8. Catholic Schools
The
influence of the Church in the field of education is shown in a special manner
by the Catholic school. No less than other schools does the Catholic school
pursue cultural goals and the human formation of youth. But its proper function
is to create for the school community a special atmosphere animated by the
Gospel spirit of freedom and charity, to help youth grow according to the new
creatures they were made through baptism as they develop their own
personalities, and finally to order the whole of human culture to the news of
salvation so that the knowledge the students gradually acquire of the world,
life and man is illumined by faith.25 So indeed the Catholic school,
while it is open, as it must be, to the situation of the contemporary world,
leads its students to promote efficaciously the good of the earthly city and
also prepares them for service in the spread of the Kingdom of God, so that by
leading an exemplary apostolic life they become, as it were, a saving leaven in
the human community.
Since,
therefore, the Catholic school can be such an aid to the fulfillment of the
mission of the People of God and to the fostering of the dialogue between the
Church and mankind, to the benefit of both, it retains even in our present circumstances
the utmost importance. Consequently this sacred synod proclaims anew what has
already been taught in several documents of the magisterium,26 namely:
the right of the Church freely to establish and to conduct schools of every
type and level. And the council calls to mind that the exercise of a right of
this kind contributes in the highest degree to the protection of freedom of
conscience, the rights of parents, as well as to the betterment of culture
itself.
But let teachers
recognize that the Catholic school depends upon them almost entirely for the
accomplishment of its goals and programs.27 They should therefore be
very carefully prepared so that both in secular and religious knowledge they
are equipped with suitable qualifications and also with a pedagogical skill
that is in keeping with the findings of the contemporary world. Intimately
linked in charity to one another and to their students and endowed with an
apostolic spirit, may teachers by their life as much as by their instruction
bear witness to Christ, the unique Teacher. Let them work as partners with
parents and together with them in every phase of education give due
consideration to the difference of sex and the proper ends Divine Providence
assigns to each sex in the family and in society. Let them do all they can to
stimulate their students to act for themselves and even after graduation to
continue to assist them with advice, friendship and by establishing special
associations imbued with the true spirit of the Church. The work of these
teachers, this sacred synod declares, is in the real sense of the word an
apostolate most suited to and necessary for our times and at once a true
service offered to society. The Council also reminds Catholic parents of the
duty of entrusting their children to Catholic schools wherever and whenever it
is possible and of supporting these schools to the best of their ability and of
cooperating with them for the education of their children.28
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