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April 2, 2025 By Laura Schaffer Leave a Comment

History and Person: Newman’s Approach and Contemporary Issues

By: Dr. Alessandro Rovati, Chair and Assistant Professor of Theology at Belmont Abbey College

Published in Newman Today & Ecclesiology & Education

There are three things that, according to Benedict XVI, we should learn from Newman. First, the Pope Emeritus says that Newman reminds us that “we were created to know the truth, to find in that truth our ultimate freedom and the fulfillment of our deepest human aspirations. In a word,” continues Benedict XVI, “we are meant to know Christ, who is himself ‘the way, and the truth, and the life’ (Jn 14:6).”[1] Second, Benedict XVI thinks that Newman’s life also “teaches us that passion for the truth, intellectual honesty and genuine conversion are costly. The truth that sets us free cannot be kept to ourselves,” the Pope Emeritus explains, “calls for testimony, it begs to be heard.”[2] Finally, Benedict XVI claims that Newman teaches us that when “we have accepted the truth of Christ and committed our lives to him, there can be no separation between what we believe and the way we live our lives. Our every thought, word and action must be directed to the glory of God and the spread of his Kingdom,” argues the Pope Emeritus, because faith “penetrates to the core of our being.”[3] Following in the footsteps of Benedict XVI, I, too, probe here whether and how Newman might shed light on some contemporary difficulties.

I do so keeping in mind that all the important theological and philosophical works that Newman wrote are rooted in the thoroughly Christological center of his life and thought. While his so-called spiritual writings are sometimes overlooked, all the reflections of Newman on the various topics sketched below are ultimately rooted in a gaze that is continuously fixed on Jesus. That is why the church counts Newman among her saints. It is because of his life of prayer, missionary zeal, and fraternal charity made possible by Newman’s complete devotion to the Lord. In the end, it is most of all Newman’s holy example that can sustain us as we confront the many challenges we face, for only God’s gracious initiative may allow the church to remain a beacon of truth amid a turbulent world. There is one prayer by Newman that well represents his utmost desire and perfectly describes his way of conceiving his work and vocation: “The one thing, which is all in all to us, is to live in Christ’s presence; to hear His voice, to see His countenance.”[4] It is such single-hearted devotion to and desire for the Lord that should accompany us as we think through some of today’s most pressing challenges. Nothing mattered more to Newman than to discover and testify to the cogency of Christ. Accordingly, all his treaties and polemics were ultimately rooted in a desire to bring to life the existential import of the faith.

Because of such a Christological emphasis, Newman’s theology is characterized both by a keen perception of the historically bound nature of all human existence and by the recognition of the importance of the subject. His emphasis on history and his personalism are the features that make Newman’s proposal uniquely modern and that made him such a different voice within the Catholic Church of his time. It is precisely this modern character that allowed Newman to anticipate many issues that would soon become central for the church’s life. Simultaneously, though, while introducing within the theological conversation emphases that were novel, Newman always referred to the wealth of the Christian tradition and brought it to bear on the many contemporary discussions in which he engaged. I contend that these hallmarks are the ones that have made Newman a fitting spiritual and intellectual companion for many. Furthermore, they are also the reason why Newman’s thought has played a crucial role in the development of Catholic theology in the past century.

In what follows, I trace Newman’s distinctive approach across four essential aspects of his contribution, specifically, conscience, faith, doctrine, and education. Furthermore, I gesture toward the pathways that Newman’s method and insights offer to address some of today’s urgent questions within and without the church. As I do so, I engage in conversation with one of the latest additions to the ever-growing literature on Newman, namely, Reinhard Hütter’s John Henry Newman on Truth and Its Counterfeits.

