Pro-life advocates said the University of Notre Dame's recent
invitation to President Barack Obama to speak on campus is a chance to
participate in public discourse, unlike the school’s welcoming of Obama
as commencement speaker in 2009.
“One is a scandal and the other is entirely appropriate,” said Eric
Scheidler, executive director of the Pro-Life Action League.
In a recent press release, Notre Dame explained that it has invited
both Obama and Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney to speak at
the school during the campaign in order to “provide the campus
community a firsthand impression of the contenders and their messages.”
It noted that the university was continuing a 60-year long tradition in
offering Notre Dame as a “forum for serious political discussion” by
the presidential candidates.
The invitation drew some concern from those who feared it would be a
repeat of the university’s 2009 decision to invite Obama as the
commencement speaker and award him an honorary degree. Numerous bishops
spoke out against the decision and a petition protesting it drew more
than 100,000 signatures, pointing to the president’s adamant support for
abortion without limits.
Obama has also recently announced support for redefining marriage to
include same-sex couples. In addition, his administration has come under
fire for issuing a mandate that requires employers to offer health
insurance plans covering contraception, sterilization and early abortion
drugs.
Notre Dame has joined more than 80 other schools, dioceses, charitable
organizations and private businesses in filing lawsuits over the
mandate, arguing that it violates their constitutionally-protected right
to religious freedom.
Scheidler, who led hundreds of pro-lifers in protesting Obama’s
commencement speech at Notre Dame, believes that the current invitation
is an “entirely different kind of situation than what we saw in 2009.”
In that situation, Obama was presented as “a fitting voice to speak to
students about their futures,” while in reality, his adamant support for
abortion makes him unfit to do so, he told CNA.
Conferring an honorary degree was “totally outrageous and scandalous from a Catholic perspective,” he added.
The “essential difference” in this situation, Scheidler explained, is
that the president is not being given an honor in being asked to speak
about his political positions in an election year.
Rather, Notre Dame is making a claim, on behalf of the Catholic faith,
to “a vital place at the table of public discourse,” he said.
Scheidler argued that withdrawing from public discussion of important
issues because one or more candidates oppose Church teaching is
“precisely the wrong response.”
He suggested that Obama would love for Catholics to refuse to have any engagement with pro-abortion culture.
In fact, he said, the problem with the contraception mandate is that it
is “driving Catholics out of the public square,” and the faithful
should not willingly cooperate by removing themselves from public
debate.
Having filed a lawsuit against the administration and its mandate, the
university has made it clear where it stands on the subject, he said,
and it would be very difficult to read the invitation as an endorsement.
The current situation is “plainly” different from 2009, agreed William
Dempsey, founding president and chairman of Project Sycamore, a group of
Notre Dame alumni concerned about “patterns of secularization
persisting on campus.”
“They’re not conferring an honorary degree on Obama this time,” he told
CNA, and they are not presenting Obama as someone to emulate.
While Project Sycamore as an organization does not have an official
position on the matter, Dempsey said that he believes it is generally
good for Catholic universities to be part of the public debate, inviting
speakers with differing views as long as they are not being honored or
given a platform to oppose Church teaching.
When deciding on speakers, it is important to adhere to the bishops’
policies, he explained. Beyond this, each individual case must be
“decided with prudence.”
In this case, Dempsey said, the invitation does “raise some questions
as to whether it is prudent and wise” to offer an invitation to Obama
when the school is “locked in litigation” with his administration over
the HHS mandate.
He cautioned that consideration must be given to what message will be
conveyed by inviting someone who is a “significant adversary” in matters
of fundamental religious liberty.
In addition, he noted, if Obama accepts the invitation this late in the
campaign, it will only be because he “thinks it will advance his
political stature in this election,” and the university may want to
consider the possibility that it may be aiding the president in his bid
for re-election.
Still, Dempsey said, it would be hard to read the invitation as an
endorsement given the similar invitation granted to Romney, and the
prudential considerations at play in this instance are not the same as
the more fundamental concerns raised in 2009.
“This is quite different,” he said.