The Living Light

Fall 2000
Volume 37-Number 1

Excerpts from the Fall 2000 Issue

SPECIAL FEATURE -- Our Hearts Were Burning Within Us

Table of Contents
A New Priority in Pastoral Ministry
by Michael Warren
When Is Catechesis of Adults Genuinely Adult?
by Jane Regan
Faith Development: Fowler Revisited
by Kenneth Stokes
Starving Outside the Banquet Hall: Young Adults and Their (Hunger for) Faith Formation
by Timothy P. Muldoon
The Open Door: An Invitation to the Hispanic Community
by Jorge Diez
The American Cinema's Challenge to Adult Faith Formation
by Guerric Debona
Does Catechetical Sunday Have a Future?
by Carol Dorr Clement



Table of Contents

A New Priority in Pastoral Ministry

Michael Warren
When Is Catechesis of Adults Genuinely Adult?
Jane Regan
Faith Development: Fowler Revisited
Kenneth Stokes
Starving Outside the Banquet Hall: Young Adults and Their (Hunger for) Faith Formation
Timothy P. Muldoon
The Open Door: An Invitation to the Hispanic Community
Jorge Diez
The American Cinema's Challenge to Adult Faith Formation
Guerric Debona


Articles

Does Catechetical Sunday Have a Future?

Carol Dorr Clement


Review Essay

Baby Boomers in the Spiritual Marketplace: A Religious Renewal?

William D. Dinges


Book Reviews

English, Leona M., and Marie A. Gillen, eds. Addressing the Spiritual Dimensions of Adult Learning: What Educators Can Do

(rev. by Karen Murphy)
Gallin, Alice. Negotiating Identity: Catholic Higher Education Since 1960
(rev. by Patrick J. Hayes)
Buckley, Francis J. Team Teaching: What, Why, and How?
(rev. by Lorna Bowman)
Gaggawala, Paul O. Fully Christian . . . Fully Human: A Model for a New Evangelization
(rev. by J. Njoroge wa Ngugi)
Faley, Roland J. Apocalypse Then and Now: A Companion to the Book of Revelation
(rev. by Chris McMahon)
Keenan, James F., and Joseph Kotva Jr., eds. Practice What You Preach: Virtues, Ethics, and Power in the Lives of Pastoral Ministers and Their Congregations
(rev. by Geoffrey J. Grubb)
Nachef, Antoine E. The Mystery of the Trinity in the Theological Thought of Pope John Paul II
(rev. by Peter C. Phan)


New and Noteworthy

O'Gorman and Faulkner: The Complete Idiot's Guide to Understanding Catholicism
Koch: You Give Me the Sun: Biblical Prayers by Teenagers
Scott: Bible Stories Revisited: Discover Your Story in the Old Testament
Pennock: The Catholic Social Teaching: Learning and Living Justice
McKenna: A Concise Guide to Canon Law: A Practical Handbook for Pastoral Ministers
Elizondo: Galilean Journey: The Mexican-American Promise, 2nd edition
Ayer: Guided Meditations on Discipleship: Readiness, Faithfulness, Conviction, Transformation
Perrotta: Luke: The Good News of God's Mercy
Calvocoressi: Who's Who in the Bible, revised edition
Pilch: Choosing a Bible Translation
Miscamble: Keeping the Faith, Making a Difference


Departments

Editor's Foreword
Calendar



Editor's Forward

Afterword, Not an Afterthought
By Berard L. Marthaler

It will be unfortunate if readers of Our Hearts Were Burning Within Us, the pastoral plan published by the U.S. bishops last November, stop before the last page. The document's Afterword is key to an appreciation of the scope of the document; it is not simply an afterthought attached like a postscript to a letter.

The underlying theme of Our Hearts Were Burning is "adult faith formation," a phrase that evokes any number of associations. The document gives priority to adult catechesis and recalls that church documents speak of it as "the axis around which revolves the catechesis of childhood and adolescence as well as that of old age" (2). "Adult faith formation" clearly implies development and maturity. Our Hearts Were Burning describes it as growth "in the life of Christ through experience, reflection, prayer, and study" (2).

The importance of the Afterword lies in its emphasis that adult faith formation cannot be dissociated from the whole range of other ecclesial activities, whether they are described as baptismal catechesis, religious education or instruction, education in the faith, or theology and other forms of ministry of the word. The Afterword clarifies issues with a series of helpful distinctions, but its basic premise is that catechesis is a continuous process from cradle to grave. The Afterword reiterates the point made in the International Council for Catechesis's 1990 document Adult Catechesis in the Christian Community by stating that "the specific role of the catechesis of adults consists in an initial deepening of the faith received at baptism . . . with a view to helping individuals all life long grow to the full maturity of Christ (cf. Eph 4:13)" (62).

The Afterword does not pretend to be the last word. On the contrary, the very last sentence encourages further reflection. The Christian tradition, beginning with the text in Ephesians just referenced, offers any number of perspectives on growth in faith. The yellow, dog-eared pages of my old theology manuals speak of the increase of faith in connection with the "object"of faith. The emphasis is on content—in the technical language of the scholastics, fides quae. Thus, as truths of faith were progressively revealed, faith grew quantitatively, but after the fullness of revelation was made known in and by Christ, faith grows only qualitatively. In this context, faith formation becomes a matter of making explicit that which is implicit in the person and teachings of Jesus. In this framework, faith formation emphasizes study—knowledge and understanding of the Scriptures, Christian tradition, and church teachings.