Conscience

Let me start with conscience. According to Newman, conscience is a messenger from God who “speaks to us behind a veil, and teaches and rules us by His representatives.”[5] Accordingly, Hütter describes the saint’s view of conscience as being “theonomic all the way down,”[6] that is, a description of conscience as the faculty capable of receiving God’s eternal law into the human intellect. Interestingly enough, Newman does not spend much time arguing in favor of such a description of conscience. Instead, Newman treats the reality of conscience in human beings as a given, something that possesses self-evidence and emerges from within the experience of each of us. However, Newman does contrast his understanding of conscience with what Hütter describes as conscience’s modern counterfeit, namely, private judgment. When people today advocate for the rights of conscience, Newman thinks that they do not “mean the rights of the Creator, nor the duty to Him, in thought and deed, of the creature.”[7] Instead, Newman continues, what they mean by the word conscience is “the right of thinking, speaking, writing, and acting, according to their judgment or their humor, without any thought of God at all.”[8] While for Newman freedom of conscience coincides with the freedom to recognize the truth for which we are made, and thus it is the primary tool to respond to our God-given call, our society thinks of freedom of conscience as the right to affirm our own subjective conceptions of the truth, no matter what they are. Drawing a parallel between Newman and Aquinas, Hütter believes that our society has lost the sense of the human capacity to recognize a first principle and precept—what Aquinas calls synderesis. Accordingly, people are left with the idea that, as John Paul II taught in Veritatis Splendor, “one’s moral judgment is true merely by the fact that it has its origin in the conscience. … The inescapable claims of truth disappear, yielding their place to a criterion of sincerity, authenticity, and ‘being at peace with oneself.'”[9]

It is easy to discern the many ways in which Newman’s warnings against confusing conscience with the sovereign rule of self-will apply to today’s society. What I want to suggest, though, is that Catholics should recognize that the dominant mentality touches them as well. One aspect of the faithful’s lives in which this is clear is how most Catholics think of the relationship between freedom and the church’s authority. In particular, plenty of the faithful have an adversarial understanding of the relationship between their conscience and the teachings of the church. This is not the case only for those who perceive a tension between what the magisterium teaches and what their conscience seems to indicate as true. Instead, one can agree with church teachings and still perceive the magisterium as something external that imposes itself on the individual’s conscience. Newman’s reflections about conscience serve as a powerful antidote to such a misrepresentation of the magisterium‘s role in the life of the faithful. Rather than an external imposition, the church’s authority is best described as an aid to conscience’s natural capacity to perceive the truth. Hütter argues that the first mission of the church’s magisterium is to “support and strengthen the divine spark of conscience, synderesis, by explicitly reaffirming the first principles of moral action.”[10] The church’s authority does not impose conclusions from the outside but enlightens the individual to allow her to become certain of the truth and to follow it.

Faith

Nowhere is Newman’s personalism more evident than in his description and defense of faith. His vivid account of the faith’s existential import, though, goes hand in hand with the affirmation of the ecclesial nature of faith. Consider the following quotes of Newman that Hütter highlights:

1) “The very meaning, the very exercise of faith, is joining the Church.”[11]

2) “Men do not become Catholic, because they have not faith.”[12]

3) “It is vain to discourse upon the beauty, the sanctity, the sublimity of the Catholic doctrine and worship, where men have no faith to accept it as Divine.”[13]

Faith is giving assent to God’s self-revelation, but God’s initiative reaches men and women today through the encounter with the human reality of the church. To assent to God today entails assenting to what the people the Lord chooses to communicate himself today say. Hütter puts the matter succinctly: “divine faith is always apostolic faith, the submission to a living authority.”[14]

In our age, instead, faith is perceived as the exclusive realm of individual preferences and choices. According to Hütter, a person’s choice of religious affiliation is “ultimately nothing but a consumer choice of a particular commodity that is in principle dispensable or exchangeable at any time.”[15] To counter such tendency, Newman insists on the incarnational and communal nature of the Christian life, thus rescuing us from the temptation of living the faith while always remaining isolated outsiders. We are embodied creatures who are not touched by abstract arguments. We do not give our lives to opinions but to a real place made of witnesses, past and present. As Newman says beautifully: “No one … will die for his own calculations: he dies for realities.”[16]

Christianity is a faith that values history. It does so for two reasons. First, because Christianity’s most fundamental claim is that God, the origin of everything that exists, the source of reality and existence, became a human being. God entered human history at a precise time and in a specific place. T. S. Eliot describes it wonderfully:

“Then came, at a predetermined moment, a moment in time and of time, A moment not out of time, but in time, in what we call history: transecting, bisecting the world of time, a moment in time but not like a moment of time, A moment in time but time was made through that moment: for without the meaning there is no time, and that moment of time gave the meaning.”[17]

