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Second-grader Yoselyn Arroyo answers a question in class at Holy Name of Jesus Catholic School in Henderson, Ky. (CNS photo/Tyler Orsburn) Second-grader Yoselyn Arroyo answers a question in class at Holy Name of Jesus Catholic School in Henderson, Ky. (CNS photo/Tyler Orsburn) 

“If God loved us, why would he give my mom cancer?” asked a 12-year-old girl when prompted to write down one major question she had about God. Other students asked: Why does God so easily send us to hell? Will God still accept me if I’m gay? Why do only some people receive miracles? Why do we need God? As teachers at a coeducational Catholic prep school in Minnesota, we often encounter such questions as we talk about faith with our students.

Teachers, parents and catechists in parish faith formation programs always hope that we can answer questions about God appropriately. But the questions can reveal a deep sense of doubt among adolescents. Questions of existence—suffering, purpose and the presence of a divine reality—are ones that people often reflect on, but they are rarely part of deep conversations with others. Ineffective catechesis programs may be one reason for this absence.

Questions of existence are rarely part of deep conversations with others. Ineffective catechesis programs may be one reason.

At Benilde-St. Margaret’s School, we are taking a radical approach and throwing out the traditional theology curriculum in junior high in favor of “conversational catechesis.” Seminar-style theology classes allow teachers and students to talk openly about difficult and complex questions of faith. Parish faith formation curricula using this model, partnered with volunteer catechists who are willing to engage in students’ authentic questioning, could be the starting point for truly forming the whole person and nurturing a living faith for the young members of our church.

This method should not be new to teachers. Young adults no longer need to memorize historical facts or quotes from lofty literature—they have Google for that. Rather, we need to help our students exercise an ethical conscience, apply creativity and cultivate innovation. Education needs to embrace the muscles of learning so that our students can develop into future leaders for a global world.

Unfortunately, the muscles of learning have long been neglected in the study of theology as seen in the high-school curriculum provided by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. The core curriculum, “Who Is Jesus Christ?,”dives into the dual persons of Jesus and floods students with the incredibly complex teachings of Nestorianism and monophysitism. But the curriculum does little to promote critical thinking and moral development. How can we foster faith in students with merely rote memorization and inaccessible vocabulary?

The curriculum does little to promote critical thinking and moral development. How can we foster faith in students with merely rote memorization and inaccessible vocabulary?

Like all teachers, catechists must help students strengthen the muscles of learning. This gets more complicated when we begin to talk about faith formation in a parish setting. With classes that meet only once a week and often include unwilling participants, transmitting the faith is already an uphill battle. Conversational catechesis offers volunteer teachers and students the opportunity to build authentic relationships and begin to teach the faith through moments of encounter rather than the dissemination of theory.

For example, this fall we asked students, “Can you think of a person or time in history that emulates the actions and figure of Moses?”

Immediately, a hand went up in the air, and a girl said, “I think that Malala is like Moses,” referring to Malala Yousafzai, the Nobel Peace Prize winner and advocate for the education of girls in her native Pakistan. “Because she was willing to endure violence and guns in order to free girls who were being oppressed and not allowed to go to school.”

In response, we asked, “And how old was Malala when this happened?”

“She was our age!”

That’s right. She was 15 years old when she listened to God’s word and changed the world.

Conversational catechesis is much like a conversation that bends and turns as young minds think through the abstract landscape of faith. If we simply study Exodus without bringing to the Scripture questions from our own time, we may never understand the relevance and impact that Moses continues to have upon us.

By creating a space where students can ask questions without judgment, teachers in schools and parishes become spiritual companions, walking with young people as they become aware of moments of consolation and desolation in their life. Adult companions need to lean into those experiences of students, rather than shying away from them because they are “uncomfortable” or too difficult to deal with, all the while keeping in mind appropriate boundaries. In October, The New York Times published an op-ed by the religion writer Jonathan Merritt making this same point: “It’s Getting Harder to Talk About God.” It is refreshing to see acknowledgment of this crisis in secular publication, reinforcing the need to reframe how we talk about God and faith.

In January, Saint Mary’s Press released a study titled “Going, Going, Gone” that assesses the disaffiliation of young Catholics from the church and explores the reasons they have chosen to step away from their church community. The research indicates that those who have “drifted” away from the church have done so because they perceive a lack of “real world relevance.” A 2017 survey of Benilde-St. Margaret’s students produced similar data, with only 26 percent of junior high students saying that their religious faith is extremely or very important to their daily lives.

