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The Catholic Identity
of Rockhurst University |
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| Rockhurst is a Jesuit University. As such,
it shares in the rich tradition of Catholic
universities, the oldest and largest collection
of colleges and universities in the western
world.
In his famous encyclical on Catholic universities,
John Paul II wrote that it is the nature
of a university “to engage in the joy
of searching for, discovering and communicating
truth in every field of knowledge.”1
The goal of a university education is not
simply to acquire information, but also to
engage both students and faculty in the exciting
process of research and the expansion of
the boundaries of human knowledge. The Rockhurst
maxim, “we do not teach students what
to think but how to think,” has real
validity. Naturally, universities do teach
students facts and therefore what to think,
but ultimately the task of a university is
to assure that students acquire an intellectual
framework that will allow them to address
questions and issues that can never be covered
in even the most comprehensive classroom.2
Universities play a unique role in every
culture and society, for only universities
enjoy the freedom to continually ask questions
that go beyond what is practical or expedient
and train their students to do this in all
aspects of life.
Rockhurst’s mission to engage in the
search for truth is common to all universities.
However, Rockhurst is more than just a university;
it is a Catholic university, and its identity
as a Catholic university expands its freedom
of intellectual inquiry, gives it a basis
for understanding reality, and extends its
mission beyond the hallowed university ivory
tower. Rockhurst’s Catholic identity
can be understood under three headings: Rockhurst
as a faith-based university; Rockhurst and
the Catholic understanding of reality; and
Rockhurst’s external expression of
faith. |
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Rockhurst as a Faith-based
Institution |
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| Rockhurst “unite[s] existentially
by intellectual effort two orders of reality
that too frequently tend to be placed in opposition...the
search for truth and the certainty of already
knowing the fount of truth.”3 To understand
the interplay of these two orders of reality,
let us take an example from physics and theology.
Like most universities, Rockhurst scientists
study the universe. At some point these scientific
studies will come up against an end point.
How did it begin? Theories abound, but the
one we hear most commonly is the “Big
Bang.” For many universities the search
for the truth about the universe ends here.
Not, however, at a Catholic University or indeed,
any faith-based university. For even the Big
Bang must have a cause, and at a faith-based
institution, which “searches
for the truth with the certainty of already
knowing the fount of truth,” our inquiry
goes back to, and includes, the ultimate
cause of the universe, which is God. So,
at Rockhurst, the scientific search for the
truth about the universe in physics must
end with the Big Bang, but the search for
the truth of the universe continues beyond
the Big Bang in philosophy and theology.
Furthermore, these two distinct avenues
of research, which must remain faithful
to their proper modes of inquiry, are never
in conflict. The physicist at Rockhurst
understands that the Big Bang can be explained
by a cause which transcends his or her
discipline. The theologian at Rockhurst
understands that he or she can speak about
the cause of the Big Bang but that theology
cannot explain the intricate physics that
the Big Bang initiates.4 Both understand
that there is no inherent conflict between
their two approaches.
At Rockhurst this expanded freedom of
inquiry has concrete ramifications for
our learning environment and for what we
teach. These ramifications stamp Rockhurst
as an institution of faith and they are
highlighted in Ex Corde Ecclesiae.5
The first ramification is the integration
of all knowledge.6 At Rockhurst we understand
that all truth is united in the ultimate
truth. In other words, there is a basic unity
of all knowledge. Traditionally, universities
have expressed this understanding through
insistence on a core curriculum that stresses
the liberal arts. At Rockhurst we want our
undergraduates to search for the truth in
a number of disciplines, regardless of a
student’s particular major. The study
of English and history are important for
an accounting major because the formation
of our students requires that they have experienced
truth in a variety of human aspects. We understand
that English, history and accounting are
not theology, just as we understand that
a physicist’s research into the Big
Bang is not revelation. However, we also
understand that the study of these disciplines
reveals more of the truth about the universe
and therefore, ultimately, more about God
and our relationship to God. Conversely,
the more we know about God the better we
can understand the fullness of English, history,
and accounting.
The second ramification is the dialogue
between faith and reason.7 At Rockhurst,
the search for truth, which takes place in
various disciplines, cannot ultimately be
at odds with the ultimate truth that is revealed
to us. In other words, there cannot be a
true conflict between faith and reason.8
This does not mean that there will never
be tensions or even collisions, such as took
place in the now famous Galileo episode.