Another perspective, less emphasized but equally respected in the Catholic tradition, emphasizes fides qua, faith commitment, and the affective dimension of faith. Adolphe Tanquerey's classic treatise on ascetical and mystical theology says that "in order to grow in faith, we must rely on prayer and our own personal efforts. Under this twofold influence, faith will become more enlightened, simple, strong and active" (The Spiritual Life, 556). Tanquerey says "beginners" should strengthen their faith by performing acts of faith, carefully avoiding individuals and writings that attack or undermine faith. "Advanced souls" nurture "the spirit of faith"—that is, they strive to arrive at a point where all their judgments, words, and actions are influenced by principles of faith. They read the Gospel in order to assimilate the teachings and words of Jesus, and they "accustom themselves" to see all things, persons, and events as being guided by the hand of the Creator.

Distinctions of this kind, according to the bishops, sensitize planners to "the many different faith needs and circumstances of adults" and "offer[s] them a wide and relevant range of programming and services" (63). The 1997 General Directory for Catechesis makes a similar point when it links planning and organization to the theoretical concept of catechesis (no. 35). Pedagogical strategies and even the content of catechesis must take into account the needs of the individuals and communities to whom they are addressed. It is fair, even necessary, to concentrate on the cognitive aspects of faith, but never to the exclusion of the experiential and behavioral, and vice versa. Our Hearts Were Burning clearly implies that, in catechesis, fides quae and fides qua are equally important. In the end, one returns to the Catechism of the Catholic Church, which sees catechesis not as an end in itself but as a means: "The whole concern of doctrine and its teaching must be directed to the love that never ends" (no. 25).



[This excerpt is from the article "A New Priority in Pastoral Ministry," by Michael Warren, The Living Light Fall 2000, Vol. 37, No. 1. Subscribe to The Living Light.]

Fifty years from now, people studying pastoral renewal may recognize that the Church in the United States "turned a corner" at the millennium: a conceptual corner, restating the goals of pastoral ministry, particularly catechesis, in vivid and compelling terms.1 Two documents in particular disclose the character of this shift: the 1997 General Directory for Catechesis (GDC)2 and the U.S. Catholic bishops' 1999 pastoral plan for adult faith formation, Our Hearts Were Burning Within Us.3 Understanding the second document is aided by understanding the first.

Published documents do not a revolution make. However, documents guided by a vision of change and tied to a plan to implement that vision can and do guide profound social change. In the face of mandated shifts, business-as-usual gives way to more thoughtful action and to the structures needed to support that action. The "conceptual corner turned" that I have in mind is one where we think differently about our own discipleship, about our life in the Church, and about the significance of the Church itself. Both the Directory and Our Hearts Were Burning have built into them significant re-orientations for the way we understand the path to discipleship and the way we follow that path.

Catechetical Power of Living Practice
The 1997 Directory is a thorough revision of the Vatican II-mandated guidelines for communicating the Gospel, originally published in 1971 as the General Catechetical Directory. The revised directory's descriptions of handing on the Good News have a sharper edge than those of 1971, with greater emphasis on the local church's gospel practice as the primary communicator of the gospel message. This edge is forged in the Directory's introduction, with its dramatic retelling of the parable of the sower. The soil being sowed is not the soil of the Church but of the world. The sower is actually the Church, suffused with the Spirit of Jesus and astutely aware of the conditions of the soil. To be effective, the sower discerns "the most diverse social situations" as potentially "marked by the creative activity of God" (no. 16). These words set catechesis's twin foci: the Gospel and the world. Here the Directory speaks of a way of being in the world that enables us to interpret it from a gospel perspective. Our Hearts Were Burning carries this theme forward.

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If the Catechism were to displace the Sermon on the Mount, then the primary religious "path" would be lost.4 Both documents seek to unify the way we think about our gospel call and the way we act upon it. The local church is the key to that unity.

The 1997 GDC highlights the local church as the sacrament of the encounter with the living Spirit of Jesus, the Christian reality at its most primary level. If Jesus is the sacrament of the human encounter with God, then the Church is the sacrament of the human encounter with the living Spirit of Jesus. This means that "the agent of catechesis" is not any individual catechist. The agent of catechesis is "the Church animated by the Holy Spirit" (GDC, no. 77). Catechesis is essentially an ecclesial act, and when the local corporate body of believers is in fact the Church animated by the Holy Spirit, it becomes the main "agent" of catechesis proclaiming the Gospel (cf. GDC, no. 78): "The Christian community is in herself living catechesis. . ." (GDC, no. 141).

This insight, a unifying theme of the revised Directory, suggests that parish catechetical directors and the catechists working with them cannot understand their own efforts without seeing them as directed to the witness of the life of the local church. Their task is fostering the gospel life of the ecclesial body itself. The local church's enfleshing of the Gospel is the master communicator of the Gospel; and lacking that witness, the efforts of the individual catechist have little effect. What else does the following passage mean? "Catechesis is nothing other than the process of transmitting the Gospel, as the Christian community has received it, understands it, celebrates it, lives it [italics added] and communicates it in many ways" (GDC, no. 105). Unless backed by a convincing communal practice, the efforts of a lone catechist tend to be drowned out like a whisper in the blare of traffic.

Effective pastoral ministers have long known that one does not say to skeptical youth, "If you only had faith you could see what we are talking about." No, the truth the GDC has in mind comes from the other side. It says to young people (and everybody else) something like this: "Even if you don't prize the tradition, you can still see the Gospel being lived. It is observable, discernable, visible. You might not want to be part of it, or you might judge it to be insane or stupid, but the it cannot be denied." That was the way Jesus himself spoke to the disciples of the Baptist when they asked him if he was the promised one: "The blind regain their sight, the lame walk, lepers are cleansed, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, and the poor have the good news proclaimed to them" (Mt 11:5; Lk 7:22). And so to be leaven, any announcement of the local church as sacrament of the living Spirit of Jesus points to something tangible and actual. As Jesus himself suggested in a timeless analogy: You will know there is yeast in the dough when you see the loaf is in fact rising. The 1997 GDC endorses such a pastoral strategy of effective living signs. In fact, effective living signs is its core catechetical message.

