糖心Vlog

How Catholic should a Catholic university be?

Disagreements over the extent to which Catholic teaching should influence academic practice have caused ructions at the Australian Catholic University. But where exactly should the line between academic freedom and spiritual doctrine be drawn in a church-owned university? John Ross reports

Published on
February 26, 2025
Last updated
February 27, 2025
Catholic statue of Catherine of Sienna holding a crown of thorns, St. Patrick's Cathedral, East Melbourne, Australia. With a mortarboard tassel added to illustrate the double act of being Catholic and being a university.
Source: Lenah lens/Alamy/iStock montage

When constitutional lawyer Greg Craven gave his as new vice-chancellor of the Australian Catholic University (ACU) in 2008, he declared that the institution鈥檚 success would hinge on two things. 鈥淚t must be supremely good at being Catholic, and it must be supremely good at being a university.鈥

That is not an easy double act to pull off, however, in a country where higher education has been ferociously secular for most of its 175 years. When Australia鈥檚 first universities were established in the 1850s, Australia was riven by sectarian hostilities they wanted no part of and that Enlightenment values suggested that public institutions should steer clear of.

As a result, theology was not taught on Australian campuses for well over a century, and religious instruction was allowed only in universities鈥 independently run residential colleges. The founding act of the oldest institution, the University of Sydney, limited its scope to literature, science, art, law and medicine. 鈥淭hey were so scared of sectarian divisions that鈥ou couldn鈥檛 [even] teach history,鈥 said former ACU history academic Hannah Forsyth.

Craven 鈥 who was only ACU鈥檚 third vice-chancellor, following its founding in 1991 鈥 planned to navigate this complicated legacy by committing his institution to public engagement on issues relevant to Catholic intellectualism (in line with a perceived governmental imperative for Australian universities to seek to better distinguish themselves from their peers). This would involve 鈥渁 profound concentration upon theology and philosophy鈥 and a prominent contribution to public debates 鈥渋n a way that promotes Catholic values and positions鈥. He pledged a new institute of public policy focusing on issues such as 鈥渓ife, social justice and religious freedom鈥.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

Thirteen years later, in 2021, Craven鈥檚 successor, Zlatko Skrbis, likewise committed in his own to leading an institution that was 鈥渟upremely good at being a university and being Catholic鈥. But 鈥渢ectonic shifts in the sector鈥 鈥 new educational technology, booming international student numbers, government funding overhauls and pandemic-induced upheaval 鈥 meant that 鈥渃ircumstances have changed鈥, Skrbis added. Under his watch, ACU would have 鈥渁 stable core鈥 but also 鈥渁 disruptive edge鈥.

Disruption ensued. In late 2023, the university announced major cuts to religious studies, history, philosophy and political science. These were ACU鈥檚 strong suits; for instance, in the now-obsolete research assessment exercise, Excellence in Research for Australia (ERA), the university was the only one rated above world standard on religious research. The cuts spelt the end of the Dianoia Institute of Philosophy, which just a few years earlier had headhunted star international scholars on the promise of an ambitious, sustained research programme.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

Then, in late 2024, ACU decided to close the PM Glynn Institute 鈥 the public policy institute that Craven had singled out as a core commitment. This capped a 15-month horror stretch for ACU, including a wave of resignations, terminations and contract non-renewals that would ultimately claim the entire second tier of the university鈥檚 executive leadership.

ACU says this was 鈥減art of the rejuvenating cycle鈥 of natural turnover. Others describe it as a purge. 鈥淚t鈥檚 no accident that some senior [Catholic] conservatives no longer hold their positions at ACU,鈥 said Paul Oslington, professor of economics and theology at Alphacrucis University College, who worked at ACU for five years.

The university鈥檚 financial accounts revealed deficits of A$8 million (拢4 million) in 2022 and A$36 million in 2023, ending years of surplus. Despite this, ACU paid about A$1.1 million to reverse the 2024 appointment of a law dean whose back catalogue included two publications portraying abortion as a women鈥檚 health matter rather than, as most Catholics would contend, a social or religious issue. The university refuses to discuss this episode.

In October, staff and students walked out of a graduation ceremony as staunchly Catholic former union leader Joe de Bruyn decried abortion and same-sex marriage during an acceptance speech for an honorary doctorate. ACU鈥檚 response 鈥 offers of counselling and refunds of students鈥 ceremony fees 鈥 earned the wrath of the Archbishop of Sydney, Anthony Fisher, who resigned as chair of the university鈥檚 Committee of Identity.