Nor does it mean that either reason or faith
must yield pride of place to the other, for
our understanding of faith is never perfect,
and reason can never fully exhaust the ultimate
reality of God. Indeed, faith and reason
need each other, because reason without faith
can never plumb the depths of truth and faith
without reason can easily lapse into superstition.
The third ramification is the place of
ethics. At Rockhurst ethics is important
because there is ultimately a right and a
wrong.9 While Enron and other scandals have
made ethics a common word in our everyday
vocabulary, ethical studies are not simply
telling our students that cheating and fraud
are wrong. We expect that our students know
the basic differences between right and wrong
before they even come to us. Ethics is really
the search for truth (in this case, right
and wrong actions) in areas that are much
cloudier. This is why we teach ethics, so
that our students will be grounded in principles
that will enable them to make good ethical
decisions in areas which are not immediately
obvious.
The fourth ramification is the role and
importance of philosophy and theology.10
At Rockhurst we search for truth not only
in disciplines such as chemistry and English
literature, but we also search for the ultimate
truth more directly by reflecting systematically
on revelation, on the human condition, and
on reality in general. Not only are theology
and philosophy legitimate academic disciplines
at Rockhurst, but every undergraduate must
take at least 15 hours in theology and philosophy.
It is important to note here that theology
is a mode of inquiry through which we seek
to understand as much as we can about God.
Theology accepts revelation and applies reason
to revelation to come to an ever deeper understanding
of Who God is and how we can speak about
God.11 As such, the proper study of theology
is different from catechetical instruction
or even religion courses taught in elementary
and secondary schools. |
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The Catholic Understanding of Reality |
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| The essence of Christianity is the belief
that God is definitively revealed through the
person, the life, and the teaching of Jesus
Christ, most profoundly through his death and
resurrection. No other great religion highlights
the incarnation of God in a unique historical
moment. No other Christian religion highlights
the incarnation of God in our own lives as
does the Roman Catholic Church with its emphasis
on sacraments and sacramentality.
Sacraments are privileged ways of experiencing
God’s presence through persons, places
and things whom and which we can hear, see,
touch, smell and taste. The seven sacraments
are unique and special moments of encounter with
God’s grace, but Catholic religious
practice and spirituality expand the sacramental
concept to all reality. In other words, our
Catholic faith leads us to find God in all of created reality
even though we make clear not to confuse
God with that same created reality.
Rockhurst’s culture, both in the classroom
and beyond, is sacramental. Rockhurst carries
out its teaching and inquiry against the
background of a reality filled with God’s
Spirit. To quote the famous 19th century
Jesuit poet, Gerard Manley Hopkins, “The
earth is charged with the grandeur of God.”
Since God’s Spirit permeates the world
in which we live, Rockhurst’s mode
of inquiry and learning is shaped by reverence.
First, and most obvious, Rockhurst insists
on treating others with dignity and respect.
This insistence is not grounded in a desire
just to do good customer service, important
as this is, but rather in the conviction
that every human being is a unique bearer
of God’s Spirit. Our teaching and learning
take place with the understanding that every
student has a unique set of gifts and talents
that are given by God and that reveal God.
Our job at Rockhurst is to do everything
we can to identify and develop those gifts
and talents, and to “assist each of
our students to achieve wholeness as human
persons.”12
Second, along with reverence and respect
for others as images of God, Catholic sacramentality
fosters a receptivity to ideas and opinions
that are new or different from our own. Certainly
not all ideas are good, and ultimately we
want our students to make considered judgments
about what is right or wrong and what is
correct or incorrect. However, we do want
our students to be open to a universe that
bears God’s stamp.13 To do otherwise
would be to assume that we already know all
truth or that God is not really present in
God’s creation.
Finally, Rockhurst’s educational
mission (our search for truth) is grounded
in a world created by a loving God and redeemed
through the death and resurrection of Jesus
Christ. Therefore, Rockhurst looks with confidence
to the discovery of meaning and purpose in
the world in which we live and in each individual
life. This is in stark contrast to some academic
environments in which skepticism rules and
there is no possibility of discovering a
meaning that transcends each individual’s
own idiosyncrasies. Our mission looks to
a truth that lifts the human spirit and unites
us with other human beings and with God.