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The Testimony of the Pastoral Plan for Adult Formation: "We Adults"
In the following reflections, I focus on the bishops' introduction to the new pastoral plan. These few pages alone present the fundamental motifs that shift the conception of pastoral practice in important ways. The second paragraph of Our Hearts Were Burning begins with a sentence whose meaning is articulated often in the document:

Every disciple of the Lord Jesus shares in this mission [of witnessing to and sharing the word of life about the reign of God faithfully, so that each new generation can hear this word in its own accents and discover Christ as its Savior]. To do their part, adult Catholics must be mature in faith and well equipped to share the Gospel, promoting it in every family circle, in every church gathering, in every place of work, and in every public forum. They must be women and men of prayer whose faith is alive and vital, grounded in a deep commitment to the person and message of Jesus. (1)
At first glance, this phrasing sounds like boilerplate, typical of the prose in many church documents. It often comes across this way: "The laity, though they often don't ‘get it,' are called to become authentic disciples, and only if they do so can the reign of God take hold. We write these words to remind them of what they tend to overlook," etc. What is so important in these first paragraphs of the pastoral plan—and what becomes more clear as one reads on—is that the bishops are applying these principles to themselves, in their own lives, as fellow travelers on the road to Emmaus. When I saw that this was their stance, the document engaged my attention intensely.

For example, in the fifth and sixth paragraphs, the bishops write

Adult faith formation, by which people consciously grow in the life of Christ through experience, reflection, prayer, and study, must be "the central task in this catechetical enterprise," becoming "the axis around which revolves the catechesis of childhood and adolescence as well as that of old age." This can be done specifically through developing in adults a better understanding of and participation in the full sacramental life of the church.

To make this vision a reality, we, as the Catholic bishops of the United States, call the Church in our country to a renewed commitment to adult faith formation, positioning it at the heart of our catechetical vision and practice [italics added]. We pledge to support adult faith formation without weakening our commitment to our other essential educational ministries. This pastoral plan guides the implementation of this pledge and commitment. (2)
Here we have not just a public naming of adult formation as the heart of catechesis but a public pledge and commitment to it as well. I know of no episcopal text that makes any statement about adult formation with such open, unmodified directness. These words have a kind of "Here we stand; we can do no other" ring about them. And indeed, true to these words, the pastoral plan itself does guide the implementation of this committed pledge.

The bishops' pledge and commitment is not just to funding and structural change but to their engagement in all dimensions of the ministry of adult faith formation:

To be effective ministers of adult faith formation we will first, like Jesus, join people in their daily concerns and walk side by side with them on the pathway of life. We will ask them questions and listen attentively as they speak of their joys, hopes, griefs, and anxieties. (2-3)
These words have no hint of "actually, as everybody knows, this is what we bishops have been doing all along." One could not write or endorse these words without knowing what it is like to walk with them, encountering "joys, hopes, grief, and anxieties."

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What follows in this section of the pastoral plan is a recognition of the efforts made in some dioceses of the United States to do what the plan envisages, with significant church renewal following in the wake of those efforts. These successes provide us with an imagination of the possibilities of adult faith formation. The document also recognizes the significance of university- and college-level academic programs that make theological education and ministerial resources available to lay persons, who then share their learning with others. The bishops wish to build on these achievements.

Knowing their plan is a pipe dream if it is not followed by all those in leadership positions, the bishops list the various categories of leaders who will have to work together to achieve the goals of the pastoral plan: pastors; adult formation leaders, both professional and non-professional; all other members of parish staffs; all those who do faith formation ministry in a parish (catechists, education team members); RCIA ministers; Scripture study facilitators; sacramental preparation leaders; ministry trainers; small church community leaders or facilitators; and administrators and teachers in Catholic schools.

Listing such a range of persons as leaders in faith formation implies that these persons themselves will be familiar with the pastoral plan and are themselves (like the bishops) engaged in their own ongoing faith formation. The bishops seem to have in mind something different from the common pattern of parish staff meetings (a hasty prayer, a review of the upcoming calendar events, a check that the facilities needed are indeed available, and a prompt end). Leaders who take on the challenge of this document must find ways to advance the parish from a comfortably vague parish mission statement ("Our parish exists to foster the reign of God") to a programmatic approach for helping adults face the deep challenge of the Gospel. The question of gospel fidelity is a lifelong problem for everyone serious about it. The question is easily dismissed by means of religious self-congratulation: We have a wonderful parish filled with persons serious about gospel fidelity.

Pastoral staffs ready to face the implications of this plan might very well want to undertake a series of five discussions: one for the statement's introduction and one for each of the four main parts of the document. Such discussions are appropriate for a parish staff and are imperative for the diocesan staff. They would quickly bring to the surface the implications of what the bishops are proposing in Our Hearts Were Burning: a unified ministry for nourishing the full gospel agency that comes from deep faith. This effort affects everybody, and the bishops name the following ministries: seminaries, houses of religious formation, colleges and universities, social service agencies, hospitals, nursing homes, prisons, migrant worker camps, pro-life agencies, retreat houses, monasteries, and publishing and communications offices.

The pastoral plan is clearly a catechetical document, and near the end of its introduction, it echoes the GDC's call for bishops to have a passionate commitment to catechesis: "We intend the vision, initiatives, and timeline of this plan to awaken throughout the Church in our country a passion for renewal in the ministry of adult faith formation" (7). It moves the image of catechesis from one of an activity mostly for children to one for everyone, although mostly for adults.