In order to appeal to a young mind, we must employ conversational catechesis in our classrooms, parishes and homes as we teach kids about faith. Understanding God will always be complex, but talking about God should always be easy. Our adults need to model this behavior as we raise a future generation of Catholics.

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JR Cosgrove
6 years 1 month ago

The basic problem of faith is belief. All these things mentioned here are good but will not withstand criticism that primarily uses what appears to be rationale attacks. What has to be done alongside these other things is to show that the attacks are not really rationale. For example, Catholicism is primarily meant for getting us to the next world so any attempt to force it into relevance for this world may not be productive. That does not mean Catholicism is not useful for a better life here but it isn't its primary purpose. As life on this world gets better and better, the next life seem less relevant.

JR Cosgrove
6 years 1 month ago

For example, the theodicy issue, or why does God allow really bad things to happen to some people is hard to explain to people. It is certainly relevant for this life but for eternity, what happens in this life is trivial in comparison. This is hard to explain to someone when they or someone they knew was the person that was affected.

Adam Green
6 years 1 month ago

With all due respect, I think you have completely misunderstood the Gospels, and thus the Catholic religion. When you say that "Catholicism is...for getting to the next world" I see very little connection to the entire core of the Catholic faith. The vast majority of the Gospels -with the exception of a few well known pericopes in John, which assume knowledge of the the synoptics anyway- are all about how to act in THIS world. Even the "Last Judgment" (Mt. 25) is all grounded in actions in this life we are living. In Catholicism, the Sacraments -primarily the entire liturgy of the Mass, (cf. "The Eucharist has ended, go forth...")- are about strengthening us for life in this world. Thus, in educating young Catholics, the most effective way in promoting belief would be precisely to engage this world. Remember 1 John 4...not to mention Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. If there is to be faith in the future, it will depend on connection between the immanent and transcendent; the current disconnect many are experience with the faith is because of a disconnect between transcendent and immanent.

JR Cosgrove
6 years ago

Your point of view is news to me because I was continually taught about salvation in my 16 years of Catholic education starting at 6 years old. It has also been mentioned in thousands of homilies I have heard. Without offering eternal salvation, Catholicism has no more relevance than any other well meaning social program. For almost all of history since Christ, nearly all Catholics lead short miserable lives. So the gospels did a lousy job if this life was the objective.

Sandi Sinor
6 years ago

A lot of christians go to church because it's their fire insurance. They are afraid of burning in hell instead of going to "heaven". They are motivated by fear rather than by love.

Jesus' life and teaching were all about how to live in this world. When he spoke of the kingdom, he said said "Thy Kingdom come, thy will be done ON EARTH as it is in heaven."

It is our job to build God's kingdom - on earth. Jesus taught us to love, to love God, to love our neighbors - the two great commandments.

If your main focus is your own personal salvation, then you might want to reflect on Matthew 25:31-46. Jesus was quite explicit about who would be damned and who would achieve "salvation". If your main concern is saving your own hide for heaven, then you might want to think about saving the hides of some of those who need help on earth today. Think about loving your neighbor as yourself. That includes poor people, homeless people, hungry people, desperate Latino migrants, Muslim refugees, among others. Anyone who reads this site regularly knows the strong antipathy you have towards helping those whom Jesus wants us to help.

“Then the King will say to those on his right, ‘Come, you who are blessed by my Father; take your inheritance, the kingdom prepared for you since the creation of the world. 35 For I was hungry and you gave me something to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you invited me in, 36 I needed clothes and you clothed me, I was sick and you looked after me, I was in prison and you came to visit me.

37 “Then the righteous will answer him, ‘Lord, when did we see you hungry and feed you, or thirsty and give you something to drink? 38 When did we see you a stranger and invite you in, or needing clothes and clothe you? 39 When did we see you sick or in prison and go to visit you?’

40 “The King will reply, ‘Truly I tell you, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me.’

41 “Then he will say to those on his left, ‘Depart from me, you who are cursed, into the eternal fire prepared for the devil and his angels. 42 For I was hungry and you gave me nothing to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me nothing to drink, 43 I was a stranger and you did not invite me in, I needed clothes and you did not clothe me, I was sick and in prison and you did not look after me.’

44 “They also will answer, ‘Lord, when did we see you hungry or thirsty or a stranger or needing clothes or sick or in prison, and did not help you?’

