Posted on 07/26/2017 7:36:08 PM PDT by marshmallow
William Inge (1860-1954), Professor of Divinity at Cambridge University and Dean of Saint Pauls Cathedral, was frequently in the literary crosshairs of G.K. Chesterton for his anti-Catholic polemics and strident promotion of eugenics. Fortunately, Chesterton also rejected his advocacy of nudism. Given Dean Inges eclectic version of progressivism, one is struck by his cynicism about faddish thinking: Whoever marries the spirit of this age will find himself a widower in the next.
Exactly fifty years ago, fads ran wild at the Land OLakes Conference in Wisconsin organized by Father Theodore Hesburgh of the University of Notre Dame to update the culture of Catholic higher education. Its summary document was published on July 23, in a year when society seemed to be having a nervous breakdown. It was a time of Vietnam protest rallies, an exploding drug culture, the Cold War at fever pitch, and actual combat in the Six Days War. Instead of challenging the cultural neurosis, the Church succumbed to it, as theological and liturgical chaos disappointed what Joseph Ratzinger would call the Pelagian naivetés of the Second Vatican Council. The heads of Catholic colleges and universities who gathered at Land OLakes were fraught with a deep-seated inferiority complex, rooted in an unspoken assumption that Catholicism is an impediment to the new material sciences, and eager to attain a peer relationship with academic leaders of the secular schools whose own classical foundations were crumbling and whose presidents and deans were barricading their offices against the onslaught of Vandals in the guise of undergraduates.
Like Horaces mountains that gave birth to a ridiculous mouse, the 26 conference participants labored for three days and then declared portentously in the first line of their Statement: The Catholic university today must be a university in the full modern sense of the word.
(Excerpt) Read more at crisismagazine.com ...
Butter?
Land o’ Lakes is a 6,000+ acre estate in northern Wisconsin, off of US 45 between Eagle River and Watersmeet, Michigan. It was once owned by a wealthy Catholic layman named Ignatius Aloysius O’Shaughnessy. Mr. O’Shaughnessy gave money to many Catholic institutions, one of which was the University of Notre Dame, which before the lay board of trustees was formed was owned by the Congregation of Holy Cross. Mr. O’Shaughnessy donated the estate to Father Hesburgh; I think Land o’ Lakes is formally owned by the Congregation, although the University holds retreats up there. I’m told that there is a lodge on the property, and I’m guessing that it is fairly comfortable.
There is also a little town and an airport alongside US 45 just below the Michigan state line.
Notre Dame and the other historically Catholic universities need to eliminate liberals from their boards of trustees as a way to returning to sanity and rationality.
Oh....k....
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