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A most important piece of information is missing from Kristin Kramer's article ("The green of the Union"). The conservation of the 63rd New York's Second Irish Colors and the research for the book Blue for the Union and Green for Ireland was made possible by a generous gift to the Archives from Jack and Kay Gibbons of Dublin, Ohio (Notre Dame class of 1963 and Saint Mary's class of 1962). Without their support, these projects would never have been completed.

Wendy Clauson Schlereth
Notre Dame, IN

Levels of trust

John Cavadini's article "Levels of Trust" in the summer issue was a very good and clear overview, I think, of the crisis in the Catholic Church. I'm not sure how much I can add, but I share my experience in the hope that it will provide some detail to that view.

I was a Holy Cross priest for 10 years, from 1989 until 1999. I left the priesthood and my community after a very long struggle. I think I was a good priest and a good community member, but my life had been too often a struggle with depression and loneliness. I stayed a lot longer than I might have out of a sense of responsibility and also gratitude toward the Church and Holy Cross. While I was a priest and a member of a religious community, I was treated with respect and compassion. I was cared for generously.

Now that I am not a priest I can see the other side. And the fact that I chose to use that metaphor describes the problem for me. There is a significant divide between those who are ordained and those who are not. When I was a priest I could find community among other priests, but that sense of community was often based on a sense of separateness. Priests and religious were seen in a special role that defined them over and against the common culture.

When I found myself out of community and no longer defined as a priest, it became apparent to me that what I was longing for was a wider and deeper sense of community. When I was a priest, my concerns were not the concerns of my parishioners. When I was a priest and a religious, I even found it difficult to relate to the lives of my siblings, who were working to make a living, involved in committed relationships and raising families. Difference is not bad. It becomes negative when it divides people. I feel a division in the Church that is not at all healthy -- nor necessary.

Many priests find great satisfaction in their work. Many religious men find a deep and sustaining sense of brotherhood in community with other men. My closest friends are priests who are struggling to find a healthy balance between their work and their need for community. Many of these men are gay. They know the value of a celibate commitment and a life of generous service. But where I looked most for community, I felt like an outsider. The church is not gay or straight, ordained or lay, male or female. The Church is all of these. Its ministers and its leadership ought to reflect that diversity.

I value very much the ministry of celibate men. But I am afraid of the divide that keeps a more diverse experience and wisdom from enriching the whole Church. I want my Church to be a community where religious priests, brothers, and sisters are respected and listened too; where single men and women are respected and listened to; and where married men and women are respected and listened to. I want a church that supports a diversity of ministerial and leadership styles, and that is in a constant state of dialogue -- from the leadership to the people in the very back pews -- with the concerns and the issues that we share with the whole world.

If I had felt more inclusiveness from the Church, a broader acceptance of different roles, I may have been able to stay in some ministerial role.

Jim Gunshinan, '81, '88MDiv.

Thank you for printing "Levels of trust, " by John C. Cavadini in the Summer edition. It was an excellent article One sentence, however, stood out as a piece of bad writing. "With some justice, anti-Catholicism has been called the last acceptable public prejudice in American society." This sounds rather Protestant, but I don't think that is what Mr. Cavadini really means. Perhaps using 'justification' for 'justice' would help. Personally, I would have written : "With ample justification,... " The Catholic League has taken on the job of pointing out current examples of anti-Catholicism and complaining about it. They usually keep pretty busy, and lately have been kept very busy!

And while I am at it, Cavadini later writes "..believing in the church is like believing in Amtrak, as a friend of mine once put it. It's just there." This is belief in the sense H. L. Mencken expressed when someone asked him if he believed in infant baptism: "Believe in it?! Hell, I've seen it with my own eyes!" With all due respect to Mr. Cavadini and his friend, I suggest they employ a different analogy. I do not think Amtrak will be with us always, till the end of time.

Brian W. Donnelly, M. D. '81

Gibsonia, PA

Summer thoughts

The summer 2002 has been, perhaps, the issue I have enjoyed most in the past several years, even with that horrible two-column format you use in the front pages

I enjoyed my reunion week-end and I agree with Kerry Temple about the serenity of the virtually empty campus. Sunday morning I sat on a bench in front of the Main Building, savoring the sunshine, the beauty and thoughts of college days long gone.

It was refreshing to note the magazine recognizing (for a change) that athletics do, indeed, have a place at ND. The photos of athletes juxtaposed with the Rockne niche figures were excellent (and politically correct).

It was wryly amusing to note that among the "Fighting Irish Legends" pictured on the back cover are two coaches who were hustled off campus by disapproving administrators. Does time heal all wounds?

It has always been difficult for alumni from my era to understand the problem of alcohol on campus and the furor that accompanies any suggestion of change (remember when kegs were banned?). A strong administrator need just repeat Fr. Hesburgh's admonishment to Vietnam war protestors on the front steps of the Main Building. Problem solved immediately.

