How to be loyal to Loyola.Jesuit Education 21 Conference on the Proceedings on the Future of Jesuit Higher Education Edited by Martin R. Tripole, S.J. Saint Joseph University Press, $70, 544 pp. The volume at hand is the record of a conference held at Saint Joseph's Saint Joseph's may refer to:
abbr. Master of Business Administration Noun 1. MBA - a master's degree in business Master in Business, Master in Business Administration degrees and student life. As a tour d'horizon of the voices of Jesuit education in the United States Education in the United States is provided mainly by government, with control and funding coming from three levels: federal, state, and local. School attendance is mandatory and nearly universal at the elementary and high school levels (often known outside the United States as the , this volume is fascinating, indispensable, and inconclusive. I hope it is not unkind to the earnest authors who contributed to the 544, 8 11/42-by-11-inch pages of this book to say that at the end I am still not certain what Christian/Catholic/Jesuit higher education higher education Study beyond the level of secondary education. Institutions of higher education include not only colleges and universities but also professional schools in such fields as law, theology, medicine, business, music, and art. is or will be. (One assumes that the adjectives are at least compatible if not synonymous.) What Jesuit higher education was is clear, but all the authors reject a return to the past. Most assume that there will be fewer Jesuits and fragmented theology. No one wants to go back to "ghetto Catholicism" and theology as Baltimore Catechism A Catechism of Christian Doctrine, Prepared and Enjoined by Order of the Third Council of Baltimore (or, simply, the Baltimore Catechism) was the de facto standard Catholic school text in the United States from 1885 to the 1960s. Plus. Jesuit universities and colleges have enjoyed unprecedented success in the recent past. The contributors are justifiably proud of the fact that several of these institutions would be regarded as leading players in American higher education. Jesuit colleges are no longer thought of by the public or the higher education establishment as academically deviant, strange isolates of superstition superstition, an irrational belief or practice resulting from ignorance or fear of the unknown. The validity of superstitions is based on belief in the power of magic and witchcraft and in such invisible forces as spirits and demons. and religious rant. But such academic success is precisely what has made the adjectival ad·jec·ti·val adj. Of, relating to, or functioning as an adjective. ad jec·ti qualifier
(Catholic/ Jesuit) problematic. To what extent has entry into the
mainstream of higher education swamped or submerged (to stick to watery
metaphor) the religious sense of these institutions? Faculties are now
built competitively with quality appointments from the leading secular
graduate institutions, not from the Society of Jesus--where there may be
no qualified candidates at all. (Frederick Homann, S.J., points out that
while there are currently twenty aging Jesuits with doctorates in
mathematics there is not a single Jesuit now enrolled in a doctoral
program in that field.) This absence of Jesuit scholars means that
laymen will have to carry these institutions in the Ignatian
tradition--thus repeated suggestions that an "affirmative
action affirmative action, in the United States, programs to overcome the effects of past societal discrimination by allocating jobs and resources to members of specific groups, such as minorities and women. " policy for appointing Catholics and/or inculturation Inculturation is a term used in Christian missiology referring to the adaptation of the way the Gospel is presented for the specific cultures being evangelized. It is attuned - but not identical - to the term enculturation used in Sociology. into a
school's "mission" for non-Catholic faculty is a
necessary strategy for a "Jesuit" future.What then is the special mission of Jesuit education, the mission that will differentiate these worthy institutions from their secular peers? The editor, Martin Tripole, offers in his introduction a theme, which runs through a large number of the offerings. Referring to the Jesuit General Council 32 (December 1974-March 1975)--"the most innovative of the modern Society"--Tripole notes the emergence of social justice as a or the guiding Jesuit task. But General Council 32 was hardly concluded before Tripole among many others questioned the formula as too restrictive. How, exactly does pursuit of the moral virtue of justice integrate or expand the intellectual virtues pursued in the academy, specifically the traditional Jesuit apostolate a·pos·to·late n. 1. The office, duties, or mission of an apostle. 2. An association of individuals for the dissemination of a religion or doctrine. in education? Even supposing that concern for justice was a differentiating mark of Jesuit education, three immensely difficult questions arise: What, after all, is justice? Can justice be taught? Is justice the special Christian virtue? Robert J. Arujo, S.J., expresses the first problem in one of the earliest papers at the conference. "I have examined all the theories and meta-theories [of justice], and while each offers varying degrees of insight, I am still unsatisfied." "Justice" has been a monumental puzzle since Plato's Republic, which labors through ten long books to define it--and then it turns out that only philosopher kings could administer a just state. Alfred North Alfred North may refer to:
But let us suppose that we knew the nature of justice. Plato's second problem arises: Can virtue be taught? In one sense the answer is obviously "Yes!" Humans do not come prewired for justice or any of the other moral habits. (Pace the sociobiologists.) What is not clear, however, is how the intellectual work of higher education affects just behavior. One does not become courageous by reading books about courage; one does not become just by reading the Republic. Plato had that correct. The testimony of Jesuit alumni contained in the present text suggests that "lessons" about justice took place in the slums and barrios Barrios is a name of Hispanic origin. The name may refer to: Persons
tr.v. in·doc·tri·nat·ed, in·doc·tri·nat·ing, in·doc·tri·nates 1. To instruct in a body of doctrine or principles. 2. and experience were a total fraud. The final issue, however, would seem to be the crucial one. Is "justice" a particularly Christian virtue? The prospectuses and programs of most American colleges and universities claim to educate for citizenry cit·i·zen·ry n. pl. cit·i·zen·ries Citizens considered as a group. citizenry Noun citizens collectively Noun 1. . "Princeton in the nation's service" and all that. However well or ill that end is pursued and accomplished, "justice" would not immediately serve as a distinguishing mark for Christian higher education. More important than achieving differentiation from distinguished secular peers is the question whether "justice" is the right designation for what Christianity is all about. On this score, the most crucial paper in the entire volume is that of noted biblical scholar John A. Fitzmyer, S.J., who discusses the complexity of translating Hebrew terms into the Latin justicia. To illustrate only one problem: the Hebrew sedeq, which often appears as "justice," can also be translated as "charity." Further Jesuit General Councils recognized the issues raised above. Tripole thinks that General Council 34 is more balanced since it speaks to "the justice of God's kingdom" and "the justice of the Gospel" which display "God's redemptive righteousness and mercy." Surely this is on the right track, but proper formulae do not of themselves solve the problem for Christian higher education. From General Council 32 to General Council 34 one could say that one moves from Jesuit higher education as academics+morality to academics+mystery ("God's redemptive righteousness and mercy"). Fitting "mystery" into the clarified conceptual world of the modern university is, I suggest, the problem for Catholic higher education if it is to have any future at all. Dennis O'Brien The name Dennis O'Brien or Denis O'Brien may refer to:
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