Archive for the ‘About Us’ Category

Commencement Address: Part 1

Sunday, January 4th, 2009

Commencement Address at Franciscan University of Steubenville by John F. Kippley, Dec. 13, 2008: Part 1
Sheila and I want to thank the Franciscan University of Steubenville for this great honor. We especially want to thank Fr. Terence Henry; Fr. Christian Oravec and members of the Board of Trustees; Fr. Michael Scanlan; and Members of the Board of Advisors for honoring our work of the past 40 years in this way.

Honored members of the University, fellow graduates, parents, family and friends, we thank you for being here and for making this school the great University that it is. 

You have honored us for our work in the field of Natural Family Planning and for upholding sexual morality in marriage.  We are most happy to accept this honor not just for ourselves but also on behalf of all those who work in the Natural Family Planning apostolate, and especially on behalf of those who teach as volunteers.  Some couples have been teaching Natural Family Planning —or NFP for short—as volunteers for more than 30 years.  They obviously believe that the NFP apostolate is extremely important. 

President Franklin D. Roosevelt once was asked what makes a good speech.  He replied, “Be brief, be sincere, and be seated.”  I will try to follow that advice.

Commencement means a beginning, not an ending.  This is the beginning of the life for which you have prepared for the last four years or more.  First, I want to congratulate you for earning your college degrees.  You have worked hard.  You have done research.  You have written papers and passed your examinations.  You are prepared in many different ways to contribute to the various work and social environments in which you will be active.  You are prepared to use your special gifts in the service of your families, your Church, your place of work, and your culture. 

You are about to start working or doing further academic work in a world where your Catholic faith will be challenged.  Your education here at Franciscan University has prepared you to meet these challenges.  In fact, you are among the best prepared college graduates in the world to bring your education and your other gifts to meet those challenges.  You won’t know the answer to every challenge you meet, but part of your education consists in learning how and where to find the answers so that you can continue a constructive dialogue.  Responding in a positive way to the challenges to your faith will provide you with some of your greatest satisfactions in life.  

We all know that you are graduating in tough economic times.  Who could have imagined the current situation when you started your freshman year or graduate studies?  Sheila and I join you in praying that you may soon be working in your chosen field.  May God bless your every effort to use your gifts in his service.

To be continued next week.

NFP Celebration

Sunday, December 28th, 2008

NFP Celebration for the Kippleys

   We were gratified to receive honorary degrees at Franciscan University of Steubenville’s Winter Commencement on December 13, 2008  for “a lifetime of work in teaching Natural Family Planning (NFP) and upholding sexual morality in marriage.”
   The following address was given by Rev. Terence Henry TOR, President of Franciscan University, before the conferral of the honorary degrees:
   “For the past 40 years, John and Sheila Kippley have helped tens of thousands of couples understand and embrace the Church’s teachings on life. Beginning in 1971, shortly after Pope Paul VI released his encyclical Humanae Vitae, the couple started teaching Natural Family Planning classes in their Minnesota parish.  In addition to the Sympto-Thermal Method, those classes also included Sheila’s research on ecological breastfeeding, which she had published in 1969 in her book, Breastfeeding and Natural Child Spacing.
   In 1972, the Kippleys moved to Cincinnati, Ohio, where they began work on their landmark book, The Art of Natural Family Planning (1973), and started training other couples to teach Natural Family Planning methods.  Within a few short years, their efforts went global, with their work eventually receiving the endorsement of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops.  To date, well over 200,000 couples have attended NFP classes in the U.S. alone, and thousands of books, tapes, and newsletters on NFP have been distributed worldwide.
   In 2004 the Kippleys established Natural Family Planning International to continue their efforts to educate couples on the problems of birth control and the benefits of Natural Family Planning and breastfeeding.
   Married for more than 45 years, the Kippleys have five children and many grandchildren.”

Franciscan University honors Fr. Pacwa and Kippleys

Sunday, November 23rd, 2008

STEUBENVILLE, OH—In response to sustained growth in student enrollment, Franciscan University of Steubenville will host its first-ever December commencement ceremony on Saturday, December 13, 2008.   This announcement was posted October 29, 2008.

Bachelor’s and master’s degrees will be awarded to the approximately 180 students who have qualified for graduation since May 2008.

Father Mitch Pacwa, SJEvents begin at 10:00 a.m. Saturday with the Baccalaureate Mass in Finnegan Fieldhouse. The main celebrant and homilist will be Father Mitch Pacwa, SJ, who will receive an honorary doctorate in Christian ethics.

Known to millions of television viewers as the host of EWTN Live and other programs on the EWTN television and radio networks, Father Pacwa works arduously to educate Catholics about their faith and teach people about the Scriptures. He is the founder of Ignatius Productions and has written books and produced videos on apologetics, the sacrament of confession, the New Age movement, the Holy Land, Eastern religions, and many other faith topics. He is often called upon to explain and defend the Catholic faith on the national media and speaks at over 30 Catholic conferences each year. Fluent in 12 languages, including Arabic, Aramaic, Hebrew, and Koine Greek, he has led over 50 pilgrimages to the Holy Land.

Immediately following Mass, the graduate and undergraduate commencement will take place in Finnegan Fieldhouse. The December 2008 graduating class of approximately 105 undergraduate and 70 graduate students will represent 30 states as well as Korea, Jamaica, and Canada. Theology, mental health, English, business, and biology are the top five majors of this graduating class.

During the ceremony, John and Sheila Kippley will receive honorary doctorates in Christian ethics for a lifetime of work teaching Natural Family Planning (NFP) and upholding sexual morality in marriage. John Kippley will deliver the commencement address.

John Kippley Married 45 years, the Kippleys began teaching Natural Family Planning in 1971, devoting much of their early efforts to countering negative stereotypes associated with NFP and becoming among the first lay advocates of Pope Paul VI’s prophetic 1968 encyclical, Humanae Vitae.

Since then the Kippleys have become some of the leading voices of the Natural Family Planning movement within the Catholic Church, receiving the endorsement of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops along the way. To date, well Sheila Kippleyover 200,000 couples have attended NFP classes in the U.S. alone, and thousands of books, tapes, and newsletters on NFP have been distributed worldwide. In 2004 the Kippleys established Natural Family Planning International to continue their efforts to educate couples on the problems of birth control and the positive benefits of Natural Family Planning and breastfeeding.

Graduates will receive their degrees from Franciscan University president Father Terence Henry, TOR, with Father Christian Oravec, TOR, chairman of the Board of Trustees, and other University representatives presiding at the ceremony.

More information about December 2008 commencement activities is available online, and live streaming video of the day’s events will also be available on the University’s Web site beginning at 10:00 a.m.

© 2008 Franciscan University of Steubenville