
Setting the Context for this Commentary:
One of the on-going discussion topics we have been exploring here at Catholica
Australia has been the lack of success of the institutional
Church in its communication outreach to young people. It's a topic that
is presently far from exhausted and as editor I have a number of initiatives
in the planning stages to advance the discussion further and which we
will now see next year in the pages of Catholica,
particularly with the focus on World Youth Day. Today's commentary has
come about more serenipitously in a conversation I struck up earlier in
the past week on the CathNews Discussion Board with Peter
Marendy, who is also a member of the Catholica
community. I find Peter's view worth
listening to, even if I don't always agree with them, as firstly
he is, as it were, "working at the coal face" with young people
as a teacher of RE in a Catholic Secondary School; secondly he
is a self-evidently deeply committed person to his work and concerned
for the sort of issues that constantly surface in our discussions here;
thirdly, he is writing from the perspective of a committed member
of the Greek Orthodox Faith and as he has indicated at a number of points
recently in various posts he considers himself a "non-Catholic"
albeit passionately committed to educating Catholic youth in their faith.
The actual discussion started with an exchange about the value of World
Youth Day and I have included here the initial post of
Peter responding to some comments
of mine and then my response to Peter
where I put to him a number of questions more pointedly seeking his perspectives
as a teacher of Religious Education in a Catholic Secondary College. I
submit the real focus of today's lead commentary is Peter's
extended reponse to those questions which you will find towards the end
of this commentary.
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Brian
Coyne
Editor, Catholica Australia
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A General Editorial contextual
point: Before you embark on the commentary could I make one
further general editorial point as to the thrust of what we are endeavouring
to do here at Catholica with
this extended discussion on Catholic Education.
I spent six years working in one of the better Catholic Education Offices
in Australia as media officer. Rightly or wrongly it is my perception
that the general set of beliefs held by those who teach in Catholic schools
differ from what the "official party line" is that the Bishops
are expected by "head office" to uphold and impart to our children
and young people. I have picked up this perception through listening to
many teachers over nearly a decade and a half and I respect the reluctance
of staff in the Catholic Education system to speak out openly about the
things they believe and feel free to talk about privately. This perception
is not only held by people like myself. Readers of Catholica
will more than probably be aware that earlier this year the Cardinal
Archbishop of Sydney, or someone acting under his thinking
or authority, endeavoured to introduce an "Oath
of Fidelity" that all heads of department and administrative
leaders in Catholic schools would be required to swear to. The "oath
of fidelity" was similar to the commitment that bishops or
priests make. In the end the proposal was dropped. It
doesn't take the insight of an Einstein to work out that the reason that
proposal was even considered was because of this perception that there
is widespread divergence between what our teachers, principals and other
leaders in Catholic Education think and believe privately and what they
are expected to subscribe to and teach semi-publicly in their classrooms.
I do not believe the correction to this disjunction is to run around trying
to force teachers, principals and other leaders to believe by taking "oaths
of fidelity". What our institution needs to
do is face honestly and squarely why this disjunction exists. If they
have been unable to convince the leaders with above-average levels of
academic education and exposure to theological studies of the "truths"
of their propositions, they need to be asking themselves "why?"
and urgently!
Don't expect to make much headway from today's lead commentary.
In many ways I think Peter's response
throws up more questions than answers but I do sincerely thank Peter
for the candour in his responses and I trust what he writes will help
us collectively "open up" this big debate just a tad more than
it had been yesterday morning. I certaintly hope to address further questions
to Peter, and others, in our forums
in coming days and months.
Brian
Coyne, Editor
An
unnecessarily pessimistic response Brian
Posted by Peter Marendy on December 10, 2007, 4:38
pm, in reply to "Re: Do you think these WYD's are the Churches farewell
parties?"
Hello Brian.
While the statistics do seem to strongly support your pessimistic assessment
about the relationship between WYD's and Church attendance, I don't accept
your categorical dismissal of their usefulness. Firstly,
I find it curious and a tad contradictory for you to dismiss such an alternative
method of evangelisation and community worship for a person who is a strong
advocate for ICT based alternatives to traditional forms of worship.
For instance, the Franciscans Friars Minor in Australia have a great WYD
related website promoting their own WYD celebrations (www.franciscans.org.au/wyd/).
