
Back to School and Closer to Jesus
By Bishop Paul S. Loverde
Special to the Herald
(From the issue of 9/2/04)
The school bells are ringing throughout our diocese. Just outside our
Chancery windows in Arlington, I have seen parents dropping their children
off for school all week. For those just beginning school, this week is
particularly momentous. For all of our students, the journey of learning and
of living the faith stretches out before them.
Indeed, there is a tangible sense of anticipation and excitement in the
air as this new academic year begins. Over 17,800 children are enrolled in
our Catholic schools this year, representing a 7 percent increase from five
years ago.
But to what are our children being called this year?
Once again, our young people are being invited to open their minds to the
Good News of Jesus Christ. Our Catholic schools provide the opportunity for
our children to be formed totally: physically, intellectually, emotionally
and spiritually.
Five days per week, five hours per day: that is an extensive formation, a
priceless opportunity for "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" (Pope John Paul II, May 30, 1998). This formation
is also sustained and nurtured through our catechetical programs and youth
ministry. All these instruments of faith formation — the Catholic school,
catechetical programs and youth ministry — assist parents, who are the
primary teachers of the Faith within the "domestic church" of the family.
The Holy Father has announced the Year of the Eucharist, beginning this
October, and ending in October of 2005. During this year, it is my prayer
and hope that the formation which takes place in our schools, catechetical
programs and youth ministry will deepen our young people’s understanding of
the Eucharist, that they and we would all see more clearly the intrinsic
connection between how we worship and how we live. May this Year of the
Eucharist be one in which our unity with Him in the Eucharist bears fruit
beyond our church walls and informs every aspect of our lives.
I am so proud of the central role our 43 Catholic schools play (39
diocesan, four private), and I salute the teachers, staff and principals of
all our Catholic schools. I echo gratitude to them for all of their diligent
work and dedication. Together you are doing nothing less than forming the
future of the Church and of the nation. I commend our schools as they focus
this year on solidarity, a key principle contained in our Catholic social
teachings that is rooted in our bond in justice and charity.
Recently our Holy Father said, "Now is above all the hour of the lay
faithful, who, by their specific vocation to shape the secular world in
accordance with the Gospel, are called to carry forward the Church’s
prophetic mission by evangelizing the various spheres of family, social,
professional and cultural life" (Ad Limina address, May 28, 2004). May our
Catholic schools significantly advance the formation of tomorrow’s Catholic
adults, so that they will be equipped to continue the work of the "new
evangelization."
Whether we are in school or not, the school bells are calling all of us
forward this year — forward to a deeper formation, a more prophetic
evangelizing in our spheres of life. Throughout the approaching ‘Year of the
Eucharist,’ may the irresistible call of Jesus Christ spill over into every
aspect of our lives! May our awareness of His Presence be such that others
look at us and see Him. If we do this, it will be a school year we all look
back on with gratitude and wonder.
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