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A Catholic Education for Every Catholic Kid
Catholic Exchange ^ | September 17, 2007 | Heidi Bratton

Posted on 09/18/2007 4:37:07 PM PDT by NYer

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Heidi Bratton writes from Cape Cod, MA where she pens a column for Catholic families called "Home Grown Faith." For seasonal and topical collections of her columns email her at homegrownfaith@gmail.com.  Heidi is also a homeschool parent of five children, a professional photographer, the author of eleven Christian children's books, and a book for moms, Making Peace with Motherhood and Creating a Better You. Her books are available through www.paulistpress.com.
1 posted on 09/18/2007 4:37:10 PM PDT by NYer
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To: Lady In Blue; Salvation; narses; SMEDLEYBUTLER; redhead; Notwithstanding; nickcarraway; Romulus; ...
This is a very timely and important article that we will follow over the next few postings. As a Catholic educated by the nuns in post WWII America, and as the parent of an adult who was educated through a combination of Cathoic School / CCD, I was particularly taken with the last paragraph:

A generation or two ago, many Catholic parents were able to turn to parochial school systems for help in living up to their baptismal promise.  Today, not as many parents are able to draw on this valuable resource.  If we cannot access the help of a good Catholic school system, we will need to be more disciplined ourselves about investing time and energy in educating their hearts, hands, and heads in all things Catholic. 

I confess that in sending my daughter off to Catholic School, I assumed, out of sheer ignorance, that the teaching methods would be the same used when I attended school. It was a sad shock and sorry surprise to learn, from my daughter, that oftentimes Religion class was shelved in favor of devoting more time to Science or Mathematics. It wasn’t until she was well into CCD at our local parish, that I learned the ugly truth of what is being taught at the local (liberal) RC parishes. It was a struggle to get her to Confirmation (that would be 11th grade in our diocese) and then have her drop out because I was teaching one of the other Confirmation groups. As many of you know, it was then that I picked up the weapon of choice - the Rosary - and began praying. One year later, my daughter returned to the CCD program and was Confirmed in the Faith. I have never shed more tears of anguish and joy than I did over those two years.


That said, I must apologize for being lax in posting articles to the forum over the past few days. The pastor of our small Maronite Catholic Church asked me to head up the Religious Education program and I have spent the past few weeks exploring catechetical materials from different sources. The complexity of this task is in assigning students to groups. As a small parish with only 15 children, their ages range the gamut from Pre-K to 10th grade. We are only 4 instructors. Amongst these children, there are 2 (grades 3 and 7) who have neither been baptized, nor recieved any religious instruction. We have one 1st grader who repeated Kindergarten and one 2nd grader preparing for the Sacraments of Penance and Holy Eucharist. We also have two children (8th and 10th grades) who were not chrismated at Baptism and are now candidates for Confirmation.

Last night, Father and I spent 3 hours developing a curriculum to cover the (only) 15 classes of religous education on the calendar. The added challenge was to select the proper materials to be used and then pick and choose which units might be covered - matching them to the liturgical calendar. And that was strictly for Pre-K! The formula, however, works as a template for the other classes, as well.

Letters of invitation were sent out to the parish families two weeks ago, with no response. Last Sunday, with Father’s permission, I got up after Mass to make an announcement. I used this opportunity to explain to the parents just what their children would be learning this year. Beginning with the Pre-K/K program, I told them the youngest children would be learning about the Trinity, Creation, why God made them, the 10 Commandments, loving others, the Church, Sin, Baptism and forgiveness. The older children would embark on a journey through time and space to learn specifically more about the Maronite Church. The would meet 1st century martyrs, Eastern Catholic Fathers and then pack their belongings to join other Maronites as they flee persecution in the fertile valleys of Syria for the unknow mountains of Lebanon. Along the way, they would meet Abbot Alexander of Bet Maroon and hear him speak of how the Jacobites killed 350 of his monks.

To drive home the value and importance of Religious Education, I, a Roman Catholic, addressed these Maronite parents and grandparents, reminding them of an event that took place in 1860. The Muslims attacked a Convent. The Superior, knowing what was about to happen, promised to show the invaders the hiding place of a great treasure. (Remember, there was no electrity back then). He led them into the Church, lit 2 candlelabras, opened the Tabernacle and swallowed the Consecrated Hosts. The Muslims killed him immediately, on the altar. There were witnesses to this event - the Blessed Massabki Brothers. The Muslims promised to spare their families if they would convert to Islam. One by one, each brother defended his Catholic faith and was slaughtered. The last one was Francis. He chose his carefully chose his response.

