鈥淒o you teach creationism?鈥
I was used to hearing this sort of enquiry from ignorant or prejudiced interlocutors troubled by my academic affiliation. Now it was coming from a renowned, cosmopolitan Iranian writer, whom I met at a literary festival. I almost exploded with anger. 鈥淐an this woman,鈥 I thought, 鈥渞eally suppose that I would teach drivel, or associate myself with an institution that endorses creationism?鈥 All I said, however, was: 鈥淥f course not. Notre Dame is a Catholic university, not some weird fundamentalist coven.鈥
My questioner apologised handsomely. But she seemed puzzled. I transferred my anger to the secularist propaganda that misrepresents the religion of the University of Notre Dame as indistinguishable from forms of fanaticism that are as distasteful to most Catholics as to other open-minded people.
In part, the fault lies with soi-disant Christians who give every Christian tradition a bad name by inexcusably affected myopia: blind to the truth of evolution, to the reasonableness of deistic, agnostic and atheistic starting points for trying to understand the cosmos, and even, in extreme cases, to the reality of the physical universe. In the US, there are so-called universities that exclude from the curriculum anything that their leaders do not see 鈥 usually with a selective or refractive eye 鈥 in the Bible.
The institutions of learning of the Catholic Church, by contrast, deploy reason to explore metaphysics, and science to understand nature. Catholics do not treat the Bible as the last word on anything. At Notre Dame, we think truthfulness is an ineluctable obligation for academics. If it leads us to recommend reformulations of Catholic teaching, or to seek to realign doctrine with shifting scholarly and scientific paradigms, we do not hesitate. As the late Father Ted Hesburgh, the university鈥檚 legendary president, used to joke: 鈥淲e鈥檙e here to do the Church鈥檚 thinking.鈥 To adapt another of his famous sayings, if there seems to be a conflict between science and Catholicism, there鈥檚 something wrong with the science, or the Catholicism, or both. By the standards of any university, freedom of enquiry is broad at Notre Dame because, on the one hand, we want to demonstrate to the world the liberty that Catholicism confers, while, on the other, we are unrestrained by any secular dogmas of political correctness.
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Yet the delusion persists that we must be mired in dogmas of our own or embarked on some arcane, tendentious agenda. The effects include irritants, such as the conversation I was obliged to have with the Iranian writer, and evils, such as the disdain and even hatred with which we sometimes have to contend. I am happy to be hated, if hating me gives others pleasure. Indeed, I regard it as an obligation of charity to indulge the haters.
A recent controversy, however, shows that the dangers go deeper.
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One of my colleagues, a professor in our law school, which is well known for emphasising ethics in legal practice and justice in legal processes, was nominated to be a judge in the US Court of Appeals. By acclamation among students and professors, Amy Barrett is a person of exemplary character, profound learning and sound judgement. Everything she teaches about the obligations of Catholics in the law shows that she would be a fair judge.
鈥淛udges鈥, she observed in a famous article, 鈥渃annot 鈥 nor should they try to 鈥 align our legal system with the Church鈥檚 teaching.鈥 She has said that those whose personal moral or religious convictions conflict with law 鈥 in, for instance, a capital case before a judge convinced of the inviolability of a convict鈥檚 life 鈥 should recuse themselves. She explicitly rules out trying 鈥渢o manipulate the law鈥o save lives鈥.
鈥淎 judge鈥, she said, 鈥渕ay never subvert the law or twist it in any way to match the judge鈥檚 personal convictions.鈥 Catholic judges, Barrett writes, should not tamper with the law but rather 鈥渃onform their own behaviour to the Church鈥檚 standards鈥. Yet secularist and fundamentalist US senators, interrogating Barrett about her suitability for the bench, as if they thought her asseverations were mendacious casuistry. 鈥淒ogma鈥, Senator Dianne Feinstein taunted her, 鈥渓ives loudly within you鈥ou have a long history of believing that your religious views should prevail.鈥 In a press release, the senator questioned whether 鈥渁 judge heedful of ecclesiastical pronouncements鈥 was capable of 鈥渋mpartial justice鈥.
Obviously, although any genuinely religious person will try to live in accord with relevant precepts, Barrett鈥檚 assurances that she will adhere scrupulously to legal precedents are unambiguous. Senators, though, continued to read Barrett鈥檚 declarations as if she meant the opposite of what she said. Perhaps exponents of fake news lose their ability to discriminate between truth and falsehood. However, despite the nasty interrogation, the Senate in full session eventually ratified Barrett鈥檚 appointment.
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Has she said or done anything to invite obloquy or ignite bigotry? She exhorts every Catholic student to keep in mind 鈥渢hat your fundamental purpose in life is not to be a lawyer, but to know, love, and serve God鈥. Reject these heroically high standards if you like; but to treat them as disqualifying Catholics from office, or to suppose that Catholicism is an impediment to academic or professional excellence, is to surrender to prejudice and to license religious discrimination.
Felipe Fern谩ndez-Armesto is William P. Reynolds professor of history at the听University of Notre Dame听in the US.听
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline:听The secular prejudice
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