Our Hearts Were Burning carries forward the vision of the General Directory for Catechesis: that the chief carrier of the living message of Jesus is an assembly of disciples who regularly do the inconvenient tasks the Gospel demands. You become different and find yourself called to fidelity by living among such persons.

Michael Warren is a professor for catechetical ministry and religious education at St. John's University in New York. Dr. Warren recently edited the book Changing Churches: The Local Church and the Structures of Change with Pastoral Press (Portland, Ore.).



This excerpt is from the article "When is Catechesis of Adults Genuinely Adult?" by Jane Regan, The Living Light Fall 2000, Vol. 37, No. 1. Subscribe to The Living Light

The clarion call for refocusing catechesis from an exclusive concern for children and youth to an inclusive emphasis on adults (and with them children and youth) can hardly be missed in the recent statement issued by the U.S. Catholic bishops, Our Hearts Were Burning Within Us.1 The first few pages insist that adult catechesis, the ongoing faith formation of adults, is essential to the life and vitality of the Church. Unfolding in the remainder of the document is a description of the "goals, principles, content, and approaches for adult faith formation" (21) as well as a discussion of the organizational elements necessary for effectively planning and implementing adult faith formation.

A clear message of this document is that adult faith formation happens in a variety of contexts. In describing the approach to be used, the bishops point to the "cognitive, experiential, and behavioral" (34) scope of the content. In light of this, they reason, the approach must be multifaceted and must take on "a great variety of forms: ‘systematic and occasional, individual and community, organized and spontaneous'" (34). Experience of liturgy, family- or home-centered activities, large and small group gatherings, and individual study and reflection are cited throughout the document as expressions of adult catechesis that can be adapted within Catholic communities of faith.2

It is evident that in many parishes, intentional programs of adult faith formation take a variety of forms: meetings of parents of children preparing for first eucharist; the catechesis that is part of marriage or baptism formation; Bible studies and prayer groups; formation evenings for catechists in the children's programs; ministry formation for lectors, ushers, and eucharistic ministers; and a Lenten lecture series. These have the potential to serve as opportunities to enhance the faith of the adult participants. Yet it would be a mistake to presume that each time adults gather around issues of faith it is an experience that helps them "to grow in both human and Christian maturity, enriching the whole of life with the leaven of the Gospel" (21), to cite one description of the catechetical mission found in Our Hearts Were Burning.

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Examining this question requires that we step back and look at the broader context from which adult faith formation gains its direction and meaning. To grapple effectively with the characteristics of adult catechesis necessitates setting our work with adults within the comprehensive movement of catechesis, and setting catechesis within the vision of the Church's mission. In a way, we can look at this as setting Our Hearts Were Burning within the context of the 1997 General Directory for Catechesis (GDC).3

In its own right, the Directory speaks clearly to the call for adult catechesis. Early in the document, the writers include the classic text on this topic: "Catechesis for adults, since it deals with persons who are capable of an adherence that is fully responsible, must be considered the chief form of catechesis. All other forms, which are indeed always necessary, are in some way oriented to it" (no. 59). Building on the ecclesial documents on catechesis that have been published since Vatican II, the writers of the Directory clarify the place of prominence held by adult catechesis: "This is the axis around which revolves the catechesis of childhood and adolescence as well as that of old age" (no. 275).

Toward Evangelizing Catechesis
Even a cursory review of the General Directory for Catechesis discloses the centrality of the concept of evangelization to the overall structure of this document. The understanding of evangelization is continuous with the developing vision of evangelization as set out in a series of documents beginning with those from Vatican II. These documents serve as stepping-stones in tracing the movement from an earlier notion of evangelization—that of "something done to non-Christians by missionaries in foreign lands"—to the rich and challenging image of the whole Church being called to evangelize. These documents include the Decree on the Church's Missionary Activity (Ad gentes divinitus), the Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World (Gaudium et spes), Paul VI's apostolic exhortation On Evangelization in the Modern World (Evangelii nuntiandi), John Paul II's apostolic exhortation On Catechesis in Our Time (Catechesi tradendae), John Paul II's apostolic exhortation The Vocation and the Mission of the Lay Faithful in the Church and in the World (Christifideles laici), and John Paul II's encyclical On the Permanent Validity of the Church's Missionary Mandate (Redemptoris missio). Each of these documents contributes core insights or ideas that enhance our understanding of evangelization.

Given the idea that developed across these documents and is reflected in the Directory—that evangelization is as much about who we are as what we do—it might be helpful to think of "evangelization" not only as a noun but as an adjective as well: "evangelizing."4 When we use the term "evangelization," it is with the temptation to set it out as another activity the parish does—catechesis, liturgy, pastoral care, evangelization. Or to see it as the responsibility of a single committee—the evangelization committee, similar to the other committees a parish might have.

Using "evangelizing" to strengthen the commitment that who we are as Church—our mission and identity—is rooted in engaging in all activities through the lens of evangelization. To speak of "evangelizing pastoral care," for example, reminds us that as we visit the sick, as we care for the bereaved or lonely, or as we counsel the lost or confused, we do so in a way that recognizes the close connection between human life and the liberating word of Jesus Christ. We do all of these activities so as to proclaim the Gospel in word and action and thus further the reign of God. So we can speak of an evangelizing youth ministry, an evangelizing liturgy, and even an evangelizing budget committee. It is in this sense that we speak of "evangelizing catechesis."

