Stritch Univ. hosts Bishop Hying in new lecture series aimed at business

Cardinal Stritch University’s Saint Clare Center for Catholic Life is launching a new breakfast lecture series aimed at the Catholic business community that focuses on the intersection between faith and industry.

The new Forums on Faith and Work, modeled after the old Peter Favre Forums once sponsored by Marquette University, will feature presentations by theologians and scholars on topics of interest to the business community, said St. Clare Center Executive Director Eamonn O’Keeffe.

Each breakfast, four times a year at the Milwaukee Athletic Club, will be hosted by new Stritch President James Loftus and his wife, Irene. And while it’s a great opportunity for Loftus to make connections in the business community, that was not the impetus for the forum, O’Keeffe says.

“The Catholic business community has been crying for some kind of format ever since the Peter Favre Forum ended,” he said. “People in the business community really do want something beyond the Sunday sermon to help them live their Catholic faith.”

While the topics will be driven in part by the business community, speakers will not shy a way from the tenets of Catholic social teaching on such issues as labor, the common good and profit, O’Keeffe said. Milwaukee Bishop Donald Hying is expected to touch on at least some of those in the kickoff lecture, “Living the Creative Power of God in the Work We Do,” 7-9:30 a.m. Oct. 21.

The cost is $25. Reservations available at 410-4340. 
MJS

Ahem, I seriously doubt Cardinal Stritch University correctly understands Catholic Social Teaching.  On the other hand, they recently removed their affiliation with Planned Parenthood so maybe someone over there is trying to right the ship.  But if you do not correctly understand the Church's teaching on the Gospel of Life you will never understand her social teachings.  Being pro-life is the foundation.

2 comments:

Dad29 said...

Meh.

The series it replaces (Peter Favre) had some low-lights, to say the least; but some highlights, too.

One I attended featured a bank president who flat-out lied about the (illegal) immigrant situation.

Oh, well. Remember that R. Weakland was the sole cause of MANY purchases of the Catechism (and lots of other orthodox Catholic books.)

See? "....works in strange ways" applies.

Badger Catholic said...

I do like the forum, but in the wrong hands it would just be beating people with the stupid stick.

That is interesting about Weakland.