An from seven prominent Catholic lawyers depicted this 鈥渨ithdrawal of episcopal confidence鈥 as a warning that 鈥渋f ACU has not already lost its Catholic identity, it is on the verge of doing so鈥. The letter said that in order to avoid the rescindment of ACU鈥檚 Catholic designation, an independent investigation of the institution鈥檚 senior executive was required 鈥 possibly a joint inquiry by the higher education regulator Teqsa (on civil matters) and the Vatican (on canonical matters).

At Christmas, The Australian newspaper that Teqsa had launched a compliance probe of ACU, citing concerns about its 鈥渃ompetent governance oversight鈥 and accountability, as a precursor to the university鈥檚 reregistration this coming July. The university confirmed that Teqsa had 鈥渟ought assurances about a number of matters and ACU is in the process of responding鈥.

By then, the university鈥檚 Senate had reappointed Skrbis for a second five-year term, even though his first term still had more than a year to run. The move was portrayed as a fait accompli by progressive members of the governing council, which, uniquely in Australia, includes an archbishop and is half composed of bishops鈥 appointees.

Source:听
Scott Kenneth Brodie/Alamy

This is not the first time internal Catholic politics have spilt over into university administrative matters. Historian Forsyth said Sydney鈥檚 famously conservative archbishop George Pell, ACU鈥檚 foundation pro-chancellor and a president of its 鈥渃orporation鈥 or legal entity, had at one stage threatened to bankrupt the university by charging rent for church-owned land if it did not conduct itself in a 鈥渕ore Catholic鈥 manner.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

Forsyth, who spent time on the ACU branch of the National Tertiary Education Union, said she had gained the impression that the 鈥渃onservative side鈥 of the church was constantly pressuring Skrbis to be more Catholic. 鈥淚t struck me that the church sees the university as a kind of political football for [its] internal conflicts,鈥 she said.

Catholic politics are particularly complicated at ACU because, unlike most of its international counterparts, it is not aligned with any particular religious order. Things are easier in the US, where the Catholic universities are 鈥淔ranciscan or Jesuit or whatever鈥, a source said. 鈥淭o some extent, you鈥檝e got a guiding manual.鈥

Maria Luz Vilches, vice-president of Ateneo de Manila University in the Philippines, said her institution鈥檚 Jesuit values helped guide its strategic priorities and even its oversight. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 see God up in the heavens,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou see God in the mud. You see God everywhere. That鈥檚 how the Jesuit universities are governed 鈥 looking at the world not as an enemy, but a place for finding God.鈥

ACU鈥檚 spiritual traditions come from the multitude of religious orders that founded the teacher- and nurse-training colleges that amalgamated into the university in 1991 鈥 Christian Brothers, Dominican Sisters, De La Salle Brothers, Good Samaritan Sisters, Marist Brothers, Sisters of Mercy and Sisters of St Joseph.

This makes for tricky leadership, according to historian Peter Sherlock, the University of Divinity鈥檚 longstanding former vice-chancellor. 鈥淭he Catholic Church, despite papal authority, is not a unitary, singular entity. All the different religious orders鈥ave their own charism [spiritual gift] and structure, and all the different dioceses and bishops will sit somewhere on the spectrum of conservative or progressive. The number one problem you have in a Catholic institution is [to determine] which bit of the Catholic Church are you talking to, and why.鈥

And that is on top of all the other trials and tribulations of being a vice-chancellor. 鈥淶latko has a completely impossible job,鈥 Sherlock concludes. As head of ACU, 鈥測ou鈥檝e got to deal with government, student demand, industry 鈥 all the usual stuff 鈥 and then you鈥檝e got to deal with the church politics on top of that鈥.

