Reflections Magazine Issue #48 - Spring 1998 | Page 6

Catholic Identity 6 Exploring Our Religious Foundations “The mission of Siena Heights, a Catholic college founded and sponsored by the Adrian Dominican Sisters, is to assist people to become more competent, purposeful and ethical through a teaching and learning environment which respects the dignity of all.” (Adopted by the Board of Trustees, October 1997) E arlier this academic year, the Board of Trustees approved a new mission statement for Siena Heights, concluding the work of a campus committee chaired by trustee J. Patrick Murphy, CM. The trio of growth objectives-competent, purposeful, ethical--give the new statement an old familiar ring. But there is an important change. The updated mission lifts up, proudly and prominently, the college’s Catholic identity and Dominican heritage. To some, this change might seem unremarkable; but it is evidence of a significant shift in attitude at Siena Heights. After omitting all mention of religion in its mission, the college now is affirming, even promoting, its Catholic foundation. And the precise nature of that foundation--what it means, or should mean, to be a Catholic college generally, and an Adrian Dominican college in particular--has become a topic of serious discussion in many quarters of the community. Since coming to the college in 1994, President Rick Artman has highlighted Siena’s Catholic identity as an institutional strength deserving increased attention, both on and off the campus. “The life and ministry of Jesus Christ was about betterment,” he said at his inauguration. “A Catholic college, as it bridges the intersection of faith and culture, ought to be about betterment.” He went on to challenge the students, faculty, alumni and friends of Siena Heights to stay focused on “what we are called to do, and to be, as a Catholic college, as a Dominican college, as a college whose business is betterment.” There is no question that Siena’s Catholic character expresses itself differently today than in the past. No longer do students attend daily Mass. No longer do Adrian Dominican Sisters conduct flashlight checks to ensure resident students are in, and in bed, at proper times. No longer are all, or even most, faculty and administrators members of religious congregations. “Up to and after Vatican II, students were very involved as Catholics. Daily Mass and mission crusades were part and parcel of the college experience, but that was characteristic of the times,” observes archivist and chemistry professor emerita Helen Duggan, OP ’41. Throughout the 1970s, Siena Heights--and many other schools--moved away from highlighting its tradition of Catholic education, Helen explains. The number of Adrian Dominicans teaching and working at the college began a steady decline. Student religious involvement became a matter of personal choice and responsibility. Students were more likely to express their values through leadership and student projects than through formal religious activity. Despite these changes the Dominican influence never disappeared, Sister Helen believes: “The values are being transmitted today through wonderfully dedicated faculty and staff. The quality of people on campus is awesome.” These days, Sunday evening liturgies attract 30-40 students weekly, and campus ministry director Deena Jarmosevich, OP ’93, coordinates a variety of spiritual and service programs, from “Soup and Scripture” to “Rekindling the Flame of Human Potential.” Although Helen Duggan believes that interest in Siena’s religious heritage has increased under President Artman’s leadership, Sister Deena joins many faculty in the belief that there is little overt Catholic emphasis at Siena today. “Catholicism is not a given anymore,” says Greg Schira ’89 of the graduate studies office, an active Catholic and a leader in campus liturgical life. He adds, “We are more pluralistic today, which is good.” “The external manifestations of Catholicism have changed, but the important foundational values are very much alive here,” says Mary Weeber of the English faculty. “I think students are mostly affected by the openness of Siena, the drawing in and encouragement of a community that really does care about them.” “Students don’t realize it at first,” agrees Michele Buku ’74, dean of students, “but Siena’s religious foundation does affect them because we truly are a caring institution.” Two groups at Siena Heights recently have been involved in formal explorations of the college’s Catholic identity. A student-faculty-staff committee appointed by President Artman is considering how best to implement Pope John Paul II’s apostolic constitution Ex corde Ecclesiae at Siena. The group has drafted a preliminary statement that articulates elements of the Catholic intellectual tradition (a search for truth informed by the conviction that faith and reason are not contradictory but mutually informative) and the Adrian Dominican tradition (commitment to justice, service and the continued interaction between reflection and action); and identifies eight ways Siena Heights expresses its Catholic character. Those expressions include respecting the dignity of