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D.C. archbishop speaks at Newman Catholic Center

by Andrew Ramonas
'08 Senior News Editor

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The Rev. Donal Wuerl, the archbishop of Washington, talked to a packed Alumni House Thursday evening. He discussed the Catholic Church's view on stem-cell research and Islam.
Media Credit: Erin Shea
The Rev. Donal Wuerl, the archbishop of Washington, talked to a packed Alumni House Thursday evening. He discussed the Catholic Church's view on stem-cell research and Islam.

The archbishop of Washington spoke to a packed Alumni House Thursday about the Catholic Church and its views on stem-cell research, war and Islam.

The Newman Catholic Student Center invited the Rev. Donald Wuerl, who is a former college religion professor, to speak as part of a coffee house discussion series they host regularly called Theology on Tap.

"I invited him because he has a love for education," said Father Bill Gurnee, who is the chaplain of the Newman Center. "He loves to be around college students."

Pope Benedict XVI named Wuerl the successor of former Washington archbishop Cardinal Theodore McCarrick last May. Wuerl, who previously served as bishop of Pittsburgh, officially took the post last June, said Susan Gibbs, director of communications for the Washington Archdiocese.

Weurl centered his discussion on two main questions - what does the Church do for the individual and what does the Church do for culture?

"Every one of us asks themselves growing up some very significant questions," Weurl said. "What the Church (offers) is a series of answers on the identity, expectations and faith of the Church."

In his discussion, Wuerl examined stem-cell research - an issue on which the Catholic Church has been criticized for its strong oppositional stance.

"The Church has always advanced knowledge and science within the parameters of moral judgment," Wuerl said. "What the Church is saying is that what we cannot do is take an embryo and kill it and kill it. You can't destroy one living human reality for another living human reality."

"There are things that are simply not allowed because it would be too horrendous," he said.

During the question and answer period following his lecture, the Archbishop defended the recent comments Pope Benedict XVI made about Islam when the Pope cited a text that labels the religion's founder "evil and inhuman." Wuerl said these comments were taken out of context.
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