I am tired of the controversy at Notre Dame.

Like many American Catholics, I’m proud of our flagship university, without even being an alumna. I have a well-worn, green Notre Dame sweatshirt, and Rudy is one of my favorite films. I steadfastly cheer for Our Lady’s football team. I even use a “Play Like Champion Today” key chain. So when I heard that President Obama would be speaking at Notre Dame this May, my immediate feeling was one of great excitement. I felt honored and joyful that the President I so enthusiastically supported because of my Catholic values would be honored at the university that symbolizes the prestige of the Catholic intellectual tradition in this country. I was proud to be an American Catholic at that moment.

But there’s been controversy about this commencement invitation from the start, including an online petition calling the mere invitation of President Obama a “scandal at Our Lady’s University,” along with a blizzard of vitriolic emails and blog posts from the right-wing of the American Church. As Joan Walsh at Salon.com notes,

But the growing movement to stop Obama’s visit isn’t your ho-hum sort of Catholic League media dust-up, where Bill Donohue harumphs on television and then goes away. It’s part of a well-funded lobbying effort by a group of right-wing Catholics to run liberal Catholics, and dissenting doctrine, out of the church, and to recruit the remainder of the faithful for the GOP.

The outcry all rests on the same, flawed (and yet disturbingly effective) argument: that President Barack Obama, simply because he does not support criminalizing abortion, is in fact “pro-abortion.” These vocal critics go further, actually, calling him “the most anti-life President in American history.” Nevermind that President Obama is spearheading a common ground abortion reduction program. And nevermind that in so many other respects, he is inspired by and aligned with the rich tradition of Catholic Social Teaching. In fact, instead of asking why President Obama may not support abortion criminalization, the Catholic Right compares him to Hitler and talks about human sacrifice, suggesting that the President’s interpretation of the Constitution is based on some deep-seated desire to dance on the graves of the unborn.

As I have noted elsewhere, this is all part of a compelling master narrative invoked by the contemporary pro-life movement, in which pro-lifers are invited to think of themselves as heroic champions for good against a diabolical evil. Though inspiring, such rhetoric gets in the way of constructive dialogue and the kind of common ground solutions that will actually reduce the number of abortions in this country.

And now, Francis Cardinal George, archbishop of Barack Obama’s home city, Chicago, and president of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, has said that the University of Notre Dame has “brought extreme embarrassment to many, many people who are Catholic” by inviting the President of the United States to speak at Commencement. The cardinal went on to say, “So whatever else is clear, it is clear that Notre Dame didn’t understand what it means to be Catholic when they issued this invitation.”

But the true embarrassment for Catholics is that the leaders of our Church are buying into this misleading and harmful rhetoric, and thereby lending it false legitimacy.

Plus, in the fervor of the extreme Right to insist that the rest of us aren’t really Catholics, their contrived controversy is distracting the nation from authentic and pressing Life issues. For example, how many American Catholics noticed when last week, the USCCB issued suggestions for the congressional debate on President Obama’s budget? They included

…reforming health care, making sure it is available to all and that it protects and enhances life; funding federal child nutrition programs and domestic agriculture support; restoring funds for affordable housing such as the Section 8 and 202 housing programs; addressing climate change and reducing the burden of those disproportionately affected by it…

Or how about the Pope’s recent letter to UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown at the G-20 economic summit? In it, he insisted that

Development aid, including the commercial and financial conditions favorable to less developed countries and the cancellation of the external debt of the poorest and most indebted countries, has not been the cause of the [current economic] crisis and, out of fundamental justice, must not be its victim.

Overlooking such serious national and global issues will have terrible consequences on the poor and downtrodden of society today. The aim of championing “the least of these” (Mt 25:40) that may authentically motivate the pro-life movement is noble, but the present tactic is counterproductive to that aim. Politicizing Catholic identity harms not only our Church, but also our nation and, in this increasingly globalized society, our world.

In short, it’s clearly not the folks at Notre Dame who no longer “understand what it means to be Catholic.” But it certainly seems that the right-wing agitators who have organized this false controversy may have forgotten just that.

I, like thousands of my fellow Catholics, am proud that President Obama will speak there in May.

To support Notre Dame’s Invitation to President Obama, consider signing these two petitions:

Catholic Democrats’ “Statement of Support For Notre Dame and Its President, And For Catholic Educational Excellence”

Catholics United and Faithful America’s “We Support Notre Dame” petition