Adult Faith Formation as Evangelizing Catechesis
Both the Directory and Our Hearts Were Burning maintain that adult faith formation is part of the reality of evangelization that is at the heart of the mission and identity of the Church. Catechesis is "situated in the context of the Church's mission of evangelization and [is] seen as an essential moment of that mission . . ." (GDC, no. 59). Catechesis participates in the work of evangelization, which is the action of the Church in bringing the gospel message to all of humanity.

When we speak of catechesis as a moment of evangelization, we need to take care not to short-circuit the dynamism of evangelization and, in doing so, dissipate its energy and the work of evangelizing catechesis. From one perspective, we can speak of the relationship between evangelization and catechesis in terms of the movement of the individual from first hearing the Gospel to his or her initial conversion to Jesus Christ, and from there to a participation in catechesis toward initiation. This movement from evangelization to catechesis results in an individual who is committed to Jesus Christ, who has been formed in the ways and teachings of the Christian community, and who is entering into a discipleship that lasts a lifetime and calls for continuing formation and transformation in terms of ongoing catechesis.

The goal of catechesis goes beyond simply initiating and socializing new members; the goal of catechesis is to participate in the process whereby the person who had been evangelized becomes an evangelizer. Through catechesis the parish is formed and transformed into an evangelizing community. The movement then is not simply from evangelization to catechesis—it is also from catechesis to evangelization.

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Characteristics of Adult Catechesis
So now we return to the question of the essay: When is the catechesis of adults genuinely adult catechesis? The short answer is this: when it effectively fosters adult believers committed to the Church's mission of evangelization. Our Hearts Were Burning speaks of this:

Adult faith bears the fruit of evangelization. While fully respecting the religious freedom and choice of others, the adult disciple bears witness in the world to the gift of faith and to the treasure we have found in Jesus and among the community of his disciples. In this process, the witness of the word is essential, but a living witness in the service of love and justice speaks with special power today. (20)
To explore the pastoral and pedagogical implications of this vision of adult faith, let me propose four principles that can guide our thinking and planning.

  1. Formation for the sake of transformation is at the heart of the adult faith formation enterprise.

  2. Essential to genuine adult catechesis are the time and opportunity for adults to engage in sustained, critical conversation with other adults about things that matter.

  3. In the process of adult faith formation, the wisdom of all of the participants is recognized and incorporated into the learning experience.

  4. The overarching goal of adult faith formation is a sense of mission rather than the enhancing of membership.
When is the catechesis of adults genuinely adult catechesis? When it challenges, prepares, and motivates the adult community of faith to give expression to the relationship to Jesus Christ in active engagement in the Church's mission of evangelization. It is a formidable task, no doubt, but one worthy of our best efforts and our best resources, for nothing less than the fulfillment of the Church's identity and the effective proclamation of the liberating work of God in Jesus Christ is at stake.

Jane Regan teaches in the Institute of Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry at Boston College. Dr. Regan is co-author with Michael Horan of Good News in New Form: A Companion to the General Directory for Catechesis.



[This excerpt is from the article "Faith Development: Fowler Revised" by Kenneth Stokes, The Living Light Fall 2000, Vol. 37, No. 1. Subscribe to The Living Light.]

The Church celebrates the human life cycle ceremonially: a child's baptism; a few years later, first communion; as an emerging adult, confirmation; for most, marriage; for a few, ordination; and ultimately, the final rites of the funeral or memorial service. These are holy times of much joy and some sorrow, as persons move through the somewhat predictable and ever-emerging experiences of life, and these times symbolize liturgically some of life's major transitions.

However, we in ministry need to understand better the underlying dynamics of change that take place as we move from childhood through adolescence into young adulthood, through the middle years, and finally into retirement and life's ultimate fulfillment. Ecclesiastes reminds us

For everything there is a season, and a time for every matter under heaven:

  • a time to be born, and a time to die;
  • a time to plant, and a time to pluck up what is planted. . . . (Eccl 3:1-2 [New Revised Standard Version])
In As You Like It, William Shakespeare likewise speaks through Jaques of life's inevitable scenario:

All the world's a stage,
And all the men and women merely players:
They have their exits and their entrances;
And one man in his time plays many parts,
His acts being seven ages. . . . (II, 7)
This is immediately followed, of course, by Jaques's powerful if somber recitation describing the life cycle from "the infant" to "second childishness and mere oblivion."

Although of the same flesh and blood, I was probably a different person psychologically, socially, and emotionally at ages 17, 29, 48, and 65. This is true for everybody. Life may be seen as a journey—the life journey—with its wide and rich variety of experiences along the way. The life journey incorporates the physical, intellectual, cultural, and emotional changes we all experience as we mature. It also includes the dynamic dimension of faith—the faith journey. This faith journey is the focus of this article. I will suggest that the dynamics of change in people's maturing experiences are significant factors in their individual faith journeys and, therefore, should be some of the most important bases for a parish's program of adult catechesis.

Our Hearts Were Burning Within Us affirms the importance of the faith formation of adults in the totality of our ministries:

Ongoing faith formation . . . does not end at confirmation or graduation but continues until one's death. Accordingly, we strongly reaffirm that, "without neglecting its commitment to children, catechesis needs to give more attention to adults than it has been accustomed to do."1
This document and, of even greater importance, a mushrooming awareness of the need for adult faith formation among both clergy and laity present an exciting and challenging new opportunity for those who teach and work with adults. A better understanding of the adult journey of faith is vital—no, fundamental—to our ministries with the adults of our parishes.

To understand this dynamic better, we need to review briefly James Fowler's theory of faith development, which provides a theological and psychological framework that helps map this journey of faith. Although he has written other books on the topic, his central thesis is most fully developed in his primary work, Stages of Faith.2 Based on extensive interviews with more than five hundred people, Fowler provides a stage theory of faith development that is solidly grounded in theology but uniquely simple in outline. I can in no way explore the full richness and depth of this theory in the scope of this article, but its fundamental importance to the topic necessitates at least a brief review.