Vatican City. 25 June 2018. Pope Francis meets Governor General of Australia Sir Peter Cosgrove.
Source:听
Evandro Inetti/ZUMA Wire/Alamy

Skrbis, however, plays down the challenges. 鈥淧eople will say that having one bishop [to answer to] is better than having six,鈥 he told 糖心Vlog. 鈥淏ut鈥the Catholic] church is, by definition, a broad church. That is a source of significant enrichment. I would be lying if I said that I have not learned a great deal from this diversity of perspectives.鈥

He described the relationship as 鈥渁 genuine partnership鈥, whereby the bishops are kept informed and occasionally approached for advice, but do not overstep. 鈥淏ishops have legitimate interests鈥n the university, and I can see how a perception could be created where that interest goes beyond what is perhaps appropriate,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he reality is that the bishops don鈥檛 generally interfere with the workings of the university.鈥

For his part, Father Gerry Gleeson, ACU鈥檚 newly appointed senior adviser on Catholic identity and mission, conceded that working with multiple bishops was a 鈥渃hallenge鈥. But working with multiple Australian states was arguably harder. 鈥淵ou鈥檝e got鈥ydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Canberra鈥lways [exhibiting] rivalry at the best of times. Zlatko has a lot of stakeholders.鈥

Most Australian universities are covered by single state acts. ACU has three acts 鈥 New South Wales, Queensland and Victorian versions 鈥 and a 鈥渃orporation鈥 of archbishops, their appointees and other religious leaders whose primary objective is 鈥渢o conduct the university as a Catholic university鈥, according to ACU鈥檚 constitution.

Gleeson said the corporation was like the university鈥檚 鈥渟hareholders鈥. Most universities were technically owned by states, he explained. 鈥淚n our case, it鈥檚 a church corporation.鈥

But these fine points are often blurred in people鈥檚 minds, with the bishops in the corporation assumed to play a governance role in the university. Forsyth said that when unionists had asked senate members to intervene in the ACU executive鈥檚 proposal to retrench humanities academics, they also made similar requests of the bishops.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

鈥淭he intel that we were getting鈥ecretly [from] someone who works with the executive suggested that calling the bishops was the most appropriate thing to do 鈥 I think because several of them were opposed to the university鈥檚 management, and this would give them something to work with.鈥

One source said the bishops tended to 鈥済et very, very antsy鈥 about suggestions of financial risk, particularly after Catholic Church Insurance 鈥 a 113-year-old insurer of churches and other non-profit entities 鈥 in 2023, over fears that historical sex abuse claims could make it insolvent.

鈥淲hen something like that falls over and your insurance is gone, they get very sensitive to鈥ny sign of financial instability,鈥 the source said. 鈥淭he scale of [ACU鈥檚] deficit probably would have set alarm bells ringing.鈥

ACU is far from alone in encountering financial problems. Deficits were posted by 24 publicly funded universities in 2023, up from just two in 2021. Ten notched bigger shortfalls than ACU, including three with substantially less revenue. The university says its 2024 results will reveal an operating surplus of A$40 million, with rebounding student numbers 鈥渆nsuring the financial resilience needed to navigate external challenges鈥.

In February, ratings agency Moody鈥檚 ACU鈥檚 鈥淎a2鈥 assessment 鈥 the company鈥檚 third-best rating 鈥 citing the university鈥檚 鈥渟trong track record of implementing countermeasures鈥 to support its bottom line. 鈥淒espite recent weaker operating conditions, we expect ACU鈥檚 financial performance鈥ill recover.鈥

Nevertheless, sources say Skrbis had little choice about cutting humanities programmes after declining domestic revenue made them unsustainable. Forsyth said the scrapping of the ERA research assessment exercise also made humanities research less strategically attractive.

Source:听
Robert Shakespeare/Fairfax Media

If church authorities take an unnecessarily keen interest in ACU鈥檚 financial affairs, sources say this could reflect a general Catholic focus on accountability 鈥 a sense that money should go exclusively to the mission. 鈥淭he institution should be able to manage its own resources,鈥 said Vilches of Ateneo de Manila University. The purpose of accumulating money, according to Jesuit values, was to 鈥渟erve more鈥.

Jesuit values gained ascendancy with the ordination of Pope Francis. The first Jesuit pope, he sparked what have been called the 鈥溾 by reimposing restrictions on the traditional Latin Mass. Almost 800 mostly youthful worshippers turned up to mark the 450-year-old ritual鈥檚 last hurrah at Melbourne鈥檚 St Patrick鈥檚 Cathedral last June, The Age newspaper , reflecting 鈥溾.

This 鈥渞etro spirituality鈥 is part of a 鈥済enerational divide鈥 with mostly conservative leanings, a source said. It fuelled the furore following the walkout during de Bruyn鈥檚 speech in October.