Why is the multi-faceted WYD initiative so obviously inferior to your
Catholica product?
Secondly, who cares if few WYD
attendees don't become regular worshippers after this event ends.
Maybe their Faith has strengthened because of their involvement
who knows? How could you measure this anyway Brian? Using statistics is
a blunt instrument. For a person who forcefully butts-heads (metaphorically
speaking) with traditional-minded Catholic clergy, it seems strange for
you to be so enamoured of Church attendance statistics to support your
attack on WYD's.
Anyway, that's my two-bobs worth.
Peter M.
More "two-bobs" and some questions for you Peter...
Posted by Brian Coyne on December 10, 2007, 7:15
pm, in reply to "An unnecessarily pessimistic response Brian"
Peter,
Thanks for your thoughts. My views on this statistics business, I have
to confess, are changing.
One thing I have always believed is that at the end of all our discussing,
our hand-wringing, our wondering, our surveying and our analysis there
is only one statistic that finally matters. The trouble is we even find
it hard to agree on what that is. Let me have a stab although I know some
people, even some Catholics would disagree with this today. The only
statistic that finally matters is how many humans "find God"?
But what do we even mean by "find God"?
Some would have a picture in their heads of people "sittin' up in
the clouds having the big party with all their long dead rellies and God
catchin' up on old times". Others would have more nuanced
visions of heaven, paradise, salvation or the after life. Increasingly
there seem to be many who are basically not interested in the afterlife
and see it as fundamentally being about the Kingdom Now and "finding
God" in the present moment. In a very real sense we have
no reliable tool to measure the ultimate effectiveness of any religion.
The statistics of on-going Sacramental participation rates have been at
best only a pointer towards something that is ultimately not able to be
measured, or they have been some kind of pointer as to how effectively
the institution has kept contact with its constituency (or otherwise).
I honestly don't believe all the people who have drifted away from the
institution are damned. In fact I suspect increasingly that a lot of them
are doing a heck of a lot better these days in "finding God"
than many who have stayed. I honestly do believe the institution has been
"leading us up the garden path". Many left in it are basically
"playing a game and kidding themselves" they're playing
"power games" to pick one of the principal themes in Bishop
Robinson's book, they are no longer seriously interested in
the pursuit of truth, they're playing a game about bolstering the institution
and have swallowed their own propaganda. Others are playing a game of
social conformism that they try to pretend is "religion and spirituality".
It actually has nothing whatsoever to do with "finding God".
It's all about finding certitude and psychological comfort. Others again
are "sticking with the institution" and still trying to discern
the ultimate truths, and "find God" but as each day goes by
they seem to become more and more disillusioned.
I possibly agree with you that if some good
comes from WYD it is probably more likely to be occurring in the programs
being run by the religious orders and other peripheral organisations rather
than those being run at the Official level. The
religious orders today, it seems to me, are far "closer to the people"
than the diocesan and official Church is. They're basically less caught
up in the power game of constantly "trying to please the boss and
not make any waves". Their focus tends to be on the stuff that really
does matter and not this game the institution seems caught up in of constantly
trying to prove that the institution never makes mistakes, never needs
to apologise and never needs to correct its flawed thinking of the past,
and needs to reverence all previous popes as though they are God incarnate,
infallible in everything and incapable of human frailty and error.
The problem is that the vast majority of the people in the world are
not dumb and stupid. They can see through all the "games" today.
That's why most of them have left. If anything, young people are more
astute about these things than my generation or earlier generations. They
have excellent bs detectors and hypocrisy detectors. I think by and large
Catholic schools are doing a great job but as soon as young people get
out of school it becomes apparent to them within about five seconds that
the stuff their teachers were trying to enthuse them about (which they
did believe) is not actually the agenda of the old men that run the bigger
institution. It's little wonder they leave. Similarly all the good work
done by the religious orders and these other peripheral groups associated
with WYD is in many respects a waste of energy because once young people
get outside the gates they again quickly perceive that "the old men"
are basically playing their own little (actually it is a pretty "BIG")
game that is simply light years removed from what the religious were telling
them. The young people are not stupid. They know who sets the ultimate
agenda and it ain't the people they were listening to in these peripheral
WYD initiatives or in their classrooms with their teachers who also are
"much closer to their people" than the clerics up on the bridge
of the ship are.