The second reason why Christianity values history is that, through the Spirit, God remains present in history to guide human beings to the fullness of the truth. (Jn. 16:12–13)

Doctrine

It was to respond to the profoundly historical character of divine revelation that Newman devoted much of his time to study, think, and write about the time-bound character of human existence and of the church’s life. Newman’s well-known reflections on the development of doctrine belong to this broader context of affirming and exploring God’s involvement with history. Catholics are “deep in history”[18] because, as Hütter explains, they hold on to the “Spirit-guided and Spirit-filled history of salvation that the living church holds in her memory.”[19] Anticipating one of the most important theological debates of the twentieth century, Newman teaches us that the church is called to remain rooted in the deposit of faith, while also being opened to the Spirit-filled present. In doing so, Newman helps us resist the double temptation of antiquarianism and presentism, that is, in the words of Hütter, “becoming stuck in the past for the past’s sake and getting rid of the past for the sake of an ever-changing present.”[20] Newman’s reflections on the development of doctrine are often used to debate the content and reception of the documents of Vatican II and rightfully so. I suggest, though, that Hütter’s warnings against authentic development’s two counterfeits also serve to discern what is happening today in a church where Pope Francis’s vision of missionary discipleship calls forth a season of conversion and reform. The Catholic Church is filled with disagreements regarding how, in the words of the Holy Father, traditional truths of Christian doctrine “can be lived and applied in the changing contexts of our times.”[21] For example, some want to focus exclusively on pastoral experience and seem to forget the importance of Scripture, the Catholic tradition, and the magisterium. Others, instead, have a mistaken idea of the immutability of the church’s teachings and think that any attempt to reflect upon the signs of the times and discern whether the Holy Spirit is calling us to a deeper understanding of the truth of divine revelation is in and of itself a betrayal of the faith. Newman’s warnings and his seven notes to help the church discern authentic development remain invaluable resources to craft the path ahead. In particular, his insistence that the Holy Spirit is at work in the church to guide the faithful into the fullness of truth is a perfect antidote to the temptation to settle into well-known ideological battlelines. “The development of doctrine gives concrete witness to the continuous mission of the Holy Spirit to guide the church into all the truth,” explains Hütter. Thus, “antiquarianism and presentism resist the mission and work of the Holy Spirit.”[22] The development of doctrine is a facet of the church’s life that is integral to its historical nature, for it takes time and space for what is implicit in the deposit of faith to be understood and articulated into explicit affirmations.

Education

Even when it comes to education, Newman shows an uncanny ability to spot the dangers and implications of the educational philosophy that started during his time and that is now widely spread. With prophetic spirit, Newman envisioned a society in which “authority, prescription, tradition, habit, moral instinct, and the divine influences go for nothing … [and] in which free discussion and fallible judgment are prized as the birthright of each individual.”[23] In such a society, it becomes impossible to conceive of education as introducing people to the meaning of reality, that is, to a unifying vision that might help them make sense of, learn to use, and reflect on the different facets of our world and existence. That is why contemporary universities are fragmented institutions that, using Newman’s pithy descriptions, function as a sort of bazaar in which “wares of all kinds are heaped together for sales in stalls independent of each other.” They are like a hotel where “all professions and classes are at liberty to congregate, varying, however according to the season, each of them strange to each, and about its own work or pleasure.”[24] It is no mistake that such an environment would encourage an instrumentalization of knowledge that ends up producing an education that, Hütter explains, consists of the delivery of “goods that are seen as commodities to be purchased in order to satisfy the desires of the sovereign subject.”[25] In our system, naturalism, materialism, secularism, and pragmatism have become interconnected givens. Thus, reason’s horizon has shrunk and the very notion of the existence of a comprehensive and ultimate truth that would provide unity to all knowledge becomes inconceivable. People have been conditioned to desire an education that consists exclusively of credentialing for career advancement’s sake, better still if achievable quickly and affordably. Newman, instead, stood completely at odds with such a pragmatic ethos that values employability and expertise in the order of consumption and production above everything. He thought that investigating human beings’ nature, the reality of human flourishing, and how to live a morally good life are necessary for any authentic education. Rather than taking away from the worthiness of the human intellect’s creativity and enterprise, being open to an ultimate truth and recognizing that reality is God’s gift empower human beings to unlock their true potential, according to Newman. It is such an enlargement of our reason that we desperately need today, argues Hütter, for “contemplation is necessary for human flourishings,” and we “desperately need it in our late-modern, techno-capitalist societies.”[26] We need to once again help students discover in themselves the fundamental questions of life: “What should I live for and why?” “What should I believe?” “What is morality?” “What kind of person should I be” “What is meaningful in life?” And, we should also equip them with a method to probe and pursue such questions. Starting from the insights of Newman’s The Idea of the University and its insistence on the importance of the first science, Hütter thinks of metaphysical inquiry and contemplation as the most appropriate way to explore life’s fundamental questions. Only reflecting on first principles, he argues, can rescue people from being at the mercy of transient imagination, emotions, and experiences.[27] A strong case can be made that Newman thought the same. Yet, Newman’s life as a priest and his utmost devotion to his ministry as a preacher seems to entail that, while important, the university was not the only place where people could be authentically formed. We all need a method to navigate the questions and challenges that the journey of life elicits in us, but such a journey is not open only to those whose circumstances allow them to enjoy the leisure of contemplation and the study of the first science. This is where Newman’s further reflections on the importance of existential acts of assent becomes so essential. Hütter provides a moving autobiographical depiction of their importance when describing his own journey towards joining the Catholic Church.

