of There We Stood, Here We Stand: 11 Lutherans Rediscover their Catholic Roots, Saints of the Jubilee, and Young and Catholic: The Face of Tomorrow's Church. He resides in Saint Joseph, Minnesota. 

Copyright © 2003 National Catholic Register

Interested in keeping Up to date?

Sign up for our Weekly E-Letter

* indicates required