What Notre Dame presented Obama

Besides the official doctorate of laws honor, they gave him the stage. For more than rhetorical flourish.

George Weigel calls it.

The principal themes of President Obama’s Notre Dame commencement address were entirely predictable; indeed, in some offices I know, betting pools were forming last week on how many of the Catholic Left hot buttons Obama would hit. In the event, he hit for the cycle several times over, mentioning “common ground”; tolerance and reconciliation amid diversity; Father Hesburgh; respect for those with whose moral judgments we disagree; problem-solving over ideology; Father Hesburgh; saving God’s creation from climate change; pulling together; Father Hesburgh; open hearts; open minds; fair-minded words; Father Hesburgh. None of this was surprising, and most of it was said with the president’s usual smooth eloquence.

What was surprising, and ought to be disturbing to anyone who cares about religious freedom in these United States, was the president’s decision to insert himself into the ongoing Catholic debate over the boundaries of Catholic identity and the applicability of settled Catholic conviction in the public square. Obama did this by suggesting, not altogether subtly, who the real Catholics in America are. The real Catholics, you see, are those like the late Cardinal Joseph Bernardin, who are “congenial and gentle” in persuasion, men and women who are “always trying to bring people together,” Catholics who are “always trying to find the common ground.”

This is the incisive analysis most others missed. That Catholics are already divided was self-evident, in Obama’s election by slightly over half of them, and his elevation by this prestigious university. But what he did by inserting himself into the fray in this precise way, Weigel explains, was to conquer the divided.

In his introduction, Fr. Jenkins said everyone was talking about why Notre Dame extended the invitation, but no one was talking about why Obama accepted. As much as anything, this is why.

Whether or not President Obama knew precisely what he was doing — and I’m inclined to think that this politically savvy White House and its allies among Catholic progressive intellectuals knew exactly what they were doing — is irrelevant. In order to secure the political advantage Obama had gained among Catholic voters last November, the president of the United States decided that he would define what it means to be a real Catholic in 21st-century America — not the bishop of Fort Wayne–South Bend, who in sorrow declined to attend Notre Dame’s commencement; not the 80-some bishops who publicly criticized Notre Dame’s decision to invite the president to receive an honorary degree; not the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, which explicitly and unambiguously instructed Catholic institutions not to do what Notre Dame did. He, President Obama, would settle the decades-long intra-Catholic culture war in favor of one faction — the faction that had supported his candidacy and that had spent the first months of his administration defending his policies…

Rather like Napoleon taking the diadem out of the hands of Pope Pius VII and crowning himself emperor, President Obama has, wittingly or not, declared himself the Primate of American Catholicism.

0 Comment

  • I guess I just see things a bit differently. Barack Obama and Pope Benedict both spoke to groups this month about very contentious and very disagreeable topics. Both Barack Obama and Pope Benedict spoke out for diaglogue in the face of intense disagreement. Both spoke of mutual respect for opposing viewpoints and for mutual undertstanding of the values they share. Both Barack Obama’s speech at Notre Dame in the US and Pope Benedict’s speech at the Notre Dame Centre in Isreal on May 11th brought together opposing peoples, and more than just asking that they get along, gave specific principles for mutual respect. Polarization brings only stagnation. To move forward both sides must understand that there must and can be mutual respect, if all sides will allow it. The object is not that one side or the other validate themselves for reason of pride, but to abandon our self righteousness to seek common ground to, at last at days end, show some accomplishment of the goals we seek. Barack Obama is not telling Catholics how to act any more than B16 is telling Jews or Muslims how to act.

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