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Land O'Lakes Statement Paved Way for LGBT Welcome in Catholic Higher Ed
First, inspired by Vatican IIs openness to the modern world, Land OLakes opened Catholic universities to all types of diversity in their communities. This openness has come to include a welcome to LGBT students, faculty (including theologians), staff, and alumni. New Ways Ministrys LGBT-friendly Catholic colleges and universities listing, available here, attests to how widespread that welcome has become. This openness now increasingly includes an appreciation for the rich contributions from their own various traditions that LGBT people offer schools.
Second, Land OLakes shattered boundaries that had constrained Catholic theological exploration because educators firmly defended academic freedom. This claim did not mean it was easily implemented. In some cases, it erupted into major conflicts. The saga of Fr. Charles Curran and The Catholic University of America began that same year. But as society grappled with new issues in sexuality and gender, theologians at Catholic universities began to do so as well. The profound re-thinking and reclamation of tradition that has happened in the area of sexuality, including enriched theological anthropologies, continues to be a key foundation of Catholic efforts for LGBT equality in the church. Though not considered to be such by many church leaders, these efforts have been a true service to the people of God.
Third, Land OLakes desired that undergraduate education be oriented around human formation that encourages free inquiry in conjunction with service and spirituality. This kind of thinking paved the way for Catholic universities to create formal supports for LGBTQ students. In Jesuit terms, attention to cura personalis or care of the whole person means sexual and gender identities cannot be ignored if church institutions are to truly help form young people. This desire also created space for programming that educates all students on matters of the day, including LGBT issues.
As we celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the Land OLakes statement, the question raised is how Catholic higher education continues to receive Vatican II in the present moment. Since the 1960s, Pope John Paul II released Ex Corde Ecclesia, an apostolic constitution on Catholic higher education that in some ways challenged Land OLakes ideas. Even today, new challenges remain unsettled, and the path of LGBT inclusion has not been easy. But without the Land OLakes conference, we would never have been able to have come as far as we have on LGBT issues on Catholic campuses. So on this 50th anniversary weekend, I am grateful for how far we have come and hopeful for what is to come in the next fifty years.
https://newwaysministryblog.wordpress.com/2017/07/22/land-olakes-statement-paved-way-for-lgbt-welcome-in-catholic-higher-ed/?utm_content=buffer40835&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer
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Land O'Lakes Statement Paved Way for LGBT Welcome in Catholic Higher Ed (Original Post)
UrbScotty
Jul 2017
OP
TexasProgresive
(12,313 posts)1. I want to thank you for bringing this to my attention.
I was 17 at the time and my mind was rather occupied with a hormonal hurricane. I had not heard of the Land O'Lakes conference and statement on Catholic Universities. I've found it online and will bookmark it for further study- it is quite long.
Link to "The Idea of the Catholic University"
http://archives.nd.edu/episodes/visitors/lol/idea.htm