45 “He will reply, ‘Truly I tell you, whatever you did not do for one of the least of these, you did not do for me.’

46 “Then they will go away to eternal punishment, but the righteous to eternal life.”

Karen Lucas
6 years ago

BE PRO-CHOICE - DON'T DRIFT "There are only two options." (Benedict)
Option 1: Science is Reality. (Hall). - “Natural sciences increasingly argue that human behavior is determined by hormones, genes and synapses rather than by free will - the same forces that determine the behavior of chimpanzees, wolves and worms” (Harari). - “I also believe that evolution implies there can be no qualitative difference between the brain of an earthworm and that of a human” (Hawking). - “You can’t get to a time before the big bang (the creation of the universe) because there was no time before the Big Bang. We have finally found something that doesn’t have a cause, because there was no time for cause to exist. For me this means that there is no possibility of a creator because there is no time for a creator to have existed” (Hawking). - “The question is, ‘Is the way the universe began chosen by God for reasons we can’t understand, or was it determined by a law of science?’ I believe the second. If you like, you can call the laws of science ‘God’, but it wouldn’t be a personal God…” (Hawking). - “If only there were evil people somewhere insidiously committing evil deeds, and it were necessary only to separate them from the rest of us and destroy them. But the line dividing good and evil cuts through the heart of every human being. And who is willing to destroy a piece of his own heart? (Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn).”
Option 2: Love is the greatest power for the transformation of reality. (Francis). "Love your enemies." Christ - “In the end ...God exists or does not exist. These are the only two options. Either one recognizes the priority of reason, of creative reason that is at the beginning of all things or one holds the priority of the irrational in as much as everything that functions on earth and in our lives would be only accidental, marginal and irrational result. Reason would be a product or irrationality. One cannot ultimately prove either project. But the great option of Christianity is the option for rationality and the priority of reason. This seems to be an excellent option which shows us that behind everything is a great intelligence to which we can entrust ourselves. Therefore, we can confidently work out a vision of the world based on this priority of reason, on this trust that the creating reason is love and that this love is God” (Benedict). - “By faith (that Christ was God) we understand that the world was created by the word of God, so that what is seen was made out of things which do not appear” 123 Catechism of the Catholic Church.
Choose: “Be Pro-Choice.” Don’t drift. Transform your Reality. Commit. - Choose: *Reason over chance. *Love over instinct. *Free will over no will. *Truths that are self-evident. ”that all men are created equal, endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights over nonsense. There is no creator. The laws of science brought the universe into existence. There are no truths outside of the laws of science, nor any rights, all of which are just made up by hierarchical authority. *Morality over nonsense. God is dead. There is no morality only rules imposed by judgmental political forces. *Precious child over nonsense. What your experiencing is an evolutionary process to ensure survival of the species like any other sentient species. *Beauty in nature and art over nonsense. Just an experience of the laws of synapses, hormones, genes. *”There is a sense in which we live on, in our influence, and in our genes that we pass on to our children. We have this one life to appreciate the grand design of the universe, and for that I am extremely grateful” (Hawking) over nonsense. Delusional thinking by an Astrophysicist to give meaning to his work and all creation. Neither human existence nor creation have meaning. *The love that comes from a changed heart, from a heart of stone, …turned into …a human heart” (Francis) over nonsense. Change is effected by the laws of science or driven by public opinion.
Choose Love as reality beginning with the love of God.. Live a new reality. “Love that will never end … We were created to love and be loved. (Francis)”. Live the Beatitudes. – “See God in all things … Find the sacred in everyday life. (Ignatian Spirituality).

JR Cosgrove
6 years ago

Jesus' life and teaching were all about how to live in this world...In order to get to the next world.

I don't disagree with anything you said except the implication that seeking salvation is a selfish pursuit. I certainly don't believe that nor have I met anyone who does. I'm sure there are some.

rose-ellen caminer
6 years ago

If we believe we were created by a Good God to share in the holy eternal life of this Good God, then "salvation" is our purpose as humans. The holiness of God includes the moral dimension of abhorring suffering and evil , and desire for justice.When as a rebuke people say that some Christians use church like an insurance policy, they are being arrogant. God knows each of our hearts; we are all in the same boat here. Do not kid yourself and do not underestimate other people's capacity for being truly spiritual beings. So Cosgrove, don't let it get to you when people miss interpret what you say. No body except an atheistm too in the closest to declare themselves one, is a Christian because that is the only ethical humanism available on earth! .Yes the immanent should reveal the transcendent; our goodness reflecting the good ness of God. That can occur whether one believes or not.Our faith is a faith in transcendence, the hereafter, heaven. if this is too embarrassing for some let the embarrassed shy away from expressing this Christians belief. For us its central ; existence itself is holy, is of God, humanity itself, life itself is created to share in the holiness of existence ; we want life abundantly , and this is Jesus promise., this is his earthly mission ; to safe guard our existence; our made in God's image holiness for which we were created for. And this is why we are Christians .