“When I left this Ascension Day Mass, I had become a Catholic without yet fully realizing it. While I had not received explicit answers to all the questions lingering in my still largely Lutheran mind, I had encountered mother church in the core of her life … I had been able to relinquish the principle of private judgment in matters of divine truth in an existential act of assent, which was a fundamental as it was comprehensive.”[28]

Not everyone is called to become a professional philosopher or an outstanding theologian like Hütter. Instead, it is urgent to build communities, both inside and outside the academy, that will prepare people to be open to such moments of existential assent and capable of making them the driving force in their lives. “Conscience,” explains Benedict XVI, “is both capacity for truth and obedience to the truth which manifests itself to anyone who seeks it with an open heart.”[29] People who are encouraged and empowered to engage in an attentive search for truth will discover it, for reality makes itself transparent to those who earnestly seek. Education must once again become an instrument to investigate the whole of reality so that our reason’s horizon might remain wide open, and the heart might be ready to catch God’s grace in action. In conclusion, all of us educators should heed to Newman’s invitation to the laity of his time as we prepare our students: “I wish you to enlarge your knowledge, to cultivate your reason, to get an insight into the relation of truth to truth, to learn to view things as they are, to understand how faith and reason stand to each other.”[30]


[1] Benedict XVI, “Prayer Vigil on the Eve of the Beatification of Cardinal John Henry Newman,” 18 September 2010.

[2] Benedict XVI, “Prayer Vigil on the Eve of the Beatification of Cardinal John Henry Newman.”

[3] Benedict XVI, “Prayer Vigil on the Eve of the Beatification of Cardinal John Henry Newman.”

[4] Newman, PS iv, sermon 3.

[5] Newman, Diff ii, 248.

[6] Reinhard Hütter, John Henry Newman on Truth and Its Counterfeits (Washington DC: Catholic University of America Press, 2020), 26.

[7] Newman, Diff ii, 250.

[8] Newman, Diff ii, 250.

[9] John Paul II, Veritatis Splendor, no. 32.

[10] Hütter, John Henry Newman on Truth and Its Counterfeits, 63–64.

[11] Newman, Mix, 193.

[12] Newman, Mix, 193.

[13] Newman, Mix, 207.

[14] Hütter, John Henry Newman on Truth and Its Counterfeits, 98.

[15] Hütter, John Henry Newman on Truth and Its Counterfeits, 99.

[16] Newman, GA, IV.3.93

[17] T. S. Eliot, Choruses from the Rock, VII.

[18] Newman, Dev, 8.

[19] Hütter, John Henry Newman on Truth and Its Counterfeits, 131.

[20] Hütter, John Henry Newman on Truth and Its Counterfeits, 135.

