{"id":165,"date":"2002-10-16T18:07:37","date_gmt":"2002-10-16T22:07:37","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/president\/"},"modified":"2010-10-19T18:08:48","modified_gmt":"2010-10-19T22:08:48","slug":"medal-honor-book-ceremony-2002","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/president\/medal-honor-book-ceremony-2002\/","title":{"rendered":"Medal &#038; Honor Book Ceremony, 2002"},"content":{"rendered":"<span id=\"Remarks____________________for_the_Trinity_Medal_and_Honor_Agreement_Ceremony:_Class_of____________________2006\"><h1>Remarks                    for the Trinity Medal and Honor Agreement Ceremony: Class of                    2006<\/h1><\/span>\n<p><strong>Congratulations to the Green Class of 2006!<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Tonight I want to talk about the importance of this central                    educational ideal at Trinity that we call the Honor System and                    the powerful message it sends to this sad and troubled world                    that we can still have something so genuinely and profoundly                    moral in its essence. Tonight you join a powerful tradition                    of Trinity Women who have signed the Honor Agreement before                    you, who have worn the Trinity Medal with pride. You have accepted                    the responsibility that this long history now vests in you to                    be good stewards of our tradition, to be exemplars of the ideals                    of honor and integrity as a way of life.<\/p>\n<p>Simple honesty as a way of life is not a particularly popular                    concept in contemporary society. Integrity as the sacrifice                    of personal desire for the common good seems almost quaint in                    the face of the \u2018me first\u2019 messages that fill the air. The Honor                    System is rooted in the idea of Justice as the virtue that speaks                    to what I owe to the community because of what God has given                    me &#8212; rather than the modern distortion of justice as \u2018getting                    mine, too, because I deserve it\u2019 &#8212; well, when was the last                    time anyone spoke of Justice as a personal obligation to serve                    others? This is a very hard concept in the acquisitive society                    of modern America.<\/p>\n<p>I think it\u2019s not too strong a statement to say that the catastrophes                    of our current national and world situation reveal a profoundly                    disordered relationship with the idea of Honor and its corollaries,                    Justice and Truth, as central principles of human existence.                    In our national scandals &#8212; the Enron case, Arthur Anderson,                    WorldCom and other accounting scandals; or the case of bishops                    covering up for pedophiliac priests; or, locally, the forging                    of names on the mayor\u2019s election petitions &#8212; these scandals                    seem actually quite simple in the realm of honor &#8212; or dishonor,                    if you will. We see Men Behaving Badly &#8212; and Martha Stewart,                    too, just to ensure gender equity &#8212; revealing the pitiful                    lack of respect for the idea of honor and integrity. Lies abound;                    selfish, unjust, dishonorable behaviour fills each day\u2019s front                    page. Seeing corporate executives in handcuffs may give some                    people primal pleasure, but to me it suggests an educational                    failure that all serious teachers must contemplate. What went                    wrong in the education of an accountant who deliberately falsifies                    financial statements? Was the bishop absent from class on the                    day that sister taught the lesson on truth telling; or did the                    lesson not get taught at all, perhaps pushed aside because so                    many other things need to be taught? Where did a politician                    learn that deception is ok because that\u2019s how you win? In all                    of the talk we hear these days about failing schools, almost                    no one talks of the failure of moral education &#8212; and yet we                    see well educated, elite people acting in the most immoral of                    ways.<\/p>\n<p>These national failures of honor and integrity are obvious,                    almost too much so. Certainly, you might be saying, if I ever                    were the bishop &#8212; that\u2019s a long shot &#8212; I certainly would                    do the right thing immediately. If I ever were the CFO &#8212; maybe                    not so long a shot, because I\u2019m a Trinity Woman and will be                    all-powerful &#8212; I certainly would not cook the books. Really?                    What seems so simple from afar can get really complicated on                    the inside. What if you just bought a new house, have a baby                    on the way, and the boss tells you simply to enter the numbers                    in a different column, or not enter them at all? What if you                    have the opportunity, just this once, to cheat on your spouse                    while away on a business trip? What if getting your child into                    the best school means that you fudge a little on supplying recommendations                    &#8212; who reads them anyway? Only in movies does the dishonesty                    play out in a straight story line. In real life, the gray zones                    are everywhere, and sometimes the lie starts out as a small                    mistake, a third rate burglary that turns into the toppling                    of the president. The Honor System\u2019s intent is to prepare you                    to find your way through the gray zones.<\/p>\n<p>But if these examples are simple, the rest of the world poses                    a much harder case. Around the world, the terrorists who have                    killed and maimed countless other human beings often speak of                    Truth as a value that they claim to be defending, a point of                    honor in their twisted logic. But no deliberate, wilful destruction                    of human life can be an honorable defense of Truth, indeed,                    murder is quite the opposite &#8212; the unjust destruction of God\u2019s                    gift of life to another. Terrorists often claim to be acting                    in the name of religion, but the Truth is different &#8212; no religion,                    not Islam, not Judaism, not Christianity tolerates the profound                    immorality of murder to advance its interests in the world.                    A terrorist act is a profound lie, a false claim to be vindicating                    God\u2019s righteousness.<\/p>\n<p>And what of the desire to make war to avenge the killing? How                    can we judge whether the basis for such a profound decision                    is honorable &#8212; the defense of innocents &#8212; or corrupt &#8212;                    motivated by political considerations? This is not the decision                    of people down on Capitol Hill or at the other end of Pennsylvania                    Avenue alone &#8212;- you, too, as citizens of the nation and the                    world, you must make a moral judgment about war and its consequences.<\/p>\n<p>What does your pledge of Honor tonight have to do with the                    terrible forces in conflict on the world stage today?<\/p>\n<p>We Trinity Women must accept the responsibility that this education                    imposes on us to be witnesses for a different kind of world,                    a world of justice and peace whose guiding principle is honor.                    