The Georgia Bulletin

Sat, Sep 6, 2008


What I Have Seen and Heard - Archbishop Gregory's Weekly Column

Print Issue: September 4, 1980

Knights Approve Education Fund

By Gretchen Keiser

A $1 million investment research fund to improve all aspects of Catholic education will be established by the Knights of Columbus.

The education fund was approved by the Knights at the 98th annual meeting of the Supreme Council of the fraternal organization of Catholic men. Representatives of the 1.3 million member organization met in a five-day convention in Atlanta.

The Knights also went on the record opposing abortion funding, the Equal Rights Amendment and pornography.

A resolution on the education fund followed Supreme Knight Virgil C. Dechant’s annual report, in which he said the fund was urgently needed to support research that would lead to improvement of Catholic education at all levels.

“In the barren desert of today’s secularist society Catholic schools stand out more clearly than ever as oasis of commitment to a Christian way of life,” he said.

The resolution cited the need for research to solve increasing problems of funding, and administering Catholic schools and in obtaining thoroughly prepared teachers to staff them. It also said that Confraternity of Christian Doctrine programs need refinement to make them effective conveyors of religious commitment as well as of religious information, and said that seminaries and novitiates demand in-depth study in the light of recent Vatican documents.

Research projects, to be supported by earnings from the fund, will be selected by the National Catholic Educational Association, assisted by an advisory panel of bishops and scholars representing the United States and Canada and subject to the concurrence of the Knights of Columbus board of directors.

The Supreme Council also adopted a resolution opposing the use of public money for abortion and calling for the adoption of a right-to-life amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

The resolution stopped short of mentioning the recent adoption by the Democratic Party of a platform plank supporting federal funding of abortion. However, the resolution called upon “all public officials and all candidates for public office to take serious note of our deeply felt and firmly held position on these vital issues.”

After some debate about making specific reference to political parties, the Council decided that “the resolution is clear enough,” said Elmer Von Feldt, public information officer for the Knights of Columbus. The resolutions were adopted in a closed-door session of supreme officers and 418 delegates representing jurisdictions throughout the United States, Canada, Mexico, Puerto Rico, Guatemala and the Philippines.

Specific reference to the Democratic Party’s plank on abortion was made during the convention by Archbishop Thomas A. Donnellan. In his homily at the opening Mass for 2,500 delegates and family members, Archbishop Donnellan recalled Pope John Paul II’s proclamation of the sacredness of all human life. When “a major political party” adopts a platform plank which calls for federal funding of abortion, Archbishop Donnellan said, “we shall stand up to proclaim our belief that the right to life is a basic human right which should have the protection of law and that abortion is the deliberate destruction of an unborn human being, and therefore violates this right.”

John Murphy, supreme advocate of the Knights of Columbus, said the archbishop’s homily was “in part responsible” for the thrust of the pro-life resolution, and its specific mention of candidates.

In other resolutions adopted at the convention, the Knights opposed the Equal Rights Amendment and the registering and drafting of women, and urged defeat of “so-called homosexual equal rights laws.”

A resolution on pornography called upon local Knights to coordinate their efforts with “existing agencies which have developed the expertise to curtail it.” The resolution urged councils in the United States to become active institutional members of Morality in Media in New York City; Canadian councils to associate themselves with Canadians for Decency in Willowdale, Ontario; and the councils in Mexico to join with Alianza por la Defensa de la Familia, in Guadalajara, Mexico.

The group also called for measures to ensure that any Middle East settlement includes guarantees of free and open access for people of all creeds to Jerusalem and its environs.

Other resolutions expressed appreciation to the Canadian government for that country’s actions permitting American diplomats to escape from Iran and called for prayers for release of the American hostages and for flying the U.S. flag as a symbol of national unity. The Knights also voted to invite Pope John Paul II to attend the 100th annual meeting of the Supreme Council in Hartford, Conn., in 1982.