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Pence to Notre Dame graduates: Bring values into the workplace

VP Mike Pence delivers commencement address at University of Notre Dame, May 20, 2017. / Barbara Johnston, University of Notre Dame.

U.S. Vice President Mike Pence challenged University of Notre Dame graduates on Saturday to promote human dignity and the sanctity of life in the workplace.

"I urge you, as the rising generation – carry the ideals and the values that you've learned at Notre Dame into your lives and your careers," Pence told the graduates, praising the university for its rich traditions of defending human life and religious liberty in the face of persecution.

The vice president delivered the commencement address at the University of Notre Dame on March 20. He called on the graduates to "be exceptional from this day forth."

Pence commended the university's defense of religious liberty, noting that it was among the plaintiffs in lawsuits against the Obama administration's contraception mandate.

"Just as Notre Dame has stood strong to protect its religious liberty, I'm proud that this President just took steps to ensure that this university and the Little Sisters of the Poor could not be forced to violate their consciences to fully participate in American civic life," Pence said in reference to the lawsuits.

"I'm so proud that the University of Notre Dame has stood without apology for the sanctity of human life," he continued, pointing to the university's efforts to uphold human dignity, through its educational initiatives, social commitment and focus on ethics and culture.

Around 100 students walked out of Pence's speech on Saturday, according to an estimate by the university reported by CNN. They reportedly did so to represent racial minorities, undocumented immigrants, LGBTQ persons and others who they said would be adversely affected by the administration's policies.

Pence, formerly a member of the U.S. Congress and the governor of Indiana, was baptized Catholic, but by 1994 he called himself a "born-again, evangelical Catholic." He had begun attending an evangelical megachurch with his family in the 1990s.

He has recently described himself as "a Christian, a conservative, and a Republican, in that order."

Pence has a long history of pro-life and religious freedom advocacy, but has also quarreled with Catholic bishops over immigration matters.

As governor of Indiana, he tried to halt the state's participation in the U.S. refugee resettlement program as he, along with then-presidential candidate Donald Trump, questioned the security of the program. This came in the wake of deadly terror attacks in Paris in November of 2015, where a terrorist who was reportedly one of the perpetrators had allegedly entered Europe by posing as a Syrian refugee, according to reports at the time.

Archbishop Joseph Tobin of Indianapolis, now Cardinal of Newark, had directed Catholic Charities Indianapolis to resettle a Syrian refugee family during that time. He met with Governor Pence in December. Pence's office said after the meeting that the governor "respectfully disagrees with their decision to place a Syrian refugee family in Indiana at this time."

Pence's speech at Notre Dame continued the tradition of presidents and vice presidents speaking at the university and receiving honorary degrees.

In May of 2009, President Barack Obama became the ninth U.S. president to have an honorary degree from the university. He spoke amidst controversy over his staunch pro-abortion record.

Then-Denver Archbishop Charles Chaput issued a strong statement saying that Notre Dame "conferred an unnecessary and unearned honorary law degree on a man committed to upholding one of the worst Supreme Court decisions in our nation's history [Roe v. Wade]."

Former Vice President Joe Biden, a Catholic who supported abortion as a U.S. senator and who was in an administration that issued the controversial contraception mandate, received an honorary degree from the university last year.

Bishop Kevin C. Rhoades of Fort Wayne-South Bend, the local diocese, said the university should not have honored a politician with "gravely irresponsible" positions on abortion and marriage that are at odds with Church teaching.  

"We should seek to honor those who act to protect human life and dignity from conception to natural death, who respect true marriage and the family, who promote peace, justice, religious freedom, solidarity, the integral development of the poor, the just treatment of immigrants, and care for creation," he stated last March. "We should not honor those who may be exemplary in one area but gravely irresponsible in another."

In his speech this weekend, Vice President Pence called for the university to continue to foster a free discussion of ideas, as free speech has been curbed in much of academia.

"Notre Dame is a campus where deliberation is welcomed – where opposing views are debated and where every speaker, no matter how unpopular or unfashionable, is afforded the right to air their views in the open for all to hear," he said, adding that the university "is an exception" and is "an island in a sea of conformity."

Many schools have "speech codes, safe zones, tone policing, administration-sanctioned political correctness," he said, which "are destructive of learning and the pursuit of knowledge. And they are wholly outside the American tradition."

Pence also exhorted the university's graduates to "have faith."

"Strive every day to lead for good with courage and conviction.  Live your life according to the precepts and principles that you have learned and seen here at Notre Dame," he said.

"And in all that you do, have faith that He who brought you this far will never leave you, nor forsake you – because He never will."

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