James E. Chestnut '57
Homewood, IL

Anti-Catholic

After perusing the Notre Dame Magazine for many years now, I am mystified as to how Notre Dame continues to produce holy graduates when the environment and faculty seem to be so anti-Catholic. For example, consider the latest issue, summer 2002.

On pages 4-7, the article "Sobering Debate" chronicles widespread drinking activities on campus, which strongly lead students away from Christ. The article seems to approve of timid administrators, a mistake that has lead to countless disasters in Catholic universities in recent decades. In contrast, an example of fearless leadership is Father Scanlon of Franciscan University of Steubenville, who, in spite of all warnings of a university shut down by turned-off students, instituted many reforms in line with true Catholic spirit. To everyone's surprise, the university flourished under his leadership. The explanation derives from Pope John Paul's favorite quote of Christ: "Be not afraid."

On page 11, the article Losing in Style tells about the antics of the Bookstore Basketball team Punky Brewster, which appears to have totally adopted the MTV code of behavior and been approved therefore by the Notre Dame Magazine.

Also, many in the faculty do not exhibit fidelity to the Body of Christ. The Notre Dame Magazine article "Levels of Trust," by the chairman of the theology department, is an example. Chairman Cavadini is a dissenter, skilled in Dissent-ese language. In Dissent-ese one promulgates a dissenting message without being accountable for having done so. This is accomplished by burying the message in a barrage of points of view, preferably as a report of someone else's position. Often, to provide further protection, the dissenter actually quotes the magisterium but only as one of many other viewpoints considered of equal value, so that the magisterium loses because a democratic vote decides all issues, of course.

The message Chairman Cavadini wishes to promulgate in his article, "Levels of Trust," is: the present crisis in the Church was not related to homosexuality in the seminaries, but rather due to the celibate priesthood not subject to the control of the laity. Furthermore, the magisterium should change its teaching regarding homosexuality.

Here is how Chairman Cavadini couched his above message in Dissent-ese. On page 22 he states: "The married sexually active laity are too distant, too invisible, of too little account to the closed celibate brotherhood of those in power. It is precisely that distance for which repentance and reform are required."

On page 21 he states: "Many of the cases of sexual misconduct are by priests who are now in their 60s and 70s, priests who had been formed in the sort of seminaries that conservatives would like to see rejuvenated." The problem with this statement is that seminaries were already in trouble 50 years ago, according to our former pastor, Rev. Earl A. Gannon (now deceased, God rest his soul). Father Gannon attributed this situation to a concerted effort by the communists to infiltrate Catholic seminaries so as to attack the institution that they considered to be their greatest enemy, the Catholic Church.

On page 22 we find a paragraph saying in Dissent-ese, let's change the magisterium on homosexuality: "In the minds of liberals, basic church teaching on homosexuality and sexual issues in general is called into question by the crisis. In the minds of conservatives, on the other hand, it is precisely the opposite issue that is raised, namely the way in which dissent on the sexual teachings of the church has made it appear that sexually active gay lifestyles can be morally acceptable. But these debates are older than the current crisis and it has only exacerbated them rather than rendered them clearer. It can be said with certainty, however, that the moral teaching of the church on sexual matters needs the benefit of more, rather than less, discussion." Excuse me, the chairman of the religion department of Notre Dame University should espouse the infallible magisterium of the Catholic Church as the unchangeable starting rock foundation for further discussion. By the way, Chairman Cavadini, have you signed the mandatum yet?

However, writing in Dissent-ese can be tricky. For example, one risks direct self-contradiction. On page 22 we read: "Since almost all of the cases of abuse of minors have involved abuse of pre-pubescent boys or male adolescents, the question is bound to arise. Is homosexual orientation the problem in itself, or psychosexual immaturity?" While on page 23 we read: "among...the 1.8 percent of the diocesan clergy against whom sexual misconduct has been credibly alleged, only one was a pedophile. The other cases were all cases of sexual activity with post-pubescent boys as old as 16-17 years old."

As in Notre Dame University, the seminary administrations must not be too timid, and they must insist on fidelity to the magisterium. As Father Richard John Neuhaus says: "Fidelity, Fidelity, Fidelity!"

Michael J. Gans '56

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Pick of the WeekBook cover

Finding the Monk Within: Great Monastic Values for Today
Edward C. Sellner '78M.A., '81Ph.D. (Paulist Press)

Using stories of early Christian leaders in the monastic tradition, the author relates how their values of silence, solitude, faith and compassion are still relevant today. Among the monastic heroes he includes are Antony, the "first monk," John Cassian, Brigit of Kildare and Bernard of Clairvaux.

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