|
Fit for Mission
Bishop Hits Government Wall in Trying to Improve Schools
BY JOANNA BOGLE REGISTER CORRESPONDENT
March 30-April 5, 2008 Issue |
Posted 3/25/08 at 12:34 PM
LONDON — It seemed straightforward at first. A bishop
published a document calling for improvements in Catholic education and
affirming that the task of a Catholic school was to pass on the Catholic faith
as part of a team with local parishes.
Fit for Mission, by Bishop Patrick O’Donoghue of Lancaster
in the North of England, became an instant success. Demand for copies was
overwhelming, and the Catholic Truth Society — Britain’s leading publisher of
Catholic booklets — published a pamphlet version which is selling well.
There were enthusiastic headlines in the Catholic press, and
a commendation from the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith in Rome.
The document called for clear and consistent teaching of
Catholic doctrine, crucifixes in every school, regular Masses and opportunities
for confession for all pupils, and a ban on any forms of sex education
promoting lifestyles not consistent with Catholic teaching.
“We in the diocese of Lancaster have been pleasantly
surprised and greatly encouraged by the response from Catholics across the
country and indeed in other parts of the world,” diocesan Director of Education
Father Luis Ruscillo said.
“I see this as a courageous stand by the bishop, giving
clear leadership, both within the Catholic community and beyond,” he said.
“Catholic schools are part of the body of Christ with their local parishes.
Clear and confident teaching is what is expected and needed.
“My clear task now is to see the gradual implementation of
this report, working with the head teachers and others in positions of
leadership in our schools.”
But then the politicians became involved.
Bishop O’Donoghue was accused by Member of Parliament Barry
Shearman of seeking to impose fundamentalism on children in the schools,
especially with regard to marriage and family life.
Shearman failed to return phone calls from the Register.
Catholic and Church of England schools in Britain receive
generous public funding — a recognition of the fact that for some thousand
years of British history, all education was provided by the Church and that
many parents — not merely churchgoers — want to send their children to Church
schools.
Parents sending their children to Catholic schools do not
need to pay fees, and the cost of the schools is met in large measure by public
funds, with additional support from the Catholic community at Sunday
collections.
Under Fire
But it is precisely this that has caused the difficulty.
Publicity over Bishop O’Donoghue’s report coincided with the annual allocation
of school children moving on to secondary schools at age 11. Many disappointed
parents, whose children did not gain a place at the school of their choice,
feel thwarted.
There are claims that Catholic schools “cream off” the
ablest children, and that children from troubled backgrounds, or whose parents
are not fully practicing the faith, are disadvantaged.
Newspapers have been highlighting stories of children from
Buddhist, Islamic or other backgrounds whose families wanted them to have the
benefit of the spiritual or moral background offered by a Catholic school.
The irony is that for many years, concerned Catholics in
Britain — as in the United States — have been complaining that Catholic schools
lack clear teaching, offer immoral forms of sex education and produce pupils
who when they leave at the age of 16 or 18 are not practicing their faith and
are even unaware that missing Sunday Mass is a serious sin.
“I was thrilled and encouraged by Bishop O’Donoghue’s
report,” said Catholic mother of five Margaret Emery, whose son Thomas has just
won a place at the London Oratory School, one of Britain’s best-known
publicly-funded Catholic schools. “The bishop is saying what lay Catholics and
their parish priests have been saying privately for years. It’s great to have
this courageous leadership and it promises real hope for Catholic youngsters in
Britain.”
Dora Nash, director of religious education at a major boys’
secondary school, said that the “relief amongst sound Catholic educators is
palpable.”
“To read a crystal-clear document in support of what we have
been trying to do for 30 years is like suddenly turning to swim with the stream
after an exhausting struggle against it,” she said. “We all know that just to
teach, conscientiously, what the Church teaches, works. Now we have a bishop
prepared to spell it out.”
But Bishop O’Donoghue was summoned to the House of Commons
Select Committee on Children, Schools and Families, chaired by Shearman —
prompting some Catholic commentators to invite comparisons with the summoning
of Catholic priests to the Court of the Star Chamber when anti-Catholic
legislation was passed at the start of the Reformation in England.
John Smeaon, of the Society for the Protection of Unborn
Children, which has campaigned against forms of sex education that involved
promoting the “morning-after” pill and abortion in schools, issued a call for
prayer via the Internet the morning the bishop was summoned.
“The Bishop stood up under fire,” he said. “He pointed out
that it was not feasible to expect Catholics to support organizations — despite
the good they might do — if their leadership supported policies contrary to
Catholic principles.”
The bishop also affirmed that non-Catholic children in
Catholic schools were not subjected to aggressive proselytism or forced to
become Catholics, though they would be taught the Catholic faith.
If funds are withdrawn from Catholic schools, there will be
a crisis, as they educate large numbers of children, especially at the primary
level, and the state would have to take full financial responsibility for these
children’s education.
A bigger worry among Catholics is that the Church leadership
might be tempted to “water down” Catholic content, for example in sex
education, in order to ensure continuation of funds.
Joanna Bogle is based in London.
Filed under
Advertisement
Advertisement
Make a Donation now!
Insightful. Informative. Uncompromisingly faithful. The National Catholic Register is more than a newspaper. It’s a cause. Your support for the Register funds important journalism that helps to build a Culture of Life in our nation, and throughout the world. Help us promote the Church’s New Evangelization by donating to the National Catholic Register right now.
Click here to donate
|