16 February 2026

Archbishop Cordileone Rallies Behind Bishop Calling for Notre Dame To Demote Pro-Abortion Professor

Notre Dame ceased being Catholic years ago. Rome needs to order it, under threat of excommunication, to stop identifying itself as a Catholic institution.

From LifeSiteNews

By Emily Mangiaracina

At least five bishops on Thursday alone voiced their support for Bishop Kevin Rhoades’ statement condemning Notre Dame’s promotion of a rabidly pro-abortion professor.

Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone and several other bishops rallied behind Bishop Kevin Rhoades in his denunciation of the promotion of a vehemently pro-abortion professor at the University of Notre Dame.

Thank you, Bishop Rhoads (sic), for speaking up. Holy Mary, Mother of God and Our Lady, pray for the university that bears your name,” Cordileone wrote Thursday in an X post.


Rhoades, who oversees the Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend, recently expressed “dismay” and “strong opposition” to the University of Notre Dame’s appointment of a rabid abortion supporter to a prominent position. He lamented that the decision is “causing scandal to the faithful of our diocese and beyond.”

“Such appointments have profound impact on the integrity of Notre Dame’s public witness as a Catholic university,” he wrote.

“In nearly a dozen op-eds … Professor Ostermann has attacked the pro-life movement, using outrageous rhetoric,” His Excellency exclaimed. “Professor Ostermann’s opposite view thus clearly should disqualify her from holding a position of leadership within the Keough School.”

A growing number of clergy members are expressing support for Rhoades, including outgoing Denver Archbishop Samuel Aquila and Bishop Robert Barron, who said in an X post that Ostermann’s promotion would be “repugnant to the identity and mission of that great center of Catholic learning.”


A new string of bishops has since joined in their support for Rhoades’ call for Notre Dame to demote Ostermann. Bishop David Ricken of the Diocese of Green Bay on Thursday praised Rhoades for his “courage” and “fidelity,” and called for an appeal to the Blessed Mother.


The same day, Bishop James Conley of the Diocese of Lincoln likewise voiced his support for Rhoades, writing, “Catholic institutions must faithfully reflect the truth of the dignity of every human life in both their mission and their leadership.”


Bishop James Wall of the Diocese of Gallup and Bishop Donald Hying of the Diocese of Madison also chimed in on Thursday.

Ostermann joined Notre Dame nine years ago as a professor of global affairs. In years past, she has said that abortion access is “freedom-enhancing” and that “forced pregnancy and childbirth are violence against women.”

Catholics who work at Notre Dame, including longtime professor Father Wilson Miscamble, have expressed outrage over the move. In an essay for First Things, Miscamble called the appointment “a travesty” given Ostermann’s consulting role with the Population Council, which he described as “a Rockefeller-founded agency dedicated toward population control.”

He called on Notre Dame’s Board of Fellows, composed of six Holy Cross priests and six laypeople, to revoke Ostermann’s appointment. The board is tasked, among other things, with ensuring “that the University maintains its essential character as a Catholic institution of higher learning,” according to the university’s website.

Miscamble believes the decision will only be reversed “if there is an outpouring of criticism of the Notre Dame administration.” He told the National Catholic Register that “I think the disgraceful nature of the appointment is such that there is some possibility of that.”

Despite the criticisms, the university issued a statement defending Ostermann, whom it has described as a “highly regarded political scientist and legal scholar.”

Amid the controversy stands Notre Dame’s students. Earlier this month, the executive committee of student-run Notre Dame Right to Life called on the university to rescind the appointment. In a statement published in The Observer, the school’s most prominent newspaper, the board said Ostermann’s advocacy contradicts the Catholic Church’s view that abortion is an intrinsic evil.

While it has long been considered the pre-eminent Catholic university in the United States, Notre Dame has increasingly failed to live up to its professed identity, most famously by having given then-President Barack Obama an honorary award and later bestowing on Joe Biden its prestigious Laetare Medal.

It has also hosted drag shows on campus, celebrated June as “pride month,” and promoted many other pro-LGBT initiatives.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Comments are subject to deletion if they are not germane. I have no problem with a bit of colourful language, but blasphemy or depraved profanity will not be allowed. Attacks on the Catholic Faith will not be tolerated. Comments will be deleted that are republican (Yanks! Note the lower case 'r'!), attacks on the legitimacy of Pope Leo XIV as the Vicar of Christ, the legitimacy of the House of Windsor or of the claims of the Elder Line of the House of France, or attacks on the legitimacy of any of the currently ruling Houses of Europe.