On Tuesday,
Archbishop Raymond Burke of St. Louis, Missouri, urged St. Louis University
to discipline its basketball coach for public statements in support of abortion
and stem cell research.
“I’m confident (the university) will deal
with the question of a public representative making declarations that are
inconsistent with the Catholic faith,” Burke told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. “When you take a position in a
Catholic university, you don’t have to embrace everything the Catholic Church
teaches. But you can’t make statements which call into question that identity
and mission of the Catholic Church.”
Coach Rick
Majerus attended Tuesday’s St. Louis
rally for presidential candidate Sen. Hillary Clinton and told television
reporters that he advocates abortion and stem cell research.
St. Louis University president Rev. Lawrence Biondi,
S.J., has shied away from reporters, but a university spokesman has said that
Majerus was voicing personal views, and he would not confirm that any
disciplinary action will be taken.
“We are
grateful to Archbishop Burke for his example and leadership,” said Patrick J.
Reilly, president of The Cardinal Newman Society. “His call for disciplinary action is entirely
consistent with Vatican principles for
Catholic universities. Sadly, St. Louis University has repeatedly violated those
principles.”
The Vatican’s
apostolic constitution on Catholic universities, Ex corde Ecclesiae, mandates: “Catholic members of the university
community are also called to a personal fidelity to the Church with all that
this implies. Non-Catholic members are
required to respect the Catholic character of the university, while the
university in turn respects their religious liberty.”
“Holding private
views is one thing, publicly advocating them with the aim of transforming
society and endorsing politicians is a much different matter,” Reilly
said. “A Catholic university accepts the
Catholic faith, and employees who publicly work against it have no claim to a
paycheck largely funded by Catholic alumni and donors.”