National Catholic leaders appointed to board of University of St. Thomas in Houston

Amira Abuzeid By Amira Abuzeid for EWTN News

The new board members said they are inspired by the university’s move toward building a stronger Catholic identity and the hope they see in young people.

National Catholic leaders appointed to board of University of St. Thomas in Houston
The Chapel of St. Basil at the University of St. Thomas in Houston. | Credit: Photo courtesy of the University of St. Thomas

As it continues the “confident renewal of its Catholic identity,” the University of St. Thomas in Houston announced the appointment of three influential Catholic leaders to its board of directors this week.

The new board members are R.R. “Rusty” Reno, editor of First Things; Adam Laxalt, the former attorney general of Nevada; and Mary Eberstadt, writer and senior research fellow at the Faith and Reason Institute in Washington, D.C.

Reno told EWTN News he would like to see the school become a leader on the American Catholic academic scene.

“It’s a Thomistic institute,” said Reno, a former theology professor, “and there’s a unique opportunity to put forward the Thomistic tradition in the context of American Catholic higher education in an intellectually strong and robust way.”

The three join the university board as the school “is poised to take its place among the leading Catholic institutions in our country,” school President Sinda Vanderpool said in a press release April 28.

“The university’s governance now draws upon voices who have shaped national conversations in faith, culture, law, and public life,” said board chairman Craig Jarchow in the press release.

“We live in a time when the academic culture, which is secular and progressive, exerts tremendous influence over the formation of young people,” Reno said. “A Catholic university requires a very clear and explicit mission to avoid drifting and becoming like any other university with a chapel. You don’t want that.”

The University of St. Thomas in Houston. | Credit: Photo courtesy of the University of St. Thomas
The University of St. Thomas in Houston. | Credit: Photo courtesy of the University of St. Thomas

Eberstadt told EWTN News “the fact that UST has this enthusiastic, unapologetically Catholic leadership“ is ”what drew me to the school.”

“Against the backdrop of secularization, and all the things that we know are wrong in the West,” the writer said she is seeing what she calls “the next American awakening.”

Seeing “new forms of fellowship and outreach, Catholic and Protestant alike, including on campuses where there had never been such things before,” is exciting, she said.

“It is clear that something is stirring, and so when I saw this in action at UST, I wanted to be a part of it and not just to keep telling people this was out there, but to participate in building it.”

The school is now “the Catholic ‘room where it happens,’” Eberstadt said.

Laxalt, a former naval officer and Iraq veteran, agreed, telling EWTN News that there is “an orthodox Catholic revival going on in the U.S. and our youth are seeking more depth and formation in their education.”

“One of the things I have most cherished, both in and out of public service, is mentoring young people,” he said. “I am honored to support UST in grounding students in the Catholic intellectual tradition.”

Eberstadt said she hopes that as a board member, she can help “enhance the social lives of the students because I know from my research, and we all know after COVID, thereʼs been a real collapse of socializing, in Gen Z especially.”

She said she hopes this will build “community that will be part of their battle armor that they will take into their lives after they leave the university, so they will be grounded in a network, a spiritual network and a network of fellowship.”

Practically, she said she would like to see the university add square dances to its cultural repertoire.

“It’s very small ‘d’ democratic,” she laughed. “You have to dance with everybody, you don’t have to have a partner, and it has the spiritual dimension of bringing students together who would otherwise be looking at their phones.”

“And the fact that it’s an American pastime … It’s an American thing, perfect for the 250th anniversary of our country,” she said.


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