Bishop Lennon |
After his appointment in 2006, Bishop Lennon heard concerns raised about the quality of religious instruction in local Catholic schools. Several years of assessments and meetings resulted in changes to the elementary school materials, and a comprehensive overhaul of the high school curriculum.
Based on the Catechism of the Catholic Church and guidelines from the
U.S. bishops’ conference, the new program reintroduces elements of
Catholic tradition that were “known to previous generations of Catholics
but absent from more recent instruction,” Superintendent Lyons told CNA
on June 5.
The curriculum, she said, “underscores Jesus Christ and the Paschal Mystery” as the source of salvation."
Under the new program, she explained, “students read and are guided
through Church documents. They are taught the role and importance of the
Magisterium in guarding and passing on the faith, as well as being a
sure guide to positive thinking and behavior.”
“Additionally, students are instructed in ancient prayer practices
used throughout the Church’s two thousand years of history, including
the Rosary, Lectio Divina, meditation, the Liturgy of the Hours, the
Psalms, litanies and readings in Sacred Scripture.”
In response to widespread confusion about the nature and importance
of the Church, the program also stresses the Church’s unique standing as
a divine and human institution, taught and governed by an apostolic
authority with “its origin in Jesus Christ.”
Cleveland’s new curriculum also seeks to cultivate an enduring and
lifelong faith, capable of standing up to cultural secularism and moral
relativism. Students are challenged to learn about virtue and understand
it as the source of true personal fulfillment, Lyons said.
“The life of virtue is presented as a life that flourishes with what
satisfies their desire for happiness and freedom,” she noted. “Students are instructed in natural moral law, grace and virtue as founded in God.”
Although the program seeks to correct the weaknesses of some recent
approaches to religious education, it does not do away with the goal of
making catechesis relevant to the modern world and the concerns of
youth.
“The instructional strategy,” Lyons said, “is to show to students how
Christ has been present to his Church, not just now, but throughout all
of human history, and so will remain, despite sin, war and internal
turmoil. The Church is the Body of Christ on earth and will remain until
Christ comes again.”
It is from this Christ-centered perspective, she explained, that
students will be taught to “examine the issues found in history and in
the modern era that can cloud the vision of Christ.”
In his letter authorizing the release of the new high school
curriculum, Bishop Lennon praised the diocesan Office of Catholic
Education’s program for offering “both sound doctrine and effective
instructional practice and resources.”
“Save for the celebration of the sacraments,” the Bishop of Cleveland wrote, “there is no more important work than the formation of our young people in the faith.”
By: Benjamin Mann
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