Faith & Reason Fall Issue, 2014 | Page 2

LETTER FROM THE PRESIDENT The best hope we have for converting these contemporary “fallen-away innkeepers” is to use the same method as St. Dominic—to respond with faith and reason! With a new academic year well underway here at the Pontifical Faculty of the Immaculate Conception, I have the pleasure of introducing you to our re-designed newsletter, Faith and Reason. Formerly known as The 487 Correspondent, the newsletter not only has a new title but a brand new look and focus that is more dynamic and hopefully conveys to you, our friends and faithful supporters, some of the vibrancy of what is happening in our academic program and Dominican community. We decided to rename our publication Faith and Reason because we think this better captures what is at the very core of our mission. Our mission is to inculcate in our students a solid and time-tested vision for evangelization going back to the example of St. Dominic himself — preaching the Truth of the Gospel in a way that appeals to both the mind and heart! This vision is what underlies the formation we offer to future Dominican priests, religious and laity who study here, a formation rooted in the synthesis of faith and reason. Before St. Dominic founded the Order of Preachers, he was traveling one day through southern France and ended up spending the night at an inn whose owner had become a member of a heretical sect. As the story goes, St. Dominic spent the entire night conversing with the man and by morning had converted him back to the Catholic faith! The man was converted Faith & Reason - Fall 2014 not simply by St. Dominic’s piety but by his ability to present the truths of the faith in a rational and compelling way. Preaching that is grounded in faith and reason was not only persuasive in St. Dominic’s time, it remains perennially so! Here at the Pontifical Faculty of the Immaculate Conception, we carry out St. Dominic’s vision of forming contemporary preachers with a solid foundation in philosophy (human reason) and theology (faith). Our graduates are thus well equipped to engage the many today who have been seduced by relativism, secularism, and even atheism. Our students are prepared to wrestle with their questions, to provide rational responses to their objections, and to present them with a coherent and compelling explanation of Catholic Truth. The best hope we have for converting these contemporary “fallen away innkeepers” is to use the same method as St. Dominic—to respond with faith and reason! In upcoming editions of Faith and Reason, I will speak more about how the theological perspective of St. Thomas Aquinas, which forms the core of our academic program, is the best example of the synthesis of faith and reason. Hopefully, then, you will come to appreciate how faith and reason informs all that we do because we are convinced it is the most effective way of preaching in a compelling way to the people of our time and culture! 3