JR Cosgrove
6 years ago

The creed list what we are supposed to believe, the consensus of the important things from tradition In the early Church.

He will come again in glory to judge the living and the dead, and his kingdom will have no end.
We look for the resurrection of the dead, and the life of the world to come.

sheila gray
6 years ago

I totally disagree with you. Again. My main problem with your thinking starts with your statement, “Catholicism is primarily meant for getting us to the next world.” I believe Catholicism is meant to bring the next world to Earth, to our life here. We are called on, I believe, to try to perfect this world more, to lead people into Love. Your sights on another world after death seem very premature. I am one of the luckiest, or most blessed, people on the planet. Why? In August of 2017 I almost died. I thought for sure, “This is it” as I was being rushed to an Emergency Room with sirens blaring. I closed my eyes and sayed The Serenity Prayer over and over again out loud. Suddenly I “saw” it. I moved toward a place I had never been before. I did not see any damn light. I “saw”, I felt, I experienced... Pure Love. Love is where we’re going. Love is what is waiting for us. Love is what we need to be learning about and doing here and now to even be able to recognize the Heaven of Love that awaits us. Love is the only answer here because it is the only answer ANYWHERE. There is a God. LOVE

rose-ellen caminer
6 years ago

Beautiful and moving insight Sheila. ." God is love .. and she who abides in love abides in God, and God in her". That you know this with your own being is a blessing you have received. Thanks for sharing your experience..

Bev Ceccanti
6 years ago

Can you substantiate your statement of disagreement from Catholic doctrine?

Bev Ceccanti
6 years ago

To the authors: Garbage! The Faith ,or Gift, that Jesus left us is a precious inheritance to be preserved and handed, without innovation, from one generation to the next. Any bishop or priest or Catholic educator that is seeking to be popular in lieu of being clear is directing their students down a bleak dead end. Suffering in this life will always exist. Jesus said the poor will always be with us, He directed the woman who was to be stoned to 'sin no more'. He suffered a tortuous death. Teach the expectation of burdens in this life and that Divine Revelation does not answer all questions. (ie We know 'space' exists, but we don't comprehend it). Direct your charges toward the hope of heaven and away from hell. Don't imply that injustices will always be made whole in this life.. Deny the ego, stick to the script, pray for the' mustard seeds' of faith to grow and let the chips fall where they may. Be true to your mission and have faith that God will do the rest.

rose-ellen caminer
6 years ago

Stick to the catechism with young children. Children love the catechism; questions and answers, succinctly given. Much to ponder and even to understand but satisfying to the soul . Children are natural mystics; they get it. Later , junior and high school for conversational catechesis. When little, these narratives , these conflations with history and social studies and logic even [compare and contrast Moses with this person] , simply bog their minds down. with non religious facts. Prying into their minds when they do not even have the basics , does not make them want to learn the basics.it make them want to run away
!This is a time to get the facts, later for questioning associating, interpreting etc. Religion for young children, who are just learning how to read, do arithmetic , critical thinking etc.., should be the favorite , easiest and least stressful of subjects, as it is just truly about feeding the sheep the comforting word of God. Bringing them the good news of Jesus Christ .Questions and answers as found in the catechism, bible stories that illustrate the history of salvation; all these suffice to make for a rich ground for faith. A child feels good knowing she knows why she exists! Knowing she has memorized[ yes memorized ] what are actually profound truths from the catechism,. Asking her who is Moses today, is an affront actually. How the heck does she know. She has to rack her brain with news stories to come up with an answer, maybe, A news story that may entail its own indoctrination .Now she is totally removed from her dogmatic religious education .What does that even mean and what has that got to do with teaching her the God so loved the world , he sent Jesus ?Later for deep dives into how to be a Christian today and the game of who is a real Christian today etc. First know what a Christian is , what we believe. the basic theology and basic ethics as Jesus expressed it in the sermon on the mt, and other parables and how ethics has been revealed in the 10 commandments.
!I'll bet that if young people are not learning their faith, it is because too much extraneous stuff is being thrown at these kids in religion class in their early formation years. They are being over whelmed and that is not appropriate to being yoked by Jesus Christ.