As I've argued before I think BIG liturgies are good. They
need to be an essential part of the mix if the institution is to get back
on track and again start responding to both the Will of God and the will
of the people it is meant to be serving. What's missing at the
moment is the agenda behind why we're having a big liturgy. Most of
the young people in the Western world today simply "do not believe
it". They pick up the disjunctions between what the Church says,
what it does and how it behaves. Only the gullible are sucked in. Many
young people rock up for "the big party" or the big adventure
being let loose on the world stage at their parent's expense many of whom
kid themselves that this is a chaperoned event and their children will
be "safe" in the care of the priests and bishops who run the
Church. What I increasingly pick up, apart from the small minority who
are "turned on" to an almost fanatical state of zeal is that
most are largely unmoved by the Catechesis and the agenda items that are
supposed to be the core focus of the endeavour.
Come on, Peter. You're a secondary school teacher surely you would
agree that there is a lot of truth in my perceptions above. I
suppose the logical question to ask following on from all that is what
would you do if you had the power to change anything and make the Church,
and the one the Church is meant to represent, Jesus Christ, more relevant
in the lives of young people today? What are the chief impediments that
face you as a teacher today? What, in your view, are the chief impediments
that face the Catholic education system in this country today why,
for all the thousands of millions of dollar ploughed into it each year,
(or is it a billion yet?) do young people emerge from our schools and
quickly find little interest in "The Church"? If you had the
power and influence of the Pope, what would you go about altering to change
this situation?
Cheers, Brian
Here is my response Brian.
Posted by peter marendy on December 12, 2007, 4:57 pm,
in reply to "More "two-bobs" and some questions for you
Peter..."
Thanks Brian for your considered response.
I think the most effective way in which I can respond is by answering
your questions in a systematic fashion.
What would you do if you had the
power to change anything and make the Church, and the one the Church is
meant to represent, Jesus Christ, more relevant in the lives of young
people today?
This is a very difficult question to answer. Even if I had the wisdom
of Solomon I doubt I could make much head-way in this endeavour. As implied
in my previous post, I do believe events such as WYD do have merit, especially
in relation to the young. If they aren't going to the Church then what
is wrong with using contemporary forms of entertainment to grab their
attention in an attempt to evangelise the Gospel? Since the vast majority
of them aren't going to Church regularly I see it as one way forward for
Christianity, not just Catholicism.
There is another difficulty I
have with this question. It implies that the Church isn't currently representing
Jesus. As a non-Catholic I think it best to leave that to Catholic posters
to consider.
More relevant? Well, WYD is certainly one way it could
do this. Let's face it the Pentecostals' are packing them in
with WYD forms of worship so why not the Catholic Church? I don't
think singing kumbaya and banging tambourines will cut quite frankly.
Staging Catholic youth gatherings with contemporary
music and song and coffee afterwards? How about building coffee shops
and book shops right next to Churches? This may encourage the youth to
hang around for awhile and meet and talk with a deacon and or priest.
What about giving out prizes such as MP3 players, high quality Catholic
study Bibles, etc. at the end of Church?
Examining the emerging Church movement and see what
aspects the Church could fruitfully adopt. For instance, some elements
of these movements have set up very comfortable places where people are
invited to come and have coffee while listening to others talk about their
Faith, debate about moral issues, etc. in a very friendly, non-threatening
environment. This wouldn't replace the traditional Church services, but
rather it would be one of their ministries.
However, all of this will be in
vain if the Church doesn't passionately and clearly state its beliefs,
values and practices. A limp and ambiguous Faith isn't attractive as the
declining numbers of mainstream Churches attests. A prime example
of this sort of decline is the hapless Uniting Church.
