
Catholic Schools Week
By Bishop Paul S. Loverde
Special to the HERALD
(From the issue of 1/31/02)
From Jan. 27 through Feb. 2, Catholic Schools Week is being observed throughout our
nation. I am truly proud of our Catholic schools in this Diocese of Arlington. These
Catholic schools educate 17,000 students in 34 elementary and three secondary schools. I
thank the dedicated principals, teachers and staffs of these schools. I realize that, for
them, their participation in this particular form of Catholic education is more an
apostolate than a job, because many of them remain in our schools despite much sacrifice.
I am likewise grateful to our Diocesan Superintendent Dr. Timothy J. McNiff, to the
Assistant Superintendents Sister Patricia Helene Earl, I.H.M. and Sister Karl Ann Homberg,
S.S.J. and to their staff for all that they do, day in and day out, to support the mission
of our Catholic schools within this dynamic growing diocesan church. I applaud the parents
who send their children to our Catholic schools, often at considerable sacrifice. Parents,
the gift you give to your children in this way will last a lifetime and beyond, because it
is the gift of authentic faith-formation within the context of quality education. This
years theme says this so well: "Catholic Schools: Where Faith and Knowledge
Meet".
During this Catholic Schools Week, I invite us all to reflect on Catholic education,
particularly as it takes on a specific form through the Catholic school. Within Catholic
education, the Catholic school holds a central place. Why? Because in a sustained manner,
the Catholic school provides the opportunity for a person to be formed totally:
physically, intellectually, emotionally and spiritually. I repeat that the Catholic school
does this in a sustained manner five hours per day, five days per week. No other
process of formation has this extended time frame.
In his address on May 30, 1998, to a group of United States bishops making their Ad
Limina visit, the Holy Father stated: "The mission of the Catholic school is the
integral formation of students, so that they may be true to their condition as
Christs disciples and as such work effectively for the evangelization of the culture
and for the common good of society.
A Catholic school is a place where students
live a shared experience of faith in God and where they learn the riches of a Catholic
culture
.Catholic schools must help students to deepen a relationship with God and to
discover that all things human have their deepest meaning in the person and teaching of
Jesus Christ."
This, then, is the heart of Catholic education: that students be formed in the Catholic
faith and culture and thereby come to recognize the deepest meaning of all things in the
person and teachings of Jesus Christ. Whether studying religion, science, history or
mathematics, the students will be led to a deeper understanding of God, if all of these
subjects are fully integrated within a Christian perspective. Conversely, as our students
come to a deeper understanding of God, they will also come to a deeper understanding of
their subjects.
Allow me to share with you some observations made by a Catholic educator concerning
Catholic education. "
we are not in the business of education merely to teach
English and Geography and History better than the public schools. If all we stand for is
more disciplined classrooms and some funny stories about
religious practices for our
students to tell when they become grownups, then theres not much point to continuing
this enterprise, especially given the great struggles most of us face each day. We are
really here for one purpose: so that our students may have life and have it more
abundantly."
The Catholic school facilitates a process "where faith and knowledge meet".
At the center of this process is catechesis, that is, the transmitting of the faith. In
that same address on May 30, 1998, the Holy Father stated: "Catechesis, either in
schools or in parish-based programs, plays a fundamental role in transmitting the
faith." Yes, catechesis transmits faith: faith understood as a way of life whose core
is a person Jesus Christ, the Son of God become flesh; faith understood as the
surrender of the total person to Jesus and to His teachings found in the Sacred
Scriptures, given fuller meaning through the Tradition of the Church and authentically
interpreted by the Teaching Office of the Church; faith understood as a powerful capacity
to live life with meaning to cope; faith understood as the summary and articulation
of what we believe and why we believe what we believe.
Yes, I salute the principals, teachers and staff of all our Catholic schools and echo
gratitude to them for all of their diligent work and dedication. You are engaged in a task
of immense importance; you are forming the future of the Church and of the nation. Love
Christ and transmit that love to your students! Our Holy Father, during that same Ad
Limina visit reflected upon the role of the teacher in Catholic education saying,
"Transmitting knowledge about the faith, though essential, is not sufficient. If
students in Catholic schools are to gain a genuine experience of the Church, the example
of teachers and others responsible for their formation is crucial: The witness of adults
in the school community is a vital part of the schools identity."
We cannot end this reflection on Catholic schools without recalling St. Elizabeth Ann
Seton, the secondary patron of our diocese. Popularly known as Mother Seton, St. Elizabeth
Ann started the first parochial school in the United States. She also opened the first
Catholic orphanage in the United States and founded the Sisters of Charity, who, later on,
entered into a relationship with the Daughters of Charity, originally founded in France by
St. Vincent de Paul and St. Louise de Marillae. St. Elizabeth Ann Seton continues to be a
good role model for Catholic education. Sister Virginia Ann Brooks, a member of the
Daughters of Charity comments: "St. Elizabeth Ann Seton was a good educator because
she cared about the children she taught and their faith life. She helped them to grow and
many (of her students) became leaders of our country and also leaders of the
Church
.It is important for us to remember to care about the children who come to us
for an education and to help them grow in their faith life."
The continuing challenge for us is to provide in our Catholic schools an education that
is second to none. I know all those involved in Catholic education within this diocese
join me in pledging our best efforts in maintaining and developing quality Catholic
schools "Where Faith and Knowledge Meet."
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