The search for truth in the context of knowing
the fount of truth and the sacramentality
of the world shape the educational mission
of Rockhurst and form the academic culture
within which Rockhurst students learn and
are formed. |
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Rockhurst’s External Expression of
Faith |
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| The final aspect
of Rockhurst’s Catholic
character is the manner in which we externalize
our mission both in our interaction with
the broader community and in our explicit
celebration of our Roman Catholic faith. There is only one place in the New Testament
where Jesus tells His listeners who will
be saved and who will not be saved. The powerful
Last Judgment scene in Matthew 2514 separates
the human race into sheep and goats according
to whether or not we have fed the hungry,
clothed the naked, and so on. The treatment
of our neighbor is of paramount importance
in a Catholic university. The World Synod
of Bishops in 1971 declared that “action
on behalf of justice and participation in
the transformation of the world fully appear
to us as a constitutive dimension of the
preaching of the Gospel.”15
Pope John Paul II referred to this essential
aspect of the gospel message throughout his
pontificate and explicitly for Catholic universities: “The
Christian spirit of service to others for
the promotion of social justice is of particular
importance for each Catholic university.”16
Furthermore, “Teachers and students
[should] become more aware of their responsibility
towards those who are suffering physically
or spiritually. Following the example of
Christ, they will be particularly attentive
to the poorest and to those who suffer economic,
social, cultural or religious injustice.”17
At Rockhurst, service to others enjoys a
unique importance in the daily formation
of our students. In addition to daily service
in the Kansas City community, Rockhurst students
participate in service trips to Mexico and
Central America to learn first hand of the
poverty in which many live. These trips are
funded by Rockhurst benefactors, some of
whom accompany the students.
In 2005 Rockhurst ranked first among all
Jesuit colleges and universities with more
than 90 per-cent of our undergraduates participating
in service programs during their years at
Rockhurst.
John Paul II called upon Catholic universities
to reflect on issues such as “the dignity
of human life, the promotion of justice for
all, the quality of personal and family life,
the protection of nature, the search for
peace and political stability, a more just
sharing in the world’s resources, and
a new economic and political order that will
better serve the human community at a national
and international level.”18 Rockhurst
students are involved with these issues.
Rockhurst students also have the opportunity
to reflect on their experience with service
as befits a university. This takes place
in the classroom in many ways but especially
in courses explicitly designed to combine
classroom study with active service. It also
takes place outside the classroom through
the efforts of student life and campus ministry
staff, who lead the students through discussion
and discernment of our world based on their
experiences gleaned through service. In these
ways students “seek to discover the
roots and causes of the serious problems
of our time, paying special attention to
their ethical and religious dimensions.”19
Rockhurst cannot teach social justice without
also practicing it. The University is resolutely
situated in the urban core of Kansas City
and works with the surrounding neighborhoods
to improve the quality of life for the community.
A community outreach center, a literacy clinic,
and educational and recreational programs
for young people during the summer months
put Rockhurst’s Catholic identity into
action. Rockhurst also reaches out through
scholarships for the most needy and with
special attention to the wages of our lowest
paid staff.
Finally, Rockhurst nourishes and celebrates
its Catholic identity through many activities
that are also to be found in Catholic parishes.
Through collaboration between Rockhurst’s
campus ministry and St. Francis Xavier,
the Catholic parish that includes Rockhurst,
Rockhurst students are provided with a
full range of Catholic activities and sacramental
opportunities. In addition to daily masses
both in the campus chapel and in the parish,
there is a special Sunday evening mass
attended by several hundred Rockhurst students
with a mix of students from other campuses
as well. Working with the parish staff
at SFX, Rockhurst students receive the
sacraments of confirmation and baptism,
and reconciliation is offered twice weekly
in addition to the possibility of individual
appointments.
With the support of campus ministry there
are a number of student, faculty and staff
retreats offered each year. Some of these
retreats take people off campus for quiet,
prayer and reflection; others, such as the “busy
persons retreat,” give men and women
an experience of prayer and spiritual direction
in the midst of busy daily lives. In addition,
there are expanding numbers of prayer groups
on campus, including the rosary and other
devotional practices such as Adoration of
the Blessed Sacrament. Finally, campus ministry
and the Center for Catholic Thought and Culture
offer numerous talks on religious topics
open both to the campus and to the broader
public.