What are the chief impediments
that face you as a teacher today?
a. A
lack of support from parents who are either agnostic or atheists
or at best luke-warm about their personal Faith.
b. A
lack of training of RE staff. RE, with some exceptions, is
the subject staff get lumped with to fill-out their teaching load regardless
of their level of training or any hostile feelings about it. I would hate
being given a subject to teach for which I have no training. However,
if all teachers in a Catholic school were adequately trained i.e.
completed a Cert IV in RE or an equivalent archdiocesan course
this wouldn't be an excuse and would make life a little easier for APRE's,
Head of RE Departments, or Coordinators of RE. With few exceptions, other
departments in secondary schools get teachers who are 'experts' (I use
this term loosely) in their subject areas thus the heads of these departments
don't have anywhere near the same problems dealing with reluctant and
under trained staff. And remember, except for APRE's who are members of
leadership teams, HOD's and coordinators of RE don't get paid any more
than other middle managers with their 'expert' teachers but are still
expected to be 'curriculum leaders'!
c. Hostile
students. Students invariably don't want anything to do with
a subject that "doesn't count". This attitude is most likely
passed on to them by their parents who rarely see any value in RE. They
send their children to Catholic schools for their perceived better discipline
procedures, 'values' (whatever that means), better facilities than State
schools (in comparison with order-owned schools I suspect), better teaching
standards (this is a highly sensitive subject I'm not suggesting
I agree with this assessment. I know of great teachers in all systems),
school uniform policies, etc. not RE. So what hope do RE teachers have?
If you think teaching Year 9 English is tough,
just imagine teaching Year 9 RE to boys!
What, in your view, are the chief
impediments that face the Catholic education system in this country today?
I believe the increasing militancy of secular atheists
and attacks from the far-left for funding to the independant sector to
be slashed if not halted altogether is one of the chief impediments to
this system. If the Coalition Federal Government remained in power
I would have said AWA's and the Coalitions prefigured plans for further
radical IR reforms (Minchim and Costello let out the bag many months ago
on their plans). This which almost certainly have seen Catholic and independent
school teachers on harsh AWA's (nurses also). Thank God we don't have
to worry about that now.
There are probably a few more things but I haven't got time to express
them effectively at this time.
Why, for all the thousands of
millions of dollars ploughed into it each year, (or is it a billion yet?)
do young people emerge from our schools and quickly find little interest
in "The Church"?
There is an assumption in your question
that the raison d'etat of Australian modern Catholic education
system is to get students interested in the Church and by extension "bums
on seats". I am fully aware that for some conservative Catholics
this is indeed the only reason why these schools should exist (Catholic
madrasas perhaps?) While I certainly agree
that passing on a comprehensive undertstanding of the History, Traditions
and beliefs and pratices of the Catholic Church is a vital component of
Catholic education, I don't agree that it is a Catholic school's job to
make people 'good' Catholics and certainly not convert non-believers.
Evangelise yes convert and indoctrinate no. Imparting
the Catholic Faith within the Religion Education classroom is just one
part of a broader range of objectives of Catholic schools.
Religious Education is an Educational
endeavour, nothing else. Sure, an RE teacher can legitimately
hope that their students may decide to practise their Faith more intently
or even convert to Christianity because of their educational experiences.
(Incidentally, an ACU lecturer of mine curiously even
challenged the legitimacy of such a 'hope' within Catholic education.
What a crock.)
A prominent reason why young people find little interest
in going to Church is because increasingly society is becoming militantly
secularist and thus unconducive to religious belief unless of course you
are a Buddhist, which seems to be more acceptable to the PC crowd.
Why in the world would a young person want to
follow Christianity when it is increasingly attacked by sections of the
media, entertainment industry, political groups such as the Greens and
some so-called intellectuals?
If you had the power and influence
of the Pope, what would you go about altering to change this situation?
I would immediately apologise to the Orthodox communion
for breaking away from the True Catholic Church and brazenly placing bishops
in areas in which Orthodox bishops already minister, amongst other things
and ask to be readmitted on her terms!!! Only kidding.
In all seriousness, I will again leave such a question for Catholics
to ponder.
Peter M.
Brian Coyne can be contacted at: Brian
Coyne <editor@catholica.com.au>
Peter M Marendy is a Catholic secondary education
teacher with a Masters Degree in Religious Education. He has a previously
published article in the peer-reviewed Australian e_Journal of Theology
looking at the current Catholic position on the Ordination of Women. His
article can be found online at: dlibrary.acu.edu.au/research/theology/ejournal/aejt_5/Marendy.htm
©2007
Peter Marendy, Brian Coyne, Catholica Australia. Permission granted for
republication provided attribution given to original source.
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