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Presidential Speaker Series Hosts Discussion on Gender Issues

蜜桃社 President Dr. Peter Kilpatrick and featured speaker Abigail Favale led a conversation on Catholicism and gender issues in a crowded Heritage Hall at the opening installment of the new Presidential Speaker Series March 21.
Abigail Favale, professor of practice at the McGrath Institute for Church Life at the University of Notre Dame, speaks on her experience studying gender as a Catholic at the opening installment of the new Presidential Lecture Series March 21. (蜜桃社/Patrick G. Ryan)

By Cecilia Engbert

蜜桃社 President Dr. Peter Kilpatrick and featured speaker Abigail Favale led a conversation on Catholicism and gender issues in a crowded Heritage Hall at the opening installment of the new Presidential Speaker Series March 21. 

To open the discussion on gender, Favale, professor of practice at the McGrath Institute for Church Life at the University of Notre Dame, drew on her 2022 book , sharing how she discovered and came to embrace the Catholic Church. Afterward, she took questions from Dr. Kilpatrick and audience members.  

Favale has always been fascinated by gender. Since she became Catholic in 2014, she said her thinking on gender has changed as she has moved from a 鈥渇eminist ideology鈥 to an acceptance and understanding of the Church鈥檚 teachings on the human person. 

鈥淚 think the Catholic Church is true, I think that she holds and guards the truth of what the human person is,鈥 said Favale. 鈥淣ow I try to engage on this question and write from a deeply Catholic perspective, but also one that hopefully is not about culture war battles and one that does not lose sight of humanity.鈥 

Dr. Kilpatrick asked Favale how 蜜桃社 can maintain a balance between striving to be faithfully Catholic but also affirming the dignity of every human person. 

Favale said understanding the true sense of hospitality is key. 

鈥淲hen I invite someone into my home, I don鈥檛 demand that they sign some sort of statement of agreement with all of my beliefs,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou invite someone into your home, but yet your home remains your home. It has an identity to it and hospitality doesn't mean that you compromise the identity of your home. But it does mean that you invite someone into that without forcing them to adopt the identity of your home.鈥 

Many audience members asked questions about how to accompany people who have 鈥済ender dysphoria鈥 without compromising their Catholic beliefs.  

Favale said in her work to develop models of accompaniment, she engages with those who experience 鈥済ender discordance鈥 but also people on the medical, psychological, theological and pastoral sides. 

鈥淚 speak now as someone actively thinking about this and trying to better understand this,鈥 said Favale. 鈥淭he accompaniment really has to be about seeking to understand the person and to really listen deeply to their narrative.鈥 

Other questions touched on how to understand the Catholic all-male priesthood, the difference between 鈥渟ex鈥 and 鈥済ender,鈥 and how to discuss gender topics with youth. 

Dr. Kilpatrick said the new series is designed to allow deeper conversations between the University community and Catholic thought leaders on challenging current topics.  

鈥淢y intention in launching the series was to on the one hand be authentically and unabashedly Catholic in what we do in addressing important issues, but also to be as welcoming and embracing and loving as we possibly could be to those who may differ with the Catholic position,鈥 said Dr. Kilpatrick.

Watch the whole conversation below.

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