S
stumbler
Guest
by MARK SHEA
Jesuit Father Robert Spitzer has been a champion of human life throughout his priestly career.
June 02, 2005 / Jesuit Father Robert Spitzer has been a champion of human life throughout his priestly career.
Since he was appointed president of Gonzaga University in 1998, Father Spitzer, who is one of the most active, articulate and aggressive proponents of Catholic teaching on the value and sanctity of human life, has continued to make a positive national and international impact on the struggle to protect the life of every human being from conception to natural death.
Father Frank Pavone, the National Director of Priests for Life, has said of him, “[H]e is fully committed to the pro-life cause. In his priesthood, as well as in his position at the helm of Gonzaga University, he has advanced the Gospel of Life and the teachings of the Church on every moral issue. Both in his teachings as well as in his administrative decisions, he has been consistent and faithful, and deserves the esteem of everyone in the Church and in the wider pro-life movement. I am proud to call him both a colleague and a friend.”
So it is particularly strange to see pro-abortion faculty and students at Gonzaga Law School, a few thin-skinned pro-life students, and one columnist make common cause in an attempt to casually destroy the reputation this man whose only crime is his failure to be omnipotent.
The Spark A year and a half ago, two Gonzaga University law students wanted to start a pro-life club.
Gonzaga already has a recognized, campus-wide pro-life group, but these two students wanted to form a second one at the university’s law school. Unfortunately, in contradiction of the Student Bar Association’s published guidelines, which require open participation by any student in any law school club, these two students wouldn’t allow non-Christian pro-life law students to hold leadership positions.
So they were denied funding in keeping with Student Bar Association policy. This set off a year and a half of public attacks by . . . .
Full article
Jesuit Father Robert Spitzer has been a champion of human life throughout his priestly career.
June 02, 2005 / Jesuit Father Robert Spitzer has been a champion of human life throughout his priestly career.
Since he was appointed president of Gonzaga University in 1998, Father Spitzer, who is one of the most active, articulate and aggressive proponents of Catholic teaching on the value and sanctity of human life, has continued to make a positive national and international impact on the struggle to protect the life of every human being from conception to natural death.
Father Frank Pavone, the National Director of Priests for Life, has said of him, “[H]e is fully committed to the pro-life cause. In his priesthood, as well as in his position at the helm of Gonzaga University, he has advanced the Gospel of Life and the teachings of the Church on every moral issue. Both in his teachings as well as in his administrative decisions, he has been consistent and faithful, and deserves the esteem of everyone in the Church and in the wider pro-life movement. I am proud to call him both a colleague and a friend.”
So it is particularly strange to see pro-abortion faculty and students at Gonzaga Law School, a few thin-skinned pro-life students, and one columnist make common cause in an attempt to casually destroy the reputation this man whose only crime is his failure to be omnipotent.
The Spark A year and a half ago, two Gonzaga University law students wanted to start a pro-life club.
Gonzaga already has a recognized, campus-wide pro-life group, but these two students wanted to form a second one at the university’s law school. Unfortunately, in contradiction of the Student Bar Association’s published guidelines, which require open participation by any student in any law school club, these two students wouldn’t allow non-Christian pro-life law students to hold leadership positions.
So they were denied funding in keeping with Student Bar Association policy. This set off a year and a half of public attacks by . . . .
Full article