Pope
Francis: educate openness to transcendence, practice of mercy
(Vatican
Radio) Pope Francis received the participants in a major international congress
under the sponsorship of the Congregation for Catholic Education on Saturday
morning. For four days this week, more than 2 thousand educators,
administrators, students and teachers from around the world have been examining
the challenges facing the mission of Catholic education in the 21stcentury,
under the umbrella of Educating today and tomorrow: a passion renewed.
The
Conference was organized in connection with 50th anniversary
celebrations for the II Vatican Council’s document on Catholic education:Gravissimum
educationis.
In
lieu of prepared remarks, Pope Francis held a question-and-answer session with
a select few of the people taking part, fielding queries on a wide array of
topics ranging from the challenges of maintaining Christian identity in an
educational setting across all social, political and cultural contexts, to the
dissolution of the ties that historically have bound together family, school
and society, to the specific challenges to education posed by the “piecemeal
III World War” being fought around the world, to which Pope Francis has made
repeated reference.
“Today
there is a tendency toward a neopositivism,” said Pope Francis, “that is, to
educate in immanent things, and this both in traditionally Christian countries
and in countries of Pagan tradition.” He went on to say, “Transcendence is what
is wanting – for me, the greatest crisis in education, in order that it be
[truly, authentically] Christian, is this closure to transcendence.” The Holy
Father went on to say, “To prepare hearts, that the Lord might manifest
Himself,” is the true mission of the teacher and the goal of all education
worthy of the name.
Using
the example of St. John Bosco’s “emergency education” in response to the
Masonic threat in northern Italy in the 19th century, Pope
Francis said, “There are three languages: the language of the head, the
language of the heart, and the language of the hands; education must go forward
by these three ways; instructing in how to think, helping students to feel
well; accompanying students as they do [what they have learned or are learning
to do].” He added, “The three languages must be in harmony: that the child, the
student think [about] what he feels and does, feel that which he thinks and
makes, and do that which he thinks and feels.”
The
Holy Father concluded with an appeal and an assignment for the educators
present and for all their colleagues, everywhere: to respond to the brutalities
of war in contemporary life, by committing themselves anew to learning and
teaching mercy, especially the fourteen Works of Mercy. “Think through once
again the works of mercy,” he said, “they are the work of the Father.”
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