[21] Pope Francis, Let Us Dream (New York: Simon and Shuster, 2022), 84–85.

[22] Hütter, John Henry Newman on Truth and Its Counterfeits, 154.

[23] Newman, Idea, 37.

[24] Newman, Idea, 421.

[25] Hütter, John Henry Newman on Truth and Its Counterfeits, 170.

[26] Hütter, John Henry Newman on Truth and Its Counterfeits, 201.

[27] Hütter, John Henry Newman on Truth and Its Counterfeits, 207–210.

[28] Hütter, John Henry Newman on Truth and Its Counterfeits, 233.

[29] Benedict XVI, “Address on the Occasion of Christmas Greetings to the Roman Curia.”

[30] Newman, Duties of Catholics Towards the Protestant View, IX.4.

Filed Under: Abbey News, Conversatio, Home

March 31, 2025 By radefolaju Leave a Comment

Professor Bennett Quillen on Credit Card Use

Professor Bennett Quillen was recently featured as a finance expert in WalletHub’s article titled, Credit Card APR Guide.

Read what Professor Quillen has to say about credit cards.

Filed Under: Abbey Excellence, Abbey News, Faculty, Home, News, TopNews Tagged With: bennett quillen, Business, Economics

March 14, 2025 By Sarah Bolton Leave a Comment

The Story of a Holocaust Survivor

In Episode 5 of the Conversatio podcast, Dr. Daniel Hutchinson speaks with Suly Chenkin, who shares her remarkable story of survival. At just 8 months old, Suly endured the Nazi invasion of Lithuania and the horrors of the Kovno Ghetto.

Listen now!

Filed Under: Abbey News, Alumni News, Crossroads, Faculty, Home, News, Podcast, TopNews Tagged With: conversatio, history, world war II

March 7, 2025 By Laura Schaffer Leave a Comment

Beginning the Desert

With the beginning of Lent, we step into the desert. 

We all find ourselves in the desert sometimes. We all have periods of spiritual dryness or desolation, whether in connection with events in our lives or simply as part of our journey of faith – and for reasons we might or might not be able to see. But whatever the catalyst and whatever the topography of our particular desert places, we all spend time there. 

Deserts are remote, solitary spaces, where it can be hard to pick out the thread of a trail. Sometimes we have to rely on little stacks of stones left by other travelers. Sometimes we have to navigate by the sun or the stars, which burn clearer in an arid, scouring place. 

Deserts are places of poverty. Traveling through them we can only carry what’s essential. In the overwhelming heat and plunging cold, unshielded extremes strip away our distractions and complacency, and we have the opportunity to learn who we are and what’s really important. 

Possibly more than any other kind of experience, the desert invites us to recognize our need for God. To stop ignoring Him or interrupting Him, deferring His life or cluttering the path of His grace. When we lose the furniture blocking the door to whatever part of our lives we thought we couldn’t bear to give Him, there is only the door left. And outside it, Christ.

This is why we need Lent. It allows us to choose the desert for a time; it teaches us how to survive when we end up in those deserts of our lives, when we feel alone and lost and so tired. The answer is always the same. Turn to Christ. He is even closer to us in the desert than at any other time because the desert has a way of removing the things we use, even subconsciously, to keep Him at a distance.

This Lent, whatever desert sacrifices you make or devotional compasses you carry with you, I invite you to join me in two particular ways: 

First, try always to remember that the desert is ultimately a place of hope: revealing the reality that God answers our poverty by coming to find us within it. He embraced and suffered this poverty, Himself, and He has not left us to travel it in isolation. God calls us into the desert because only by rejecting the illusion of our self-sufficiency and embracing our own poverty can we receive the inexpressible wealth of His life. The Way of the Cross is the road to Resurrection.

Second, although in the desert we are, in a profound sense, alone with God, our God is in fact Love, and He always invites us to participate in His love for others. By His mercy, then, we also have some share in our loved ones’ desert journeys. In the comfort of this, let’s try to find small, concrete ways to accompany each other through Lent, to leave little stacks of stones or bits of star charts for our fellow wanderers and pilgrims. An act of love from desert to desert, however small, can remind someone, by the grace of God, of the hope for which the desert itself exists. It can help us remember that the Way is Love. 