Alphacrucis鈥 Oslington said conservative Catholics had been appalled at the treatment of de Bruyn for 鈥渆xpressing the traditional Catholic doctrine about abortion鈥 in a 鈥渞easonably non-confrontational鈥 manner. 鈥淗ow the hell could you be in a situation where, at a Catholic university, that causes people to walk off the stage?鈥 he asks. 鈥淢y鈥iew is that the whole ACU project is not worth doing unless it is a seriously Catholic university. No one鈥檚 forced to go to ACU, but if you do choose to go, you ought to be up for a bit of Catholicism.鈥

Such a role is not inconsistent with a university鈥檚 legislated responsibility to uphold academic freedom and free speech, Oslington insisted. Rather, the 鈥淐hristian tradition鈥 of 鈥渉ospitality towards opposing views鈥 鈥 a 鈥済enerosity of spirit, combined with certain convictions鈥 鈥 made religiously based institutions natural champions of free speech in a sector where people were increasingly 鈥渟hut down鈥 through 鈥渟houting and violence鈥.

鈥淚f you鈥檙e confident in your position, then you should not be worried by people putting an alternative view,鈥 Oslington said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not the religious who are most intolerant at the moment. Your standard Catholic 鈥 even your conservative Catholic 鈥 would be one of the more liberal and hospitable [towards] alternative views [among] most people you鈥檇 find in arts faculties today.鈥

But Sherlock, the former University of Divinity boss, believes the walkout from de Bruyn鈥檚 speech was 鈥渁ctually a credit鈥 to ACU.

鈥淚f I was the v-c there, I would have鈥raised the graduates and said, 鈥榗ongratulations on learning the greatest Catholic value of all, which is the courage of your conscience and the willingness to act on your convictions. It can鈥檛 be easy to walk out of your own graduation. Job well done!鈥欌

Skrbis said radically contrasting interpretations of ACU controversies were nothing new. 鈥淲elcome to my world.鈥 He added that the de Bruyn incident was a 鈥渙ne-off鈥 that he hoped would not be repeated.

Gleeson said ACU鈥檚 Catholic designation made it 鈥渁 target鈥 on gay and reproductive rights issues. 鈥淭he Catholic view of these things is鈥ot secret. Possibly for some students, maybe for some staff, that becomes a bit of a flashpoint.鈥

On the other hand, Skrbis said, ACU had avoided the 鈥渇erocious鈥 activism experienced by other universities around the Israel-Palestine conflict. 鈥淭here are鈥rotective factors that come out of [our] sense of community,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat doesn鈥檛 mean that鈥e don鈥檛 have people with different opinions. But it did not evolve into a big, controversial issue.鈥

That is despite the fact that, in Forsyth鈥檚 experience, ACU has 鈥渟tudents from so many cultural backgrounds. Lots of Orthodox students. Lots of Muslim students who didn鈥檛 want to go to a secular institution. [They felt] a different religion was better than none.鈥 Some of Forsyth鈥檚 students told her that their parents wanted them to train for teaching in specifically Catholic schools, fearing the public school sector would be racist. 鈥淥thers just thought, 鈥榓 religious institution will understand me better.鈥欌

Forsyth 鈥渞eally thinks鈥 there is a place for Catholic universities. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 so important that academic freedom is protected,鈥 she adds. 鈥淎nd I don鈥檛 think that it is being protected in the way that it needs to be. The church really should stay out of it. You can鈥檛 [both] protect academic freedom and control what people do.鈥

Sherlock also believes that no universities should take positions on controversial matters. Therefore, it would be inappropriate for ACU to adopt an anti-abortion stance. 鈥淚t might have a methodology [around] how [to] discuss such a question; I think institutions are much better placed if they come at it with that framework mentality,鈥 he said. But ACU is far from the only institution to have struggled to hold that line, he added: many universities openly supported the Indigenous voice to parliament, which was also 鈥渟tepping beyond鈥 their responsibility to 鈥渉old open a debating space鈥, he noted.

Skrbis also argued that most of the challenges he faces are little different from those faced by any vice-chancellor. 鈥淔orget about the Catholic bit. None of this is easy. Higher education is not easy,鈥 he said.

鈥淲hen you then add those Catholic mission-related layers鈥t鈥檚 an institution with deep history, bright future, bright present, but not without challenges. It would be silly to state otherwise. But that鈥檚 a source of joy.鈥

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

john.ross@timeshighereducation.com

Register to continue

Why register?

  • Registration is free and only takes a moment
  • Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
  • Sign up for our newsletter
Please
or
to read this article.

Related articles

Sponsored

Featured jobs

See all jobs
ADVERTISEMENT