Faith, according to Fowler, is not something that one does or does not have. It is, rather, a process of becoming. He suggests the concept of "faithing," which indicates the ongoing dynamic of movement and development in a person's faith journey. This process is continually growing through stages that are "hierarchical" (increasingly complex and qualitative), "sequential" (they appear one after the other in the life span), and "invariant" (they follow in the same order for all persons).

Fowler sees an individual's faith journey moving through six stages. Few people make it through all six, and many progress through only two or three. Each person, however, finds that stage of faith full of meaning to him or her. One may remain in the same stage throughout life or move through several stages in a matter of years. The task of the faith community is to find a proper balance between accepting and recognizing people's present faith stages while still encouraging them to explore new and more challenging stages. Fowler has ascribed descriptive terms to each stage; but most discussions of his theory use the numbers one through six to indicate each stage. Stages one and two address primarily the faith development of children. Since this article focuses on the most common adult faithing experiences, I will have to leave their exploration for another time. Stage six, which is limited to less than 1 percent of people, according to Fowler, is primarily for those saints whose faith development is truly that of oneness with God. Unfortunately, because of the scope and limits of this article, its discussion must also wait.

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Fowler's Theory and Practices
The major premise of this article is that generally the adults in our parishes are all at different places in their faith journeys—at different stages in their faithing. Our task as leaders, therefore, is to better understand, lead, and accompany them along the paths of their journeys. Doing this involves more, of course, than simply announcing that one class for stage threes will meet in the Fellowship Hall, another for stage fours in the library, and a third for stage fives in the education room. Few people will understand such divisions and, if they do, will probably have an inflated concept of where they belong. Such categorizations are, at least publicly, probably counterproductive. Competent leaders, however, should be sensitive to the variety of faith perspectives among those in their parishes and make every effort to provide some faithing opportunities for everyone.

Since the vast majority of people are most likely in stage three, they will respond to experiences that help them better understand the history and traditions of their faith—basic Scripture study, the teachings of Catholicism, and the like—and explore the "why?" questions behind these tenets. Leaders can invite their participation by asking questions that do not (necessarily) have "right" or "wrong" answers but will solicit expressions of their own interpretations and understandings. Additional examples include

  • Organize people into small groups for face-to-face discussion of issues where they are encouraged to voice their own perspectives, perhaps for the first time.
  • Open up new opportunities for inquiry outside of traditional boundaries—invite a rabbi to speak; visit and perhaps get involved in a community service program on the "other side of town"; take a risk and encourage them to address some difficult issues such as abortion or the gay lifestyle where contemporary culture and traditional faith may not agree.
These experiences alone will not push them into stage four—nor do you necessarily want that—but they will stimulate some people toward new faithing directions that many will not have experienced previously.

Finding the stage fours in your parish will be more difficult. Many of them will have left the faith community if and when they raised questions and received "no" for answers. Others may be on the periphery of parish life, perhaps attending Mass but not always coming forward to take the sacrament. There may be more "closet stage fours" in your parish than you know because they are often reticent about expressing themselves, at least "in church." But give it a try. You could try the following:

  • Plan a six-week discussion series around "knotty problems of the Bible" and deal with some of the difficult Old Testament stories (the six-day creation or the parting of the Red Sea, for example).
  • Talk about Jesus' miracles and explore their different interpretations.
  • Address the significance of the cross and the resurrection—the greatest mysteries of the Bible.
Stage-four people want to discuss and consider alternative perspectives. Keep foremost the teachings of the Church, but help them understand that true faithing can benefit from exposure to other interpretations.

You won't convert all stage fours to a traditional faith—even if you want to do so—but many of them will begin to see that their parish truly is concerned with their questions and willing to address them. This may motivate some to seek further knowledge and perhaps even to return to active life in the faith community.

In many ways, the stage fives in your parish may be among the most difficult to "structure" into classes. For the most part, many of them will already be active as liturgists, catechists, or parish leaders, finding meaningful expression for their faith in these ways. Others may live their faith through involvement in community concerns or may find their most meaningful faith enrichment through retreats and a personal devotional life.

On the other hand, the stage fives in your parish will usually have a deep and abiding concern for and commitment to enriching the parish's spiritual life. They may well provide some of the key leadership in the development of new directions for adult faith formation in your parish. Since they are self-motivated and have a strong sense of their owned faith, they usually are responsible and do not need continual "nudging" from those "in charge."

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Suffice to say that what is probably most important for the parish leader to understand is the basic concept that one's faith is ever-growing and that every individual is somewhere along the way of his or her faith journey. As leaders, it is our task, our challenge, and—of most importance—our opportunity to help those with whom we minister find for themselves the fullest possible meaning in their own faithing.

Kenneth Stokes, Ph.D., long-time director of Adult Faith Resources and editor of Faith Development in the Adult Life Cycle (New York: Sadlier, 1982), submitted this article before his death on July 3, 2000. The editors send their condolescences to his family and pray for his eternal peace.



[This excerpt is from the article "Starving Outside the Banquet Hall: Young Adults and Their (Hunger for) Faith Formation" by Timothy P. Muldoon, The Living Light Fall 2000, Vol. 37, No. 1. Subscribe to The Living Light.]