A community of honor has no need for vengeance; a community                    of justice is a place of true peace.<\/p>\n<p>But in the face of all of the terrible news each day, you might                    be tempted to say, what does it matter, what can I as one person                    do to make a difference &#8212; shouldn\u2019t I just try to be happy                    for myself, get what I can to enjoy my life, forget about being                    a hero? Wouldn\u2019t that be a bleak world, a place in which everyone                    took as much as they could for themselves, not caring about                    anyone else? Imagine the alienation, the fear, the violence                    &#8211; even more than we know right now, but isn\u2019t that part of what\u2019s                    wrong right now? People acting only for themselves, not caring                    about how their actions affect others &#8212; we wind up living                    in the horrific world forecast by the philosopher Thomas Hobbes,                    a place where life is \u2018cruel, nasty, brutish and short\u2019 because                    the social contract of community has failed entirely.<\/p>\n<p>The Honor System is about a view of society favored by more                    enlightened philosophers like John Locke who described the social                    contract that human beings make with each other to build free                    and peaceful communities that are better and more secure than                    the state of nature. The enlightened philosophers\u2019 view of the                    social contract and free human society is more in keeping with                    the teachings of major religions, including Christianity and                    Catholicism, where a great emphasis is placed on social justice                    as the organizing principle for the human community.<\/p>\n<p>Such enlightened communities depend heavily on each person\u2019s                    commitment to justice, and justice requires honor and integrity                    for its vitality. You need to learn what those virtues mean,                    and how to put them to use in the construction of free, peaceful                    and just communities in the future. Honor requires that you                    be informed, that you speak out, that you weigh in with your                    opinion on the great national and international issues of this                    day; honor requires that you exercise the duties of citizenship.<\/p>\n<p>In your days here at Trinity, you are preparing yourselves                    for very significant roles as citizens, parents, workers and                    leaders of communities large and small. Some of you will become                    famous, Trinity Women of great renown, women following in the                    footsteps of Trinity\u2019s notables like Nancy Pelosi, Class of                    \u201862, the highest ranking woman in Congress; or Maggie Williams,                    Class of \u201877, now chief of staff to former President Clinton                    and formerly chief of staff to Hillary Clinton when she was                    first lady; or Kathleen Gilligan Sebellius, Class of \u201869, who                    is running for governor of Kansas and is likely to win. Most                    of you will be not quite that famous, but through your good                    deeds and hard work, you will create a great legacy for the                    future in the children you will raise or teach, the co-workers                    you will influence, the neighborhoods you will help to shape.<\/p>\n<p>Whatever your individual calling, you will also be a voice                    for doing what is right, for making right and honorable choices                    in all matters. If we teach you well here at Trinity, if the                    Honor System has the effect we intend, you will become strong                    women of integrity, people of justice and true courage. You                    will demand the same of others. You will know how to make choices                    in favor of honor and integrity, whether in the board room or                    at the ballot box or in the great bazaar of consumption that                    is part of the world struggle. Or in the quiet of your own room,                    when no one is watching, because you will also know that honor                    is a consistent principle of living that requires no witness                    save your own conscience.<\/p>\n<p>More than a century ago, a valiant group of religious women                    gathered with a handful of students on this ground to create                    a community that was new, at the dawn of the 20th century, a                    place where women could gather in peace and security to learn                    and to grow, a place that enshrined the virtue of honor as a                    fundamental organizing principle derived from their philosophy                    and their faith. Today, the legacy of Trinity\u2019s Founders sits                    in this great Chapel, the latest generation of Trinity Women                    to accept the responsibility inherent in a Trinity education.<\/p>\n<p>By accepting your Trinity medals tonight, by signing the Honor                    Book, you affirm your commitment to live by Trinity\u2019s values                    of honor and integrity in all things, great and small. On the                    large public stage, or in the silence of your own heart, you                    accept the obligation to speak and live by the Truth.<\/p>\n<p>May you go forth from this Chapel tonight wearing your Trinity                    Medals as badges of honor, symbols of your commitment to use                    this education in service to others. May the blessings of our                    Founders, those great Sisters of Notre Dame, go with you each                    day, giving you the strength to live honorably, the wisdom to                    make good choices, and the charity that will make your hearts                    large enough to embrace without reservation the people you will                    serve all the days of your lives.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Remarks for the Trinity Medal and Honor Agreement Ceremony: Class of 2006 Congratulations to the Green Class of 2006! Tonight I want to talk about the importance of this central educational ideal at Trinity that we call the Honor System and the powerful message it sends to this sad and troubled world that we can still have something so genuinely and profoundly moral in its essence. Tonight you join a powerful tradition of Trinity Women who have signed the Honor Agreement before you, who have worn the Trinity Medal with pride. You have accepted the responsibility that this long history &hellip;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"parent":0,"menu_order":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","template":"","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"class_list":["post-165","page","type-page","status-publish","hentry"],"acf":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/president\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/165","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/president\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/president\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/page"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/president\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/president\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=165"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/president\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/165\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.trinitydc.edu\/president\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=165"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}