Award-winning actor Jonathan Roumie of “The Chosen,” will serve as the commencement speaker for ’s 2024 graduation ceremony held on Saturday, May 11, 2024.
“Millions of people have had their lives changed for the better by Jonathan Roumie through his portrayal of Jesus Christ, his voice on the Hallow app, and in his many appearances where he advocates for the Catholic faith and the teachings of the Church,” said President Peter Kilpatrick. “Jonathan’s work is a testament to how lay Catholics can use their God-given talents to deliver messages of hope, belief, and bring people closer to God. I am looking forward to welcoming him to and hearing his words of inspiration for our graduates and all in attendance.”
Roumie, who will also receive an honorary degree from the University, is best known for his role as Jesus in “The Chosen,” a television series about the life and ministry of Jesus of Nazareth. He is a contributor to the Hallow prayer and meditation app where he reads the Gospels as Jesus and leads prayers as himself. Roumie also starred in the 2023 movie, “Jesus Revolution.”
In addition to his work as an actor, Roumie is actively involved with his Catholic faith. A strong advocate of the sacraments, he has been a ministry leader and an extraordinary minister of Holy Communion. Catholic media have recognized him as a leader of the faith, with Our Sunday Visitor naming Roumie to a list of Catholics of the Year in 2022. In 2023 he was the keynote speaker at the annual March for Life. And on Super Bowl Sunday this year, an reached millions of people, sparking interest in the Catholic faith as evidenced by a spike in downloads of the app.
“Speaking at ’s Commencement is such an honor because I will be among those who not only value a quality education, but a college experience formed by the Catholic faith,” said Roumie. “I so look forward to celebrating with these graduates and sharing some insights into how one can live an inspired, fulfilling and faithful life using the skills, talents, and intellect given to them by God.”
The University expects to bestow nearly 1,300 degrees. The Commencement ceremony will be held on the steps of the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception. It will be live streamed and recorded.
These additional four individuals will also receive honorary doctoral degrees:
Fleeing the fascist takeover in Italy prior to WWII, Rabbi Bemporad and his family traveled to the U.S. when he was five years old. Thus, having personally suffered as the result of persecution and prejudice, he has dedicated his career to improving relations among Christians, Muslims, and Jews worldwide. The Rabbi is recognized internationally for his diplomatic skill and leadership in matters of religious understanding and reconciliation.
The author of several books about Christian and Jewish understanding, Rabbi Bemporad is the director of the nonprofit Center for Interreligious Understanding (CIU), which he founded in 1992. Its aim is to bring people of all religious faiths together to promote open dialogue, mutual respect, and theological understanding of the common foundations shared by the world’s religions. Rabbi Jack Bemporad began teaching at Vatican universities in 1998 and has been Director of the John Paul II Center and Professor of Interreligious Studies, both at the Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas (Angelicum), in Rome since 2009. He is one of the rare Jewish leaders to have had a personal audience with Pope John XXIII, numerous personal audiences with Pope John Paul II, and was one of three Rabbis to have blessed him shortly before his death. Most recently, he met with Pope Francis at the conclusion of the “Refugees and Migrants” conference, co-sponsored by the CIU in Rome this past November.
John Finnis is Professor Emeritus at the University of Oxford and the University of Notre Dame (Law School). Professor Finnis is recognized by fellow academics as one of the two or three greatest living philosophers of law and perhaps the most important Catholic legal and political thinker of the last half-century. His work has had a massive influence on legal thought, particularly with how he returned the notion of natural law to the world of legal philosophy in his 1980 book, “Natural Law and Natural Rights.” He is the author of countless other books and academic articles.
In addition to his academic work, Professor Finnis has made important contributions to ethics and moral theology, having served as a member of the International Theological Commission and the Pontifical Academy for Life. In 2023 he was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire for his legal scholarship. His former students include Robert George from Princeton and Supreme Court Justice Justice Neil Gorsuch.
Teresa Pitt Green is an internationally known writer and speaker who promotes healing from abuse and trauma for survivors, families, parishes, clergy and leadership in the Catholic Church. She is co-founder of Spirit Fire and vice president of Healing and Recovery Ministries at St. Edmund's Retreat on Enders Island, Mystic, Connecticut.
Green is one of several founders of The Healing Voices Magazine, which was launched in 2014 and first published in 2015. She served for ten years on a diocesan advisory board and currently serves in the leadership of the Northern Virginia Human Trafficking Task Force. Her work includes collaborations with all those wounded by abuse in the Church, including survivors, family members, clergy and ministries, leadership and laity. She shares wisdom with those in other faiths and traditions seeking to promote the same healing and works with survivors and ministries worldwide.
Father Piotr Nawrot is a Roman Catholic priest of the Divine Word Missionaries. He is an illustrious alumnus of , where he received both a Masters in Liturgical Music in 1988 and a doctorate in musicology in 1993. He is a member of the theology faculty of the Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań, Poland.
Receiving a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1998 for his musicological work, he is renowned for his discovery and research of music left behind by Jesuit priests in Bolivia. His work led him to discover 13,000 pages of music held by members of the Moxo and Chiquito tribes, among others. Over the course of his career, he has sought to bring to life the music he has discovered, publishing more than thirty volumes he has reconstructed and edited from 17th and 18th century Jesuit priests. The music he has discovered continues to be performed with the assistance of the Church.