JR Cosgrove
6 years ago

Q. Why did God make you?

A. God made me to know Him, to love Him, and to serve Him in this world, and to be happy with Him forever in the next.

Baltimore Catechism - There are 4 books to the Baltimore Catechism consisting of over a couple hundred questions and answers, all free on Amazon Kindle.

sheila gray
6 years ago

When you say “catechism” you are talking about conditioning. Conditioning young minds like this is brainwashing. At least it sounds like brainwashing to me, the way you talk about it. I believe, I know, that children love to talk about such matters from the heart. Stop attempting to brainwash children. It’s evil. Ask them questions, and most of all, be real. Stop focusing on all the rules. It’s not about rules and laws. It’s about LOVE, people. Or don’t you get it?!!!

rose-ellen caminer
6 years ago

Catechism are not just rules; catechism is basic theology .Yes it is brainwashing; all religious formation is brainwashing. All culture, all education for that matter is brainwashing; minus math and logic and empirical science. If one is a Christian , if one believes, then the way to transmit the faith that one believes in to the next generation is through, well brainwashing. At the start. Later a more mature developed authentic faith can develop with the building blocks of a basic theology. Asking many questions of children. is emotional abuse [imo]. It is disrespect, Adults have trouble knowing right from wrong good and bad.. We are divided over many ethical issues; we grapple as adults with ethics .So to expect kids to have clear answers or any answers on contentious issues is asking too much. They will make things up to shut us up or to please; reading adult cues, if you pry too hard. "hey teacher leave the kids alone!, emotionally". Respect the privacy of their inner still forming tender minds .That shows them love.

Bev Ceccanti
6 years ago

I agree with Cosgrove. I've had 13 years of formal Catholic education and a lifetime of informal education regarding it. Catholicism is not a democracy. It is what it is. Its history is recorded. It reaches back to Jesus Himself. Now the only real question is, Is He God ?
And the rest follows.

Dominic Deus
6 years ago

Dominic Deus here.

With the exception of a few breaths of intellectual and spiritual fresh air, this is one of the most shallow commentary threads I have ever read on these pages. If this is the best you can do, you are the proof of why we must improve faith formation starting in middle school. I can't even get excited enough to engage with this drivel. More depth, more breadth, more substance, no platitudes and, dare I ask, can you muster an original thought?

Dominic

Bev Ceccanti
6 years ago

The Church , by its Divine nature, can only make deductions from Divine revelation. Doctrinal innovations aren't Christian. Clarity is critical.

Reyanna Rice
6 years ago

But doctrinal innovation has made innovations. There is absolutely nothing in divine revelation, aka the Scrioturrs about the Immaculate Cinception of Mary or the belief in the continual virginity of Marybirvyhe Assumption of Mary.

Bev Ceccanti
6 years ago

Scripture rose out of the same Divine Tradition that informs us about Mary. The Old Testament was produced from the Jewish Tradition. The New Testament was produced from the Christian Tradition. Things weren't written down in early Christianity. The new Testament came from oral accounts that were written down a generation or two later. There were over 400 manuscripts (papyrus) floating around and being read in the Eucharistic communities when the Catholic Church, ( long before the split off of the Orthodox) selected the 27 which were defined as Divinely inspired cannon (rule) and this list of manuscripts became the New Testament. The Gospels were first part of oral tradition. We still have Divine Tradition, of which a portion is known as the Bible. Revelation becomes more clear as it is developed through reasoning. Doctrine is never inconsistent with Divine Revelation. It is It's logical deduction. There has always been controversy in the Church. Historically, when it became untenable , it forced the successors of the Apostles, the Bishops,. to decide the argument, consistent with the authority vested in them by Jesus Christ. The Nicene Creed rose out of controversy and came from the Council of Nicaea several years before the Bible was formed . Jesus said He would always be with us.. He said the gates of hell would not prevail against His Church.(.'Prevail' doesn't not mean there won't be a fight).

E V
6 years ago

"dives into the dual persons of Jesus"

This phrase alone is commentary enough on the catechesis of the authors of this article.

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