Safe journeys, friends.

Filed Under: Abbey News, Cultivation Blog, Home

February 28, 2025 By Sarah Bolton Leave a Comment

Belmont Abbey College Expands Program in Washington, D.C. with Groundbreaking Initiatives

Belmont Abbey College Expands Program in Washington, D.C. with Groundbreaking Initiatives

Belmont, N.C. (February 28, 2025) – Belmont Abbey College is thrilled to announce an expansion of its Belmont House on Capitol Hill and its commitment to further establishing a significant presence in Washington, D.C., aimed at amplifying faithful Catholic voices in media, politics, and culture. As a Catholic higher education institution, Belmont Abbey College is making a decisive commitment to defend religious freedoms and restore the public square through three groundbreaking initiatives: the establishment of a permanent Belmont House, plans for an Intentional Catholic Student Residency Program, and aspirations for new Academic Programs dedicated to promoting the transformation of political life and discourse.

Considering our founding as one nation under God, the role of faith and the pursuit of truth have never been more important than they are today, and Belmont Abbey College is rising to the challenge. This effort is part of the “Made Strong” element of the College’s Made True Capital Campaign, which has raised more than $130 million for the College. The focus of “Made Strong” underscores Belmont Abbey’s commitment to realigning culture with God’s truth and highlighting the essential relationship between religious freedom and civil society. Today’s program expansion is made possible by gifts totaling $15 million to support the three initiatives. These gifts are part of a $45 million plan to increase the effectiveness and significance of Belmont House on Capitol Hill.

“We are taking Catholic higher education to a new level, we are ensuring that as a faithful Catholic college our voice is heard in the public square,” said Dr. Bill Thierfelder, President of Belmont Abbey College. “These initiatives will play a significant role in effecting the change needed to foster a culture that upholds faith, community, and the common good.”

The Belmont House: Since its founding in 2021, the Belmont House has quickly become a vital place of fellowship, collaboration, decision-making, and cultural influence on Capitol Hill. As just one example, strategic conversations held at the Belmont House during the International Religious Freedom Summit led directly to House Resolutions 82 and 5686, which address egregious human rights violations in Nigeria and Azerbaijan. With the acquisition of a new, permanent location on 3rd Street, just 500 feet from Capitol grounds, the College will continue to support and expand lay apostolates, convene thought leaders, build dynamic networks, and develop and offer programs with direct and tangible implications for public policy. Over the last three years, the Belmont House has already hosted dignitaries from across the globe, congressmen and senators addressing the issues of the day, alumni gatherings, and provided a space for impactful discussions and events that engage the broader public on issues of faith, culture, and politics. 

Intentional Catholic Student Residency Program: Adjoining the new permanent Belmont House, we plan to develop an Intentional Catholic Student Residency Program that will foster community within safe, affordable living spaces for at least 30 Catholic undergraduates interning on the Hill. The College envisions this program as a catalyst for collaboration, designed to inspire and invigorate the next generation of leaders. This round of funding included acquiring adjacent properties for future development that will allow this program to grow to 60 students a semester.

Academic Programs: Our future Academic Programs to promote the Common Good and to transform political discourse to equip future leaders to defend the role of faith in our society will provide enrichment and rigorous, faithful formation to students across secondary and post-secondary levels. The College anticipates that young professionals in the intended master’s degrees will develop expertise in political writing, legislative affairs, campaign management, statecraft, and more, infusing American political life with the guiding principles of natural law and divine Truth.

Belmont Abbey College believes that restoring our culture begins with a vision of human flourishing through God’s providence, a vision embodied by the College’s exceptional alumni and informed by 1,500 years of Benedictine tradition. The College’s network of alumni in Washington, D.C., will play a crucial role in advancing these initiatives, providing a direct link to influential sectors in politics, government, and beyond. This network will create a pipeline for current and future students seeking careers in public service, media, and policymaking. By fostering connections between students and seasoned professionals, Belmont Abbey College aims to equip the next generation of leaders with the tools and knowledge needed to promote a culture rooted in faith, service, and moral integrity. 

