The Anti-Pontifical Anti-Catholic University of Peru
Really, the decree of the Holy See is recognizing de jure what is already de facto obvious to any honest observer
Really, the decree of the Holy See is recognizing de jure what is already de facto obvious to any honest observer. Whatever this Peruvian university is under its Rector Marcial Rubio Correo, it is neither Pontifical nor Catholic. Indeed, it is anti-Pontifical and anti-Catholic. Yet in an interview after the Holy See's action, Rubio stubbornly maintained the university would retain the names since they are part of its legal trademarks or servicemarks. The Rector's intransigence will probably require future legal action by the Holy See
"The Holy See, with decree of His Eminence, the Secretary of State [Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone], under a specific pontifical mandate, has decided to remove from the Pontifical Catholic University of Peru the right to use in its name the titles 'Pontifical' and 'Catholic,' in accordance with canon law," the Vatican announced July 21, 2012.
Really, the decree of the Holy See is recognizing de jure what is already de facto obvious to any honest observer. Whatever this Peruvian university is under its Rector Marcial Rubio Correo, it is neither Pontifical nor Catholic. Indeed, it is anti-Pontifical and anti-Catholic. Yet in an interview after the Holy See's action, Rubio stubbornly maintained the university would retain the names since they are part of its legal trademarks or servicemarks. The Rector's intransigence will probably require future legal action by the Holy See.
According to Gonzalo Flores, an expert on canon and civil law and an advisor to the Peruvian bishops, the university refusal to abide by the decree of Cardinal Bertone is a losing battle. "The university has no escape, according to Peruvian legislation," Flores told the Catholic Register. "The concordat between Peru and the Vatican, which recognizes the autonomy of the Catholic Church to decide on all things Catholic, trumps any copyright [or servicemark] claim."
The problem with the Pontifical Catholic University of Peru actually pre-dates the 1990 apostolic constitution Ex Corde Ecclesiae. The apostolic constitution represents Blessed John Paul II's efforts to cure the problem of Catholic universities which had lost their sense of mission, or whose mission has become inconsonant with the mission of the Church.
There is a certain irony in the current situation. The Pontifical Catholic University of Peru was founded by the French priest, Fr. Jorge Dintilhac, a member of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary and of the Perpetual Adoration of the Most Holy Sacrament of the Altar in 1917. It was founded to be an authentic Catholic alternative to Universidad de San Marcos, a Dominican school founded in 1551 which had itself been captured by anti-Catholic intellectuals at the time. The university's pontifical status was granted by the Holy See in 1942.
Unfortunately, in the 1960s the PCUP itself was besieged by theologians that were influenced by liberation theology, a Marxist interpretation of the Gospel which is untrue to it, and in fact Father Gustavo Gutiérrez Muerino, one of liberation theology's most vociferous promoters, was named director of the School of Religious Studies in 1967, which later became the Department of Theology in 1969.
Gutiérrez is perhaps best known for what is considered the foundational text of this thinking published in 1971, A Theology of Liberation: History, Politics, and Salvation. In 1984, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, then-headed by Cardinal Prefect Joseph Ratzinger (now Pope Benedict XVI) was critical of some aspects of this manner of theology, and issued its Instruction on Certain Aspects of the "Theology of Liberation".
The Congregation's instruction largely fell on deaf ears. The university's School of Theology has never been able to overcome the virus of its original founding, and so suffers from the theological foibles of its original director. In fact, Gutiérrez's text is still considered required reading by theology students.
In 1976, the university adopted a new legal form that was calculated to reduce to a minimum the influence of the Church, to reduce the role of the Archbishop of Lima to a mere figurehead, and to minimize the Church's hiearchy's ability to govern day-to-day affairs of the university.
The efforts at securing independence from the Church hierarchy in the 1970s were resisted by Cardinal Archbishop Juan Landázuri, as well as his successor Cardinal Archbishop Augusto Vargas, but the Archbishops were not successful, and eventually, the Archdiocese was even denied the right to serve on the school's governing ...
Rate This Article
1 - 5 of 5 Comments
Leave a Comment
More College & University News
- Dr. Beena George Named New UST Cameron Dean
- UST Honors Student Sings Her Way to Grad School
- Archbishop José H. Gomez at Franciscan University: In this Time of Mission
- Brother and Sister Plant It Forward at UST
- UST's Macias Accepted to Thomistic Seminar
- UST's Taco Tasting Raises $35,000 for Scholarships
- Hattrup Dissertation Unanimously Passed at UST
- Learning Knows No Age for Grad
- UST Grad Speaker Highlights Leading with Faith, Character
Featured News
- Fr. Paul Schenck: Finding Living Faith on Catechetical Sunday
- The Movie Yellow: Incest as 'Normal' and Cassavates's Slides Into the World of Woes
- The Chicago School Teachers Strike Reveals the Need For School Choice
- The Sexual Barbarians and the Dissolution of Culture
- The Happy Priest Challenges Us to Ask: Who is Jesus to Me?
- Michael Coren on Canadian Public Schools: Teachers, leave those kids alone
- We Cannot Ignore Our Consciences: Cardinal Dolan On Religious Liberty
- In the Face of Danger, Successor of Peter Travels to Lebanon as a Messenger of Peace
- Reflections on the Dignity and Vocation of Women: Who or What?




Print















@Julio: It is not the Holy See, but the junta running the university, that has: (i) disrespected Peruvian law; (ii) disrespected the benefactors of the institution; (iii) dishonored the reason for the institution's founding; (iv) disobeyed canon law; (v) disrespected the authority and legal rights of the Archbishop of Lima; (vi) shown unbelievable lack of cooperation with the Vatican; (vii) shown disdain for authentic Catholic teaching. If there has been any abuse of law, property, and power, if there has been any breach of faith, it has been by university officials running the university. They are really nothing other than scoundrels with Phds.
To begin Julio has a mistaken approach what "catholic" means. Our Catholic Church was founded by our Dear Lord Jesus Christ upon the "Rock" (St. Peter) and is inspired by the Holy Ghost. Julio, Whatever you say is irrelevant.
Second, there are several "catholic" Universities in America that are anti-catholic. When will be time to put an order in this Country as well?
Manuel.
I find this PUCP matter to be very interesting from the standpoint of the right of all Roman Catholic-affiliated institutions to use "Catholic" and "Pontifical" since, as far as I can tell, the Holy See has apparently not taken proactive steps to protect these as registered marks -- if it even has a valid claim to them. Certainly PUCP has no more right than the Holy See to claim ownership of them, even though it appears to assert ownership of all parts of its current name.
Just the title of this article says how authoritarian the catolic chuch has become.
Catolics are we all , not just those people from the vatican.
Vatican MUST learn to respect the peruvian law.
It seems their 'Liberation Theology" was all about the liberation from the catholic fold, into the arms of the liberal & secular which is more to Indulgences like is to Obama & gangs in the U.S, in total ignorance of The Spirit into the "Schemes" of deceiving ones even unto their spirits.