“Sheik Abdallah can take the money I lent him; he can also take my life. But my faith, no one can make me deny. I am a Maronite Catholic and on the faith of Christ I will die.”.

They massacred him with swords, hatchets and daggars.

To my total surprise and chagrin ( I detest public displays of emotion ), the assembled congregation applauded. They also came over to me after Mass and signed up their children, on the spot, for their religious education classes.

As noted, the great challenge is in grouping the children at proper learning levels. As Maronites, these children need to learn about their ancestry, saints, Patriarchs, and the permanent link that binds the Maronites to Holy Mother Church. More importantly, the parents of these children need to spend more time in prayer with them. This Sunday, I will address that issue and introduce them to the prayers their children will be learning from the very basic auricular prayers to meditative and contemplative prayers. The older children will be introduced to the daily prayers of the Maronite Divine Office.

Please remember these children in your prayers! This Sunday, for the first time in the 102 year history of this parish, the pastor will celebrate the Rite of Commissioning, at Mass. It is an awesome task, to say the least, but I simply can’t say “no”.

Thank you all for your support, understanding, and prayers.

I would like to publicly acknowledge Ignatius Press for their support in assisting this small parish by providing a wealth of materials for our consideration. Their Image of God series, is the one we have chosen for our program.

2 posted on 09/18/2007 4:41:05 PM PDT by NYer ("Where the bishop is present, there is the Catholic Church" - Ignatius of Antioch)
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To: Lady In Blue; Salvation; narses; SMEDLEYBUTLER; redhead; Notwithstanding; nickcarraway; Romulus; ...
This is a very timely and important article that we will follow over the next few postings. As a Catholic educated by the nuns in post WWII America, and as the parent of an adult who was educated through a combination of Cathoic School / CCD, I was particularly taken with the last paragraph:

A generation or two ago, many Catholic parents were able to turn to parochial school systems for help in living up to their baptismal promise.  Today, not as many parents are able to draw on this valuable resource.  If we cannot access the help of a good Catholic school system, we will need to be more disciplined ourselves about investing time and energy in educating their hearts, hands, and heads in all things Catholic. 

I confess that in sending my daughter off to Catholic School, I assumed, out of sheer ignorance, that the teaching methods would be the same used when I attended school. It was a sad shock and sorry surprise to learn, from my daughter, that oftentimes Religion class was shelved in favor of devoting more time to Science or Mathematics. It wasn’t until she was well into CCD at our local parish, that I learned the ugly truth of what is being taught at the local (liberal) RC parishes. It was a struggle to get her to Confirmation (that would be 11th grade in our diocese) and then have her drop out because I was teaching one of the other Confirmation groups. As many of you know, it was then that I picked up the weapon of choice - the Rosary - and began praying. One year later, my daughter returned to the CCD program and was Confirmed in the Faith. I have never shed more tears of anguish and joy than I did over those two years.


That said, I must apologize for being lax in posting articles to the forum over the past few days. The pastor of our small Maronite Catholic Church asked me to head up the Religious Education program and I have spent the past few weeks exploring catechetical materials from different sources. The complexity of this task is in assigning students to groups. As a small parish with only 15 children, their ages range the gamut from Pre-K to 10th grade. We are only 4 instructors. Amongst these children, there are 2 (grades 3 and 7) who have neither been baptized, nor recieved any religious instruction. We have one 1st grader who repeated Kindergarten and one 2nd grader preparing for the Sacraments of Penance and Holy Eucharist. We also have two children (8th and 10th grades) who were not chrismated at Baptism and are now candidates for Confirmation.

Last night, Father and I spent 3 hours developing a curriculum to cover the (only) 15 classes of religous education on the calendar. The added challenge was to select the proper materials to be used and then pick and choose which units might be covered - matching them to the liturgical calendar. And that was strictly for Pre-K! The formula, however, works as a template for the other classes, as well.

Letters of invitation were sent out to the parish families two weeks ago, with no response. Last Sunday, with Father’s permission, I got up after Mass to make an announcement. I used this opportunity to explain to the parents just what their children would be learning this year. Beginning with the Pre-K/K program, I told them the youngest children would be learning about the Trinity, Creation, why God made them, the 10 Commandments, loving others, the Church, Sin, Baptism and forgiveness. The older children would embark on a journey through time and space to learn specifically more about the Maronite Church. The would meet 1st century martyrs, Eastern Catholic Fathers and then pack their belongings to join other Maronites as they flee persecution in the fertile valleys of Syria for the unknow mountains of Lebanon. Along the way, they would meet Abbot Alexander of Bet Maroon and hear him speak of how the Jacobites killed 350 of his monks.