Rockhurst is a Catholic institution, highly
regarded by the Church in Kansas City.20
Because of its Jesuit Catholic identity it
enjoys a relationship with the Universal
Church expressed in fidelity to the Church’s
teaching and contribution as a university
to the work of the Church.21 It carries out
its university mission with faith in God,
whose presence permeates our world, and with
commitment to love God and to show that love
through loving service to our neighbor. Rockhurst’s
mission, therefore, is a complex one and
must integrate an unfettered search for truth,
including the study of ultimate questions
that are closed to secular institutions,
with an expression of total concern for all
aspects of human life. Any attempt to see
Rockhurst in a more limited light cuts at
the heart of its Catholic identity and obviates
the service it renders to the Church. |
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1 Ex Corde Ecclesiae, The Apostolic Constitution
of the Supreme Pontiff John Paul II on Catholic
Universities, paragraph 1.
2 Ex Corde Ecclesiae, #23: “Students
are challenged to pursue an education that
combines excellence in humanistic and cultural
development with specialized professional
training. Most especially, they are challenged
to continue the search for truth and for
meaning throughout their lives, since ‘the
human spirit must be cultivated in such a
way that there results a growth in its ability
to wonder, to understand, to contemplate,
to make personal judgments, and to develop
a religious, moral, and social sense.’ [quoting
John Henry Cardinal Newman, The Idea of a
University, London, Longmans, Green and Company,
1931, pp. 101-102].”
3 Ex Corde Ecclesiae, ECC #1.
4 Ex Corde Ecclesiae, #15: “A Catholic
University, therefore, is a place of research,
where scholars scrutinize reality with the
methods proper to each academic discipline,
and so contribute to the treasury of human
knowledge.”
5 Ex Corde Ecclesiae, #15: “In a Catholic
University, research necessarily includes
(a) the search for an integration of knowledge,
(b) a dialogue between faith and reason,
(c) an ethical concern, and (d) a theological
perspective.”
6 Ex Corde Ecclesiae, #16: “Integration
of knowledge is a process, one which will
always remain incomplete; moreover, the explosion
of knowledge in recent decades, together
with the rigid compartmentalization of knowledge
within individual academic disciplines, makes
the task increasingly difficult. But a University,
and especially a Catholic University, ‘has
to be a living union of individual organisms
dedicated to the search for truth … It
is necessary to work towards a higher synthesis
of knowledge, in which alone lies the possibility
of satisfying that thirst for truth which
is profoundly inscribed on the heart of the
human person’ [John Paul II, Allocution
to the International Congress on Catholic
Universities, 25 April 1989, n.4: AAS 81
(1989), p. 1219].”
7 Ex Corde Ecclesiae, #17: “In promoting
this integration of knowledge, a specific
part of a Catholic University’s task
is to promote dialogue between faith and
reason, so that it can be seen more profoundly
how faith and reason bear harmonious witness
to the unity of all truth. While each academic
discipline retains its own integrity and
has its own methods, this dialogue demonstrates
that ‘methodical research within every
branch of learning, when carried out in a
truly scientific manner and in accord with
moral norms, can never truly conflict with
faith. For the things of the earth and the
concerns of faith derive from the same God.’ [Vatican
Council II, Pastoral constitution on the
Church in the Modern World Gaudium et Spes,
n. 36: AAS 58 (1966), p. 1054].”
8 In a talk to a group of scientists in
1983 John Paul II noted that “while
reason and faith surely represent two distinct
orders of knowledge, each autonomous with
regard to its own methods, the two must finally
converge in the discovery of a single whole
reality which has its origin in God.” [John
Paul II, Address at the Meeting on Galileo,
9 May 1983, n. 3: AAS 75 [1983], p. 690].
9 Ex Corde Ecclesiae, #18: “Because
knowledge is meant to serve the human person,
research in a Catholic University is always
carried out with a concern for the ethical
and moral implications both of its methods
and of its discoveries. This concern, while
it must be present in all research, is particularly
important in the areas of science and technology.” Furthermore,
in Ex Corde Ecclesiae, #20: “Given
the close connection between research and
teaching, the research qualities indicated
above will have their influence on all teaching. …In
the communication of knowledge, emphasis
is then placed on how human reason in its
reflection opens to increasingly broader
questions, and how the complete answer to
them can only come from above through faith.
Furthermore, the moral implications that
are present in each discipline are examined
as an integral part of the teaching of that
discipline so that the entire educative process
be directed towards the whole development
of the person.”
