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RESPONDING FROM THE TRADITION : FRANCISCAN UNIVERSITIES IN THE THIRD MILLENNIUM. Neumann College August 2007. AT THE DAWN OF THE THIRD MILLENIUM. What resources do we have in our spiritual traditions? How can we be prophetic? How can we help change the structural base of injustice?
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RESPONDING FROM THE TRADITION: FRANCISCAN UNIVERSITIES IN THE THIRD MILLENNIUM Neumann College August 2007
AT THE DAWN OF THE THIRD MILLENIUM... • What resources do we have in our spiritual traditions? • How can we be prophetic? • How can we help change the structural base of injustice? • What is the vocation of a Franciscan university today?
THE CENTRALITY OF BEAUTY-- Prof. Elaine Scarry • A transformative experience • Inspiring creativity and generativity • “Lateral distribution”: extending the experience - Concrete acts of justice
John Duns Scotus • Franciscan Friar • Duns, Scotland • 1265-1308 • Metaphysician • The “Subtle Doctor”
ELEMENTS OF THE FRANCISCAN INTELLECTUAL TRADITION • Inclusive – all cultures, all peoples • Critical – of injustices • Prophetic – moving beyond • Practical – an everyday approach
THE FRANCISCAN PREOCCUPATION WITH BEAUTY • St. Francis: Canticle of the Sun • St. Clare: Letters to Agnes of Prague • St. Bonaventure: The Mind’s Road to God
I. SACRAMENTAL VIEW OF MEANING • A sacramental vision: reality as SIGN • An aesthetic model: the divine Artist • Value and dignity of what exists: a work of art • Rational, creative love • The moral agent is an “artist” • Optimistic, positive vision of the human person
AFFIRMATION OF HUMAN DIGNITY • The reason for the Incarnation • Divine desire from all eternity • No “happy fault” argument • Not a response to human sinfulness, but affirmation of human dignity and value
IMPLICATIONS • The Centrality of Beauty • Love, rationality and freedom • The rationality of Beauty • The need for multiple perspectives and modes of understanding • Human desire and rational choice
QUESTIONS FOR REFLECTION 1. How is education at Neumann aesthetic and sacramental? 2. How central is the daily experience of beauty and creativity for everyone, not just students? 3. What models for innovative coursework exist? 4. How do you reward educational risks, especially creative risks in pedagogy? 5. How do all these spiritual insights influence the everyday decisions made everywhere on this campus?
II. BEAUTY AND CREATIVITY • “Thisness” (haecceity) • What is sacred and unrepeatable in each person • The mystery of each being • A personal gift
“What I do is me, for this I came.” G. M. Hopkins, As Kingfishers Catch Fire
Haecceity: OUR PERSONAL GIFT FROM GOD “It would seem to invest each [human person] with a unique value as one singularly wanted and loved by God, quite apart from any trait that person shares with others or any contribution he or she might make to society. One can even say, haecceity is our personal gift from God.” A.B. Wolter, Duns Scotus’ Early Oxford Lecture on Individuation, Introduction, xxii
“The pearl of great price” Haecceitas (Thisness): The hidden treasure “I have the immense joy of being a human being, a member of a race in which God became incarnate. As if the sorrows and stupidities of the human condition could overwhelm me, now I realize what we all are. And if only everybody could realize this! But it cannot be explained. THERE IS NO WAY OF TELLING PEOPLE THAT THEY ARE ALL WALKING AROUND SHINING LIKE THE SUN.” Thomas Merton, Conjectures of a Guilty Bystander
THE DESIRE OF OUR HEART The rationality of love • The human HEART has two affections: for justice and for happiness • They are the foundation for the ability for self-restraint; self-control • Profoundly Augustinian insight • Integrates human affective desire into rationality
QUESTIONS FOR REFLECTION 1. How might these foundational insights about human nature and dignity play a more central critical and prophetic role in student education here? 2. How might the Scotist affirmation of human goodness and uniqueness inform coursework in ethics, in education, in psychology, in business? 3. How do broader and more inclusive styles of teaching and learning enrich the curriculum? 4. How might the Franciscan commitment to all persons, including and most especially the vulnerable offer a critical and prophetic vantage point from which to analyze economic, social and political situations?
III. BEAUTY AND ACTS OF JUSTICE • Moral implications: • Human dignity • The possibility of conversion • Restorative justice • Harmonic balance of self and others
GROWING IN JUSTICE • Growing in fullness of life • Mercy • Compassion • Right relationships • Common good
OUR VOCATION “We are his mothers when we carry him about in our heart and person by means of love and a clean and sincere conscience, and we give birth to him by means of our holy actions, which should shine as an example to others.” St. Francis, Letter to the Faithful, 230j
QUESTIONS FOR REFLECTION 1. How do students see and experience justice? 2. How does the Franciscan tradition inform projects and activities for justice? 3. How are such efforts (even when they fail) celebrated and rewarded? 4. How has your small student-faculty ratio enabled you to provide innovative and creative learning opportunities for the students?
THE INTELLECTUAL AS SPIRITUAL • The intellectual journey is a spiritual journey • To be human = imago Christi • The rational order is an order of love
THE INTELLECTUAL AS SPIRITUAL • The whole is grounded in a transcendent order that is rational and loving • The whole is beautiful • The human person is the summit of creation
A FRANCISCAN VISION • 1. Sacramental view of meaning • 2. Optimistic vision of the person • 3. Optimism about the relationship between rationality and faith
A FRANCISCAN VISION • Transforming the world into beauty • The power of creativity • An integrative and empowering educational experience