Should a theologian who has publicly stated her support for abortion rights be allowed to teach at a Catholic college?
That’s not a trick question. It’s at the center of a debate now swirling in California.
From the San Diego Union-Tribune:
A University of San Diego decision rescinding a prestigious position to a Catholic feminist theologian has thrust it smack in the middle of a national debate over academic freedom versus adherence to church teachings.
Faculty and Roman Catholics are divided over USD’s decision to withdraw the appointment of Rosemary Radford Ruether to an endowed chair. At issue is Ruether’s position on the board of directors for Catholics for Choice, an abortion rights organization.
Two national women’s religious groups have sponsored a petition with more than 2,000 signatures demanding that she be allowed to assume the post.
USD is standing by its decision.
“Her public position and the symbol of this chair are in direct conflict,” said USD spokeswoman Pamela Gray Payton. “This chair is a powerful, visible symbol of Roman Catholic theology, and in Roman Catholic theology abortion is disallowed.”
The flap underscores a long-standing issue for American Catholic colleges: the debate over academic freedom versus fealty to Catholic doctrine. Many notable universities have come under fire for actions that clash with Catholic orthodoxy, including Notre Dame, Georgetown and St. Louis.
Ruether, 71, is concerned about the decision’s effect on academic freedom.
“It appears to me that some right-wing group has put pressure on the university,” she said.
The position, the Monsignor John R. Portman Chair in Roman Catholic Theology, involved coming to campus three days a week, teaching a course, giving a public lecture, and mentoring junior faculty during the fall 2009 semester, said Lance Nelson, chairman of the Department of Theology and Religious Studies.
Nelson began negotiating with Ruether early this year after a list of possible candidates including Ruether was recommended in a department vote and approved by the previous dean of the College of Arts and Sciences.
“She’s a widely respected scholar in the field,” Nelson said. “She’s done seminal work on Christian feminism, social justice, and the relationship between religion and ecology.”
Ruether writes a regular column for National Catholic Reporter, has 13 honorary doctorates and has written more than 40 books. She teaches part time at Claremont Graduate University, about 40 miles east of Los Angeles.
After Ruether was offered the USD appointment, the university’s Web site characterized her as a “pioneering figure in Christian feminist theology.”
The problem is that the appointment should have gone to the provost for final approval, Gray Payton said. That did not happen.
USD received various complaints about the appointment, though not from the chair’s anonymous donor, Gray Payton said.
LifeSiteNews.com, founded by a Canadian anti-abortion organization, wrote a scathing article after the appointment was made.
“This is a woman who is in favor of abortion, in favor of contraception, homosexuality and women priests,” editor John-Henry Westen said in an interview. “I mean how much more anti-Catholic can you get?”
Nelson said the Department of Theology and Religious Studies was unaware of Ruether’s role with Catholics for Choice, but he doesn’t know if that knowledge would have changed the faculty’s recommendation.
In mid-July, USD Vice President and Provost Julie Sullivan called Ruether to withdraw the offer.
Fifty USD faculty members have signed the petition demanding that USD reverse course. The petition was sponsored by the Women’s Ordination Conference, which advocates for female priests, deacons and bishops; and the Women’s Alliance for Theology, Ethics and Ritual, a multireligious feminist educational center with Catholic co-founders.
The petition asks for USD either to apologize and honor the offer or allow Ruether to deliver a campus lecture on academic freedom.
“Rosemary Ruether is like the godmother of the feminist theologian movement,” said Linda Pieczynski, spokeswoman and past president of Call to Action, a nonprofit Catholic organization that advocates on church reform issues and is endorsing the petition. “It’s just criminal to disinvite her from the University of San Diego.”
There’s much more at the link.