10 Ex Corde Ecclesiae, #19: Theology plays
a particularly important role in the search
for a synthesis of knowledge as well as in
the dialogue between faith and reason. It
serves all other disciplines in their search
for meaning, not only by helping them to
investigate how their discoveries will affect
individuals and society but also by bringing
a perspective and an orientation not contained
within their own methodologies. In turn,
interaction with these other disciplines
and their discoveries enriches theology,
offering it a better understanding of the
world today, and making theological research
more relevant to current needs. Because of
its specific importance among the academic
disciplines, every Catholic University should
have a faculty, or at least a chair, of theology.”
11 Rockhurst offers a rich selection of
theology courses: scripture, dogma, moral
theology, church history, world religions,
and more. Faculty in their research and teaching
apply methods proper to their discipline
to understand ever more deeply the content
and ramifications of revelation and tradition.
Rockhurst can and does require that faculty
present the Catholic faith accurately, as
represented by the Magisterium of the Roman
Catholic Church. To do otherwise would violate
the canon of intellectual honesty. Through
faculty contracts the university signifies
its satisfaction with the intellectual integrity
of particular faculty members in whatever
discipline they represent.
12 Ex Corde Ecclesiae, #21.
13 Ex Corde Ecclesiae, #17: “For the
things of the earth and the concerns of faith
derive from the same God.”
14 Matthew 25: 31-46.
15 Justitia in Mundo
(Justice in the World), World Synod of Catholic Bishops,1971, see
especially paragraph 6.
16 Ex Corde Ecclesiae, #34.
17 Ex Corde Ecclesiae, #40.
18 Ex Corde Ecclesiae, #32.
19 Ex Corde Ecclesiae, #32.
20 On May 15, 2004, Bishop Raymond Boland,
Bishop of the Diocese Kansas City and St.
Joseph, was given an honorary doctorate.
Below are his remarks for the occasion.
I am grateful for the signal honor you have
bestowed upon me this morning. Personally,
I am far from convinced that I deserve it,
but I accept it as recognition of the clergy
and laity whom I have been privileged to
represent for almost 12 years as the Bishop
of the diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph.
If I have achieved anything even worthy of
a footnote it was their hard work, loyalty
and support which made it possible. Indeed,
in listening to the words of the citation
it sounded disturbingly like those of an
obituary notice. Unless you have it copyrighted,
I may adopt it as one thing less to do being
now somebody who has lived a lot longer in
the past than he will in the future.
Now that my newly anointed successor, Bishop
Finn, is in the wings waiting for me to quit
the stage, I grasp this public moment to
acknowledge that it has been a great joy
for me to have Rockhurst University, steeped
in the Jesuit tradition initiated by Ignatius
Loyola, within this diocese. You have been
and continue to be an intellectual pulse-beat
for both the Church and the community and
a goodly number of your distinguished alumni
are my advisors and coworkers. The diocese
and this “city of fountains” have
been not the only, but certainly among the
foremost beneficiaries of your enriching
presence. May your search for truth be unrelenting
and, as was wished for Abou Ben Adhem, “may
your tribe increase!”
Allow me to congratulate the graduates.
They really earned their degrees! This week
USA Today predicted that each graduate in
the United States would achieve five seconds
of fame when they crossed the podium to receive
their parchments. Andy Warhol was far more
generous. He maintained you are entitled
to 15 minutes over a lifetime. So, remember,
after today you only have 14 minutes and
55 seconds left.
You may recall that in the movie version
of The Graduate, the somewhat bewildered
young college student was advised to seek
his future from a well-meaning self-appointed
mentor who summed it all up in the one word,
PLASTICS. (A generation later it would have
been DOT.COMs.)
Permit me to leave you with one word of
unsolicited advice, “ETHICS.” Whether
it be Enron or WorldCom, the clergy sex abuse
scandals or the sadistic behavior of prison
guards in Iraq and elsewhere, we are all
tarnished and, in turn targeted, by the sins
of the few. In whatever profession you follow,
think ETHICS. In making decisions, think
ETHICS. In leading others, think ETHICS.
Let the integrity of your life be a reflection
of God’s goodness and the greatest
gift you can give to your children and, incidentally,
the greatest tribute you can give to Rockhurst.
21 Ex Corde Ecclesiae, #27: “Every
Catholic University, without ceasing to be
a University, has a relationship to the Church
that is essential to its institutional identity.
As such, it participates most directly in
the life of the local Church in which it
is situated; at the same time, because it
is an academic institution and therefore
a part of the international community of
scholarship and inquiry, each institution
participates in and contributes to the life
and the mission of the universal Church,
assuming consequently a special bond with
the Holy See by reason of the service to
unity which it is called to render to the
whole Church. |
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