The Canadian Press covers Cardus event; The Hill Family Lecture Series: Mark Carney on Banking, Trust, and the Culture of Capitalism, which took place Friday May 3rd at the Toronto Region Board of Trade. To read the article, click here.

The <I>Canadian Press</I> covers Cardus event
May 6, 2013

Cardus event covered in <I>Fox Business</I>
Fox Business covers Cardus event; The Hill Family Lecture Series: Mark Carney on Banking, Trust, and the Culture of Capitalism, which took place Friday May 3rd at the Toronto Region Board of Trade. To read the article, click here.
May 6, 2013

Reports of faith’s demise are greatly exaggerated
With the media frenzy around the recent papal election pushed aside by more violent events, we seemed set to return to our wearily familiar tale of woe about organized religious life in Canada. Our churches are almost empty. The few who remain in the pews are so old, they’ve either fallen asleep or are just committed to keeping the nostalgia society alive. No compos mentis Canadian under 30 believes in anything beyond the evidence-based verities of a wholly secular culture, and would not be caught dead in a house of worship unless dragged there by parents for Great-Aunt Theodora’s funeral. Or so it is said. Curiously, though, a countermanding voice to this embedded narrative comes from no less a figure than our own Governor General, who warns against accepting as gospel the claim that young Canadians want no part of religious faith, and that Canada as a country has turned its back on God. In an interview for the new issue of Convivium magazine, David Johnston identifies himself as a man of deep and long-standing religious faith. “The role of religion has been important in my life and in my family’s life,†Johnston says. “In my search for truth in life, a faith-based answer has been very important to me. I am a person of faith.†The GG’s affirmation came as he represented Canada at the inaugural mass of Pope Francis. He is candid in his conversation with Convivium editor-in-chief Father Raymond J. de Souza that Canada should not deny its historic connection to religious faith. We would be weakened, he says, if we ceased making religious freedom central to our identity among the nations of the world. Historically, Johnston says, the Catholic Church of New France seeded a long Canadian tradition that has shaped us as a pluralistic nation. “Thank heaven that when a European war was fought on Canadian soil midway through the 18th century, in our unique Canadian way, we could find a pluralistic, tolerant solution and permit different traditions to continue in some degree of harmony. That’s the great promise we offer to the 21st century.†The new office of religious freedom within the department of foreign affairs is, he says, a harnessing of spiritual power to the pragmatic, diplomatic good of helping resolve fundamental problems across the globe. But it’s from within his own academic history — a student at Harvard, Cambridge and Queens; a dean, principal and president at Western, McGill and Waterloo respectively — that the Governor General most eloquently dismantles myths of faithless campus life. “I think the essential search for meaning in life is at least as present on university campuses today as when I was a student. That presents both a challenge and an opportunity as to how one relates to a younger generation who are looking for a compass for their lives,†he says. His answer to that challenge facing students is: “Be very careful about overthrowing what has made you the person you are, and as you examine new interpretations of truth, recognize that the values that have brought you here and that have made you the person you are, are very precious.†Johnston points out that the search for truth at the heart of religious faith is also “the very essence of the university,†noting the place of “veritas†in the motto of his alma mater, Harvard. “That was the question Pontius Pilate put to Jesus — what is truth? — and certainly Jesus had his own interpretation of truth,†he says. As the research director for a think-tank committed to renewing North American institutions by drawing on 2,000 years of Christian social teaching, I obviously have a bias toward that particular interpretation. Yet research we have done over the years at Cardus shows the inescapable social good that comes from having people of all religious traditions contributing to our common life. In truth, it also reveals with statistical starkness the pressures on organized religious faith in Canada. It’s encouraging to see that the Governor General agrees on the need to keep religious faith alive as a matter of public good in this country, and that he is willing to add his august voice to setting the story straight about its much-exaggerated demise across this land.
April 24, 2013

Pennings quoted in <I> OACS News Service</I>
The OACS News Service covers an upcoming Cardus event with outgoing Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney. Quoted in the article is Executive Vice-President, Ray Pennings. To read the full article, click here.
April 17, 2013

Calgary City Soul research mentioned in The Globe
Cardus' Calgary City Soul project is mentioned in The Globe and Mail. Lorna Dueck, host of Context with Lorna Dueck, talks about the ways in which religious institutions benefit their local communities. To read the full article, click here.
April 3, 2013

<I>Cardus Construction Competitiveness Monitor</I> mentioned in <I> The Record</I>
Editor-at-large for Maclean's Magazine, Peter Shawn Taylor mentions the Cardus Construction Competitiveness Monitor in The Record. To read the full article, click here.
March 22, 2013

Fr. de Souza interviews Cardinal Marc Ouellet for <I> Maclean’s </I>
Convivium Editor-in-Chief, Fr. Raymond J. de Souza met with Cardinal Marc Ouellet in Rome to discuss the appointment of Pope Francis. To read the full interview, click here.
March 20, 2013

For Pope Francis, only one question matters
The election of Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio, the Archbishop of Buenos Aires, as pope is happy news because it means the world's Roman Catholics will no longer be even temporarily leaderless. On a slightly more cantankerous personal level, it is also great news because it means the world's media will once again leave us alone. While we should, at one level, be grateful for journalistic interest in the events at the Vatican, precious little interest seems to have been shown in what is actually important to Catholics as religious believers. Perhaps someone should take me aside and suggest I give up being churlish for Lent. Alas, that would require a critical mass of people, even in Montreal where I live, who actually know that we are in Lent, a season of more than minor importance to Catholics. And that's the sticking point for me. Few seem to have wondered aloud why Roman Catholics remain interested in being Roman Catholics in Anno Domini 2013. Fewer still seem to have wondered not just why we pray for the Pope at every Mass, but why we go to Mass at all. We have been told – and in fairness I've contributed to this conversation myself – about the urgent need for to reform the Vatican bureaucracy. We've heard, again and again, about the crying need to change purportedly archaic rules around priestly ordination, teachings on divorce, strictures on same sex brother and sisters, the need to revitalize the failing European church with the growth and energy of the Church in the Southern Hemisphere whence Pope Francis comes. We've been staggered backward until we're punchdrunk by the interminable criticisms of the sexual abuse outrages – and they were authentic outrages against body and spirit – that some in the Roman Catholic Church failed to stop. But how often have we heard the question that is actually most relevant to the faithful, whether they are half-asleep in the back pews at Sunday Mass or have just assumed the title of Pope Francis: "Why are you a Catholic?" The straight answer to that simple question is what actually binds the world's 1.2 billion Catholics, on all continents, together. It is the answer that Pope Francis will need to keep constantly before him: ahead of reform of the Curia, out front and away from the incessant pressures to change Church teaching, beyond the reach of media outlets hungry to provide their audiences with mere spiritual entertainment. We are Catholics because we profess faith in the death and resurrection of Christ and in the establishment of his Church on earth. We have a new pope not because we like South American men in tall conical hats, but because we believe the pope is the Vicar of Christ on Earth. It is, self-evidently, perfectly acceptable and understandable for anyone, journalists included, to reject that belief and turn their lights on other topics. Call me cantankerous but I, for one, will appreciate the peace.
March 15, 2013

Fr. de Souza and Peter Stockland on <I> Cross Country Checkup</I>
Convivium Editor-in-Chief, Fr. Raymond J. de Souza, and Publisher, Peter Stockland discuss the question "What do you look for from the Catholic Church and a new Pope?" on the CBC's Cross Country Checkup. Fr. de Souza can be heard at 10:24, and Peter Stockland at 37:19. To listen, click here.
March 15, 2013
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