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ND in the News: April 2025

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  1. In meetings ahead of the conclave, many church leaders will emphasize the importance of “clarity” on church doctrine, including on issues such as same-sex blessings, said Paulinus I. Odozor, a priest and professor at the University of Notre Dame.

  2. “The head of the Catholic Church is the head of an institution that claims over 1 billion baptized members and is arguably the most multicultural and multilingual institution in the world,” said John McGreevy, a professor of history at the University of Notre Dame in South Bend, Indiana. “There’s nothing quite like it.”

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    A man with glasses, wearing a navy blue suit and blue and gold striped tie, smiles in front of a bookshelf.

    John McGreevy

    History

  3. To those who interpret such criticisms as being anti-capitalist, Joseph Kaboski — a professor of economics at the University of Notre Dame — has a reminder. “The Vatican keeps a record of every public talk the pope has ever given, and the only times he used the word ‘capitalism’ were to a group on inclusive capitalism, where he commended their efforts to make capitalism more inclusive, and,” Kaboski continued, “in talking to the Economy of Francesco” — an annual gathering since 2020 inspired by the example of St. Francis of Assisi — “where he talked about the shortcomings of ‘our capitalism.'”

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    Joseph Kaboski

    Joseph Kaboski

    Economics

  4. Nicole Stelle Garnett is a law professor at the University of Notre Dame.

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    Nicole Stelle Garnett

    Notre Dame Law 91视频

  5. “Pope Francis said the dramatic things that had to be said about nuclear weapons,” Mary Ellen O’Connell, a professor of law and international peace studies at the Kroc Institute at the University of Notre Dame, recalled. The church has, since “Pacem in Terris” in 1963, condemned the use of nuclear weapons as inherently immoral owing to their indiscriminate and potentially earth-ending destructive power. 

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    Mary Ellen O Connell 350 New

    Mary Ellen O'Connell

    Notre Dame Law 91视频

  6. Services like these are not directly subject to retaliatory tariffs right now, said Robert Johnson, an economics professor at the University of Notre Dame. But he said the services sector will be indirectly affected by retaliatory tariffs on goods, because goods producers rely on the services sector.

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    A headshot of a man with short brown hair, smiling, against a gray background. He wears a dark gray suit jacket and light blue collared shirt.

    Robert Johnson

    Department of Economics

  7. Video

    Cardinals are preparing to elect a new pontiff, and questions are emerging about Pope Francis' successor and his nationality. Rev. Daniel Groody, an associate provost, vice president and professor of theology and global affairs at the University of Notre Dame, joins CBS News with more.

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    Headshot of a priest with a light complexion and gray hair, wearing glasses, a black suit jacket, and a clerical collar, smiling against a gray background.

    Daniel Groody

    Theology; Keough 91视频 of Global Affairs

  8. By Tim Weninger Collegiate Proessor of Engineering, and Ernesto Verdeja Associate Professor of Peace 91视频 and Global Politics at the University of Notre Dame.

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    Ernesto Verdeja

    Ernesto Verdeja

    Keough 91视频 of Global Affairs

    Tim Weninger

    Tim Weninger

    Computer Science and Engineering

  9. Rev. Robert A. Dowd, C.S.C., President, University of Notre Dame

  10. But some African Catholics do not like this emphasis on origin - like Father Paulinus Ikechukwu Odozor, a professor at the University of Notre Dame in Indiana. "It's like people are saying, 'OK, so Africans are growing in these numbers, so why don't we give them a pope,'" he told me.

  11. Video

    University of Notre Dame President Rev. Robert A. Dowd, C.S.C., discusses the legacy of Pope Francis after his death on The Arena with Kasie Hunt on CNN.

  12. Holy Cross Fr. Robert Dowd, president of the University of Notre Dame, said Francis inspired many "through his heroic and prophetic ministry."

  13. “When the government seeks to instruct students about value-laden sexuality and gender issues in a way that contradicts their parents’ religious instruction, without telling the parents or providing an opt-out, the parents’ First Amendment rights have been burdened,” said the brief from legal experts, including University of Virginia law professor Douglas Laycock and Notre Dame Law 91视频 professor Richard Garnett.

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    Rick Garnett

    Richard Garnett

    Notre Dame Law 91视频

  14. Video

    John T. McGreevy, the Charles and Jill Fischer Provost of the University of Notre Dame, discusses the relationship Pope Francis had with U.S. Presidents during his papacy with Jake Tapper on CNN.

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    A man with glasses, wearing a navy blue suit and blue and gold striped tie, smiles in front of a bookshelf.

    John McGreevy

    History

  15. John McGreevy, a University of Notre Dame historian of global Catholicism, said it’s hard to know what will endure. “On all [the] things [Francis did], I think there are no guarantees,” he said.

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    A man with glasses, wearing a navy blue suit and blue and gold striped tie, smiles in front of a bookshelf.

    John McGreevy

    History

  16. According to experts, more spot-on than not, and at the very least meticulously researched. “They got a lot of the details right,” said Kathleen Sprows Cummings, a historian of Catholicism at Notre Dame who closely followed the election of Pope Francis in 2013.

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    Kathleen Sprows Cummings

    American 91视频

  17. In February 2024, Francis met with the trustees of the University of Notre Dame, a Catholic institution in Indiana. The school's president, the Rev. Robert A. Dowd, said in a statement Monday that the pope instructed them to continue educating students through "'three languages: the head, the heart and the hands.'"