To drive home the value and importance of Religious Education, I, a Roman Catholic, addressed these Maronite parents and grandparents, reminding them of an event that took place in 1860. The Muslims attacked a Convent. The Superior, knowing what was about to happen, promised to show the invaders the hiding place of a great treasure. (Remember, there was no electrity back then). He led them into the Church, lit 2 candlelabras, opened the Tabernacle and swallowed the Consecrated Hosts. The Muslims killed him immediately, on the altar. There were witnesses to this event - the Blessed Massabki Brothers. The Muslims promised to spare their families if they would convert to Islam. One by one, each brother defended his Catholic faith and was slaughtered. The last one was Francis. He chose his carefully chose his response.

“Sheik Abdallah can take the money I lent him; he can also take my life. But my faith, no one can make me deny. I am a Maronite Catholic and on the faith of Christ I will die.”.

They massacred him with swords, hatchets and daggars.

To my total surprise and chagrin ( I detest public displays of emotion ), the assembled congregation applauded. They also came over to me after Mass and signed up their children, on the spot, for their religious education classes.

As noted, the great challenge is in grouping the children at proper learning levels. As Maronites, these children need to learn about their ancestry, saints, Patriarchs, and the permanent link that binds the Maronites to Holy Mother Church. More importantly, the parents of these children need to spend more time in prayer with them. This Sunday, I will address that issue and introduce them to the prayers their children will be learning from the very basic auricular prayers to meditative and contemplative prayers. The older children will be introduced to the daily prayers of the Maronite Divine Office.

Please remember these children in your prayers! This Sunday, for the first time in the 102 year history of this parish, the pastor will celebrate the Rite of Commissioning, at Mass. It is an awesome task, to say the least, but I simply can’t say “no”.

Thank you all for your support, understanding, and prayers.

I would like to publicly acknowledge Ignatius Press for their support in assisting this small parish by providing a wealth of materials for our consideration. Their Image of God series, is the one we have chosen for our program.

3 posted on 09/18/2007 4:42:20 PM PDT by NYer ("Where the bishop is present, there is the Catholic Church" - Ignatius of Antioch)
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To: NYer

Paulist Press??? For real???


4 posted on 09/18/2007 4:50:48 PM PDT by madprof98 ("moritur et ridet" - salvianus)
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To: NYer

Many Catholic schools accept Muslim students, who can afford the tuition, while many Catholic students can’t. I have always refused to make a contribution to any Catholic school or college as long as there is ONE Muslim on campus.

Very un-Christian of me, huh? Then, so be it - my conscience is clear.


5 posted on 09/18/2007 4:59:09 PM PDT by 353FMG (Government is the opiate of the people.)
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To: madprof98
That was my reaction, as well. They sent me a sample of their Confirmation booklet. To my amazement, it included a large writeup on Cardinal Bernardin in which the authors were most sympathetic. There isn't enough fuel in the fireplace to consume this slim volume. That is why I was so pleased with the materials form Ignatius Press.
6 posted on 09/18/2007 5:03:20 PM PDT by NYer ("Where the bishop is present, there is the Catholic Church" - Ignatius of Antioch)
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To: NYer

**A Catholic Education for Every Catholic Kid**

Amen!

If I had it to do over, my children would all go to Catholic School. (All five of them!)


7 posted on 09/18/2007 5:07:31 PM PDT by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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To: NYer
Good for you! Your efforts in preparing a sound and orthodox course of instruction for the children will pay big dividends . . . in this life and the next!

I was SO grateful that our parish has a good CCD program!

8 posted on 09/18/2007 7:08:44 PM PDT by AnAmericanMother ((Ministrix of Ye Chase, TTGC Ladies' Auxiliary (recess appointment)))
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To: NYer
Good luck and God Bless you on our journey of teaching Religious Education. Wish you much success.

I also went the Catholic school route when my children started school years ago. The religious education they received in school was watered down and liberal. I could go into many examples of the cafeteria-style religious liberalism being taught, but I don't have enough time. We had to pull them out as my husband and I felt this kind of education was endangering their souls. We are fully aware of the responsibility God has given us and decided to teach them ourselves while still having them attend Sunday school at another parish. It was and has been a very good decision.

9 posted on 09/18/2007 7:09:18 PM PDT by Gerish (Feed your faith and your doubts will starve to death.)
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To: Gerish
"We are fully aware of the responsibility God has given us and decided to teach them ourselves while still having them attend Sunday school at another parish."

Amen to that. Pray for my kids, if I may ask, and I will pray for yours.

