Educational institutions
29. «Education can play an outstanding role in promoting the inculturation
of the Gospel» (Ecclesia in America, 71). Education brings the child
through adolescence to maturity. It begins within the family, which is always
the best context for education. Any pastoral approach to culture and any deep
evangelization relies heavily on education, and has the family as its
starting-point; Athe place where the education of the person primarily takes
place» (Ibid.).
But when families are beset by so many different problems, they cannot be
expected to cope alone. Hence the greater importance of educational
institutions. In many countries, the Church carries out her mission as an
educator and teacher by running nurseries or kindergartens, schools, colleges,
high schools, universities and research centres. These Catholic institutions
have the specific vocation of bringing Gospel values to the heart of culture.
In order to do this, those who are pastorally responsible for these
institutions must draw the substance of their educational projects from
Christ's message and from the teaching of the Church. However, to implement
their mission, such institutions depend largely on means that are often scarce.
One must accept the facts of the matter in order to grasp the challenge: the
Church is obliged to dedicate a considerable part of its human and financial
resources to education so as to respond to the mission it received from Christ,
to proclaim the Gospel. In all cases, one need remains: that of associating a
concern for deep human and Christian formation with that of providing serious
academic formation.(23) For the multitude of young people who attend
educational institutions throughout the world can frequently, despite the
efforts and the competence of teachers, be fully educated but partially
deculturated.
In the broader picture of a pastoral approach to culture and with a view to
providing students with the specific formation which they have a right to
expect, Catholic universities, colleges and research centres should take care
to ensure a fruitful encounter between the Gospel and the different cultural
expressions. These institutions can contribute in an original and irreplaceable
way to a genuine formation in cultural values, which is an ideal basis for the
symbiosis between faith and the intellectual life. In this respect, it is
recommended that special attention be given to the teaching of philosophy,
history and literature as they are essential elements for the encounter between
the faith and the different cultures.
The presence of the Church in the university and in university
culture,(24) together with those practical initiatives which make this
presence effective, demand rigorous discernment and unstinting efforts to
promote a new Christian culture, one which is enriched by the best achievements
in every field of university activity.
Priests, men and women religious, and well-prepared lay people are urgently
needed in this task of human and Christian formation. Their joint efforts will
allow Catholic educational institutions to bring their influence to bear on the
production of educational material, as well as on teachers themselves
(professionals of culture). They can also help spread a Christian model of
relationships between teachers and pupils, at the heart of a genuine
educational community. Forming minds and consciences is one of the principal
goals of a pastoral approach to culture.
30. Schools are, by definition, places of cultural initiation and in
certain countries, for many centuries, places where a culture forged by
Christianity is transmitted. While Areligious instruction» is allowed in
schools in many countries, this is not the case everywhere. But, in both
situations, we are faced with the same basic question: the relationship between
religious education and catechesis. There is reasonable concern that those
whose job it is to teach obligatory Areligion» classes will, in reality, have
to restrict them to basic religious education. It seems inevitable that, with
ever fewer young people having access to catechesis worthy of the name, and
without support from elsewhere, religious culture among the younger generations
will soon collapse. Hence the urgent need to re-think the relationship between
religious education and catechesis, and the need to find a new way of relating
the need for exact and impartial information C which is in danger of vanishing
C to the overriding importance of witness. Schools and parishes need to
complement each other in this area. Choosing teachers who can link these two
areas more clearly is indispensable if this demanding but promising pastoral
challenge is to be met successfully.
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