Through these efforts, the College is committed to making a lasting impact on society by shaping leaders who will advocate for the common good with a firm foundation in Catholic social teaching. Abbey alumni are a testament to these values and boldly carry them into the public sphere, inspiring others to do the same. Recent alumni like Lily Mullen, who currently serves as a Donor Relations Associate at the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty; Grace Bruno, Health Policy Advisor in the U.S. Senate; and Nikolas von Spakovsky, Advance Team Associate for the Donald J. Trump for President 2024 campaign, are helping shape the political culture through their faith-driven service. These alumni exemplify the kind of leadership our culture urgently needs—leaders who approach challenges with a strong moral foundation rooted in faith. 

“This is only the beginning for the Belmont House,” said Executive Director Emmett McGroarty. “The Belmont House will be an anchor for the faithful on Capitol Hill, bringing strong moral leadership and the teachings of the Church into the heart of politics and public life and serving as a home for Catholics on the Hill. We are proud to be a voice for truth, advocating for the restoration of faith in the public square.”

Abbot Placid, Chancellor of Belmont Abbey College, shared his thoughts on the significance of these initiatives: “We are establishing a place in Washington, D.C., where, building on St. Benedict’s instruction to receive all guests as Christ, we can offer a space for people of good will to gather to discuss and promote religious liberty and the important contributions that faith communities can bring to public life. As a Catholic college, we can place the insights of the Catholic intellectual tradition and the Church’s social teaching at the service of those tasked with shaping the life of our country.”

Belmont Abbey announced these groundbreaking initiatives during the National Catholic Prayer Breakfast in Washington, D.C., on February 28, 2025, where the College also served as a sponsor of the event. This occasion underscores the College’s deep commitment to promoting faith and values at the highest levels of public discourse. Following the breakfast, Belmont Abbey officials will join former congressmen and other distinguished guests, including Bishop Michael Martin of the Charlotte Diocese, for a hard-hat tour of the new facilities.

As Belmont Abbey College continues to deepen its presence in Washington, D.C., it remains steadfast in its mission to promote the values of the Catholic faith, defend religious freedom, and contribute positively to society. For more information about the Belmont House and its initiatives, please visit https://belmonthouse.bac.edu/.

Press Inquiry Contact:

Sarah Bolton, Marketing Project Manager, SarahBolton@bac.edu or 704-461-7016.

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Filed Under: Abbey Excellence, Abbey News, Alumni News, Home Tagged With: belmont house, D.C., Washington

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Your Admissions Counselor is:

Caroline Hohensee, Graduate and Online CoordinatorCaroline Hohensee
Graduate and Online Coordinator

carolinehohensee@bac.edu
Office: 704-461-6838

Your Admissions Counselor is:

John Blalock, Director of AdmissionsJohn Blalock
Director of Admissions

johnblalock@bac.edu

Your Admissions Counselor is:

Ethan McEntire, Admissions CounselorEthan McEntire
Admissions Counselor

ethanmcentire@bac.edu
Office: 704.954.8837

Your Admissions Counselor is:

Emily Hogan, Abbey Online CounselorEmily Hogan
Online Admissions Counselor

emilyhogan@bac.edu

Your Admissions Counselor is:

Angela LoyaAngela Loya
Admissions Counselor

angelaloya@bac.edu
Schedule a Conversation

Office: 704-461-5026
Mobile: 704-336-0265

Your Admissions Counselor is:

Elizabeth WelchElizabeth Welch
Transfer Admissions Counselor

elizabethwelch@bac.edu
Schedule a Conversation
Office: 704-461-7216 Mobile: 704-544-7758

Your Admissions Counselor is:

Julia Bournos, Assistant Director of AdmissionsJulia Bournos
Assistant Director of Admissions

Schedule a Conversation
juliabournos@bac.edu
Office: 704.461.6830 Mobile: 704.336.0289

Your Admissions Counselor is:

Alysa Miller, Admissions CounselorAlysa Miller
Admissions Counselor

alysamiller@bac.edu

Your Admissions Counselor is:

Frank Marie
Admissions Counselor

frankmarie@bac.edu
Also of Interest
  • College Academic Calendar in North Carolina
  • Dual Enrollment Program in Belmont
  • Academic Application Process in North Carolina
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