10 posted on 09/19/2007 5:10:09 AM PDT by Mrs. Don-o (An honest man is the noblest work of God.)
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To: NYer

The Church has always taught that parents are the primary educators of their children in the faith. And the primary way to teach one’s children the faith is to live the faith—to go to Mass each week, to pray each day, to do spiritual reading, and to discuss religious issues and matters at home. If parents do that than it is possible for them to send their children to a less-than-perfect parochial school or even to public school and CCD and still have them grow up to be good Catholics. If parents don’t practice the faith or discuss it often with their children, it won’t matter where they send them to school because the kids will grow up thinking that religion isn’t an important part of daily life let alone the most important part.


11 posted on 09/19/2007 5:29:05 AM PDT by steadfastconservative
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To: steadfastconservative

You are absolutely correct. Let’s not forget that there are many of us for whom Catholic schools are simply not an option. We live in a rural area. There’s no Catholic schooling available here, but we teach the kids the faith at home to the best of our ability and send them to CCD as well.

And if you think that all you have to do to ensure that your kid grows up in the faith is pack them off to Catholic school, you are dead wrong. My brother went to a very prestigious Catholic high school, and the last time he saw the inside of a church was at his wedding twenty years ago. I was a public school kid with a crappy “spirit of Vatican II” CCD program, and by the grace of God, I am the one who is a practicing Catholic.

Catholic schools are great, but they are not a panacea. Kids need Catholic families more than they need Catholic schools.


12 posted on 09/19/2007 5:41:08 AM PDT by Juana la Loca
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To: NYer

Great story (your talk to the parish and their response). When people hear of Christianity being taken seriously, it makes them sit up and take notice!

Good luck with your religious ed program. It’s vitally important and it is wonderful that you are doing this.


13 posted on 09/19/2007 5:47:40 AM PDT by livius
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To: Juana la Loca
Kids need Catholic families more than they need Catholic schools.

Worth repeating!

14 posted on 09/19/2007 5:52:20 AM PDT by Tax-chick (This is not a post about religion or cults. It's a post about catapults.)
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To: NYer

Great. Now the problem is this: With diabolical forces so deeply penetrating the US Catholic churches that the director of domestic policy for the USCCB is a political flak who teach abortionists’s stooges how to make themselves look Christian, where do we go for a Catholic education?

That ain’t rhetoric.


15 posted on 09/19/2007 6:13:15 AM PDT by dangus
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To: dangus

http://www.setonhome.org/


16 posted on 09/19/2007 6:17:15 AM PDT by Tax-chick (This is not a post about religion or cults. It's a post about catapults.)
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To: NYer

I write that as a future parent who is exasperated at the thought of Catholic schools, using their authority as supposed representatives of the Catholic faith, actively undermining what I teach them. I sometimes think public school is preferable, because then the kids will at least know that what they encounter in school is contrary to their faith.


17 posted on 09/19/2007 6:18:23 AM PDT by dangus
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To: Tax-chick

AWESOME! And the center is close enough to where I currently live, I can even drive out there to get resources, if I need to.


18 posted on 09/19/2007 6:20:33 AM PDT by dangus
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To: Tax-chick

That is such a fantastic idea: Christ-centered distance learning for Home Schoolers! I think *I’M* going to read the books they recommend for the High School reading list.


19 posted on 09/19/2007 6:26:25 AM PDT by dangus
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To: NYer

I had to pull my daughter out of “Catholic” school in the middle of first grade last year. We learned over the course of the three years she attended that it was CINO and not even generically Christian. Sure, there were statues of the Blessed Mother and crucifixes in each classroom, but attending this school (the only Catholic school in our former city) was all about tradition and social standing.

My daughter was bullied every single day by 1) a judge’s daughter, 2) a doctor’s daughter, 2) the daughter of the president of the school board, 3) anyone else who cared to glom on. I told the guidance counselor about it within the first six weeks of school, and he did absolutely nothing — except tell me that I needed to lighten up and let DD watch more television.

The situation was really grim — my little girl was crying every day, couldn’t eat, didn’t sleep. I offered up Rosary after Rosary, and finally one day my daughter climbed up in my lap after school and asked me to homeschool her forever. I had never considered homeschooling before.

I took DD out of school and was completely ostracized. We moved in May, and I intended to put DD into Catholic school here, but she just wasn’t ready to face that again. Now I’m meeting more parents who have children in our school and I see that we’d be facing much the same situation as before.

I can’t even consider putting her into public school here in Barak Obama Land.

I never thought I would homeschool, but I’ve come to realize that’s the only way I’m going to be able to ensure my children get the education they need. I’m not a wow-homeschooling-is-awesome mom, but our current situation (state of local parochial schools, state of public schools) leaves me no other option.


20 posted on 09/19/2007 6:32:49 AM PDT by Sashula
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