Religiously Affiliated CollegesVery Reverend David M. O'Connell, C.M.
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In the midst of what has become rather aggressive competition for students, colleges and universities in the United States must demonstrate to their potential clientele what makes them unique and worthy of special consideration. Every institution will lay claim to "academic excellence" and the "best program" in this or that discipline to be sure, but is there something else that can demonstrate a "mark of difference"? Religious institutions, in contrast to secular colleges, believe that mark to be the dimension of faith. For a college to be directly influenced by a particular religion or faith communicates to the secular academic world that the religious institution possesses (1) a sense of its own distinctiveness and difference within the academy, and (2) a conviction that it makes a purposeful contribution to higher learning through faith. Education sheds light on human experience through reason. It enlightens the mind. Religious education does so in a way that identifies human experience in terms of the God of both reason and faith. It enlightens the mind and the soul. Through religious education, we encounter truth, intelligible to the reasoning mind but also accessible on a deeper level and meaningful to the believing heart and the soul. I read once that "religion is not primarily a matter of facts but a matter of meanings." Religious colleges attempt to present both reason and faith, not separately but as two distinct yet related components of one integrated truth. It is interesting to note that some of the most accomplished and widely recognized institutions of higher learning in the United States identify their origins in some religious faith confession. For some reason, however, these religious affiliations grew less important to participation in the academic enterprise with the passage of time, and so two different models of and approaches to higher education developed: the purely secular model/approach and the religious model/approach.
When a student and his or her parents choose a religious college or university, they are choosing an institution that has a distinctive identity and mission rooted in a distinctive religious tradition. That tradition should permeate the institution and its operations and activities. It should be evident in the classroom as well as in student life on campus. Faculty and staff should be committed to that mission and not merely tolerant of it as though it offered little real value to the academic enterprise. If an academic institution is truly religious, it will be clear to everyone on and off campus that there is "value added" to higher education by the religious college and its mission, and that this value added is something that interests people, that draws them to the institution in such a way that what they perceive as being uniquely provided is something that they really want. It will make a difference in their education and in their lives. The ability of religious colleges to market themselves as both religious and academically superior to an audience that wants what they have to offer will ensure their long-term survival and ability to fulfill their mission which, in the end, will serve to advance the true diversity that is the hallmark of American higher education. This is certainly the philosophy at work in The Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C., the national university of the Catholic Church in the United States.
The opinions expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of the U.S. government.
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