Many young Catholics are out of touch with their tradition. As one born after Vatican II, I have observed the same reality that authors such as James Davidson (The Search for Common Ground) and Michael Morwood (Tomorrow's Catholic: Understanding God and Jesus in a New Millennium) have noted: that different generations envision the Church in different patterns, based not only on church leadership, but also on the wider culture. The average parish of the early 1970s was different from the parish of the 1950s: those raised with guitar music and the kiss of peace naturally form a different image of the Church than those who were raised on the Latin High Mass. Why, though, do the studies indicate that the latter group has a stronger sense of belonging to the Church, when so much of the liturgical reform was aimed at creating a stronger sense of participation among the laity?

Many pre-Vatican II U.S. Catholics were raised in a Catholic culture that nurtured their faith. Many parishes followed ethnic lines in cities, had parochial schools, and provided the primary forum for socialization in American culture. Today, in contrast, inner-city parishes are struggling as Catholics have moved into a suburban, mobile, dispersed culture in which parish life is but one more activity to fit into an already busy schedule. Young people in many cases have not been raised with the same commitment to Catholicism that their parents or grandparents developed and thus do not share the same roots in the Church.

I suggest that an important element that many parishes lacked in the years following Vatican II was a strong sense of mystery. Young people today, in spite of so much evidence that their tastes can be remarkably shallow, thirst for depth. Although I have observed this many times in my work both in the classroom and in the RCIA process, one example sticks in my mind. To me, it indicates how important it is not only to pay attention to the content of what young people think, but also to appreciate that often their faith questions lie buried and thus need time to grow.

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The mistake that many educators make in teaching young people about Christianity is to assume that telling someone a truth is the same as the other person believing it as truth. An important factor that affects evangelization and formation today is a skeptical attitude toward authority—a factor that was almost absent from my grandparents' generation. Today, people have a more sophisticated attitude toward authority, especially since a person can so easily confront different claims to authority with the click of a mouse or the changing of a channel. Many young adults look upon religious questions in a pragmatic way: It is true if it affects me directly.

Unfortunately, many young adults have seen no practical need to appropriate Catholic faith, and so they approach religious questions with what seems to many to be an appalling naiveté. Under these circumstances, it can be difficult to address the topic of faith formation. To put it frankly, religious educators can take nothing for granted—they must assume (at least initially) that young adults have no substantive knowledge of the Catholic tradition. Eventually, of course, it will become evident that many young adults have developed a more sophisticated understanding of faith; but for the sake of formation, it is still important to make no premature conclusions. This may appear to some as patronizing, but I suggest that it creates a relationship between the educator and the young adult in which faith formation will be an unfolding dialogue rather than a lecture. If faith is an invitation, then faith formation will be a process of discovery. Faith formation will simply not work for a large number of young people if it is perceived as yet another body of information that must be learned. The bottom line is that those who respond, even with reservation, to the invitation of Jesus will seek for themselves answers to the questions they raise and will seek out people who can help them.

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Four Considerations for Inculturating Catholic Faith Among Young Adults
Inasmuch as effective adult faith formation "must begin by accepting adults where they are" (Our Hearts Were Burning, 27), it is important for religious educators to understand the considerations that face young adults today, particularly those considerations that differ from those faced by earlier generations. I shall focus on four: authority, diversity, relevance, and justice. I shall suggest that faith formation for young adults must be regarded not merely as an activity of a parish office, but rather, a process that must integrate the entire parish in all its aspects: liturgy, preaching, programming, evangelization, socialization, and the whole of parish life. Ultimately, the emphasis on faith formation is the practice of growing as a church, like the response of the apostles to the experience of Pentecost.

To take faith formation seriously, then, is to recognize that there is no radical division between those who have been steady churchgoers for years and those who are neophytes. The genius of the RCIA process is that it treats the process of initiation as something that affects the whole Church; I suggest that we must view faith formation as having a similar impact on all members of the community, not only those who seek out specific programs outside of the context of liturgical worship. Faith formation in the Christian tradition is never a solitary endeavor—it involves responding to the invitation of Christ to ever-deepening communion, both with God and with neighbor. What this means practically, then, is that a commitment to parish faith formation means making faith formation a pervasive element in everything the parish does. It means thinking creatively about how every parish activity provides a context within which a person unfamiliar with the Church can feel welcome, can recognize the invitation of Jesus to know him more deeply, and can be confident that the Church is a place that offers help. In short, it means that the whole parish must be committed to the process of conversion. The bishops' 1999 pastoral plan Our Hearts Were Burning Within Us repeatedly insists that faith formation involves people walking together on the journey of faith, sharing each other's burdens. Liturgy, in particular, must manifest a fundamental openness toward the unnamed "other" who seeks to know more of what the invitation of Christ really means.

Since parishes often comprise older adults and parents with their children, these neglected "others" tend to be young adults. The four considerations I address here will apply primarily to this population of people: those between roughly eighteen and thirty-five who have not developed a sense of belonging to the parish.

Authority
Young people's attitude toward authority has been shaped to a great extent by the culture. That many are suspicious of authority is not surprising; this attitude seems to be a part of maturing. What is new, however, is the sheer volume of claims to authority that young people confront on a regular basis.

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Diversity
A second important consideration among young adults is diversity. Unlike many older Catholics, young adults are likely to know many people of different racial, ethnic, and religious backgrounds, and are thus less likely to see Catholicism as the one "true" church. In response to this attitude, I usually refer to Catholicism as a "wisdom tradition," a term that may also be applied to other faiths. Rather than watering down the meaning of Catholic faith, this term is meant to connote something of what we find in the Declaration on Religious Liberty (Dignitatis humanae) of the Second Vatican Council: namely, that the different faiths of the world are rich sources of human understanding, and that we can learn from them all even while holding that the fullness of truth subsists in the Catholic Church.

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Relevance
By now it should be clear that the concern for relevance is a pervasive one. Young adults need to know how Catholic faith speaks to their questions, their desires. Because we live amidst a marketplace of ideas, evangelization takes on an economic flavor: we must "sell" the truth by showing what it means to the "spiritual consumer." In writing this, I must admit that this idea is harsh to my sense of rendering to God what is God's; but at the same time, I am aware of how much Catholicism really does compete with other claims to truth, on bookshelves, through media, and on the Internet. It is of fundamental importance to show that the Catholic tradition of wisdom is not merely an abstract notion, but rather, one that enables people to live the good life. For this reason, the relevance concern is closely tied to the final concern of justice.

Justice
Young people today, like those of the previous generation, recognize that concern for the welfare of the person and of society extends to the poor, the sick, the disenfranchised, the outcast. Unlike so many bland egocentric claims to authority in the religious marketplace, Catholic tradition emphasizes solidarity with the poor, and this emphasis can help young people understand how Catholicism is more than just another set of rules.

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Conclusion
Rather than lamenting the sorry state of faith formation among young adults, we can take comfort in the fact that young adults still show a great deal of interest in religious questions. Traditional thinking suggests that the future of the Church depends on people having a strong sense of belonging to the Church, knowledge of its traditions and liturgy, and a commitment to its future. I suggest, however, that even though young adults as a group may be less knowledgeable about their faith than their counterparts of a generation ago, this need not be a cause for despair. Indeed, if we take seriously the far-reaching impact of Vatican II, we cannot be too surprised. The Church changed dramatically one generation ago, which means that we who grew up in this "new" Church are only now coming into our adult years. It is reasonable to expect, then, that our cohort must formulate a language of faith different in some ways from that of the previous generation. What I have sought to show are some ways in which educators can appropriate the concerns of young adults, in order to help them to draw from the wisdom of the Catholic tradition. The gospel notion of the wedding banquet is illustrative here: many young people are like those who have either not understood or not received the invitation of the Father; thus he sends his stewards out to find them, that they might not find themselves starving outside the banquet hall.

Timothy P. Muldoon, PhD, is the chair of the Department of Religious Studies, Theology, and Philosophy at Mount Aloysius College in Cresson, Pa.



[This excerpt is from the article "The Open Door: An Invitation to the Hispanic Community" by Jorge Diez, The Living Light Fall 2000, Vol. 37, No. 1. Subscribe to The Living Light.]

I began as a church music minister as a young teen. It never crossed my mind that later in life I would become a full-time lay minister dedicated to serve, guide, and religiously educate the community for a more appreciative and familiar spiritual life. My goals as a young ambitious Colombian living in New York City were quite similar to those of other Hispanics of my age influenced by consumerism: I was as much inclined to the accumulation of wealth as the next person. After completing my undergraduate studies, I entered the business world and became a real estate broker, a career that was completely different from my academic studies. In living the desire for—and struggling as a Hispanic to achieve—the "American dream," I was able to observe the spiritual emptiness of many families who, through their struggle to better their lives, lost their religious values. God was no longer essential in their lives. The majority of Hispanics come to the United States to make a better living, and in that complicated and confusing process, many lose their way, cultural roots, and values.

Most Hispanics still yearn to go back to their native countries. Their minds and bodies are here, but their hearts are back home. I have known many Hispanics who, even after spending a lifetime in this country, do not have a command of English. Again, their goal was to make a sufficient amount of money to go back home and open their own businesses. Years pass, and still more Hispanics arrive with the same goal; yet for many reasons they end up staying in the United States for the rest of their lives. This is one of the reasons why Hispanic people do not concern themselves with the need for obtaining a better education or skills in order to succeed in this competitive society. Disoriented in this complicated world, their goals become a simple dream, just a mere illusion of what life should be.

From this realization, I was encouraged to pursue graduate studies at Fordham University in the field of religion and religious education so that I could attain the appropriate education and skills to adequately serve the Hispanic community. The more I learned, the more I realized the need to advance in my studies. This inner urgency confirmed my vocation. I aspire to professionally serve as an example for my community. I value the work I do because it allows me to stay in touch with my community. I feel the need to continue educating myself, not only to aid this society but to inspire others to pursue a career that will render spiritual, emotional, and mental refreshment.

One laments upon noticing how the immense Hispanic community is fragmented because of the lack of professionally prepared leaders to assist with orientation and unification. Consequently, our Hispanic communities are practically concealed and silent, with little representation. It perplexes me to know that the educational level of Hispanics is the lowest of any culture in the nation. The absence of professional Hispanic leaders is also evident in the Catholic Church.

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Our Hearts Were Burning provides an opportunity for Catholic Hispanics in the United States to engage in profound conversation about life and faith. It represents an open door that invites Hispanics to engage in pastoral ministries and express themselves not as a segregated community but as a people that belongs to, celebrates, and shares in the life of the Church in the United States. It beckons us Hispanics to learn from and acknowledge our unique histories in order to remind other Catholic communities of the catholicity of the Church that brings diverse cultures together to minister to the world by action and reflection.

Invitation to Action and Reflection
The pastoral plan Our Hearts Were Burning invites dioceses and parishes to consider a change, a transformation, offering to communities the opportunity to create mission statements that accord with the needs of their people. Dioceses, in consultation with parish and community leaders, are called to formulate adult pastoral plans that are infused with the energy derived from the dialogue between the people's experiences and the Church's religious traditions. Parishes are encouraged to explore the many fascinating aspects of coexisting cultures, utilizing their cultural wisdom and history in order to reform their present adult religious education practices into more attractive, appropriate, and welcoming ones.

Our Hearts Were Burning represents a plea for laity to get involved