Sunday, May 17, 2009

Curious

Okay one could almost believe that Mr. Obama is speaking at Notre Dame too tease the catholics of this great country and world.  I half way think he is speaking at N.D. because he can and because he wants to flaunt his beliefs to the next generation, not defending himself but making allies.  The poll on fox news today says almost 60 percent of people believe that this issue needs more attention.  I agree, I think it is because their faith or their values are  at risk, or they have been directly effected with Mr. Obama's actions or words. I pray for Mr. Obama. The below article was found on Fox news, Have a great Sunday. 




Obama Honor Puts Notre Dame's Catholic Standing at Risk

Catholics and critics debate the lasting effect of President Obama's 2009 commencement address and the university's awarding of an honorary law degree.

FOXNews.com

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Long after President Obama leaves South Bend, along with the graduating seniors he'll address on Sunday, Catholics and members of the Notre Dame community will debate the president's 2009 commencement address and the university's awarding of an honorary law degree.

But what will be the lasting effect regarding the school's standing within the Catholic community?

According to organizers of ReplaceJenkins.com, a Web site critical of Notre Dame President Rev. John Jenkins' decision to host President Obama, more than 1,400 pledges have been received from alumni and donors promising to withhold future donations, a tally of nearly $14 million.

"Most of the donors were at least loosely aware of the University's trend away from its Catholic identity," spokesman David DiFranco said in a press release issued on Tuesday. 'But the invitation of President Obama to speak and to receive and honorary degree, combined with the weak responses presented by Father Jenkins as a defense to those have criticized the decision, is what drives most alumni to our site."

In "nearly all cases," DiFranco said, alumni who contacted the group had already decided to cease donating.

University spokesman Dennis Brown declined to comment.

"Our conversations with alumni benefactors and others about their plans to give or not are confidential," Brown wrote FOXNews.com.

In a letter to graduates on Monday, Jenkins acknowledged the debate surrounding President Obama's visit and reiterated both his and the university's stance on abortion.

"I am saddened that many friends of Notre Dame have suggested that our invitation to President Obama indicates ambiguity in our position on matters of Catholic teaching," Jenkins wrote. "The University and I are unequivocally committed to the sanctity of human life and to its protection from conception to natural death."

Jenkins, who cited Notre Dame's "long custom" of conferring honorary degrees to sitting U.S. presidents, praised Obama's policies on immigration and health care.

"Ultimately, I hope that the conversations and the good that will come from this day will contribute to closer relations between Catholics and public officials who make decisions on matter of human life and human dignity," Jenkins wrote. "There is much to admire and celebrate in the life and work of President Obama."

Fifty-six percent of U.S. voters, including 60 percent of Catholics, believe Notre Dame should not have rescinded its invitation to President Obama, according to a Quinnipiac University poll released Thursday. Observant Catholics, meanwhile, were less divided, with 49 percent supporting Obama's presence, compared to 43 percent who did not.

"My strong hope is that serious Catholics will not let this particular incident drive them away from Notre Dame, which remains very important in the life of the Church," Professor Garnett wrote FOXNews.com earlier this month. "But, Notre Dame has allowed itself to get into a very unhealthy adversarial relationship with many bishops, and lay Catholics.

"The University is going to have to find ways to demonstrate its Catholic character, to reassure those who think that the invitation to President Obama revealed a lack of commitment to that character."

Graduating senior John Souder -- a member of ND Response, a coalition of student groups who oppose the university's decision to bestow an honorary law degree to the pro-choice president -- said the answer is much clearer.

"Notre Dame's standing within the Catholic community will lessen," Souder wrote FOXNews.com. "For many years, Notre Dame has stood as a symbol of American Catholicism ... This invitation has been perceived, and understandably so, of a betrayal of this identity."

Others close to the Catholic controversy said they plan to punish Notre Dame financially.

Jeannette Niezgodski, of South Bend, Ind., said the decision will have a lasting and immediate affect on her family's previously close connection to the university.

"My mom, we buy her Notre Dame tickets every year, and that's not going to happen anymore," she said. "And when we get home, we're going to burn all our Notre Dame apparel and there will be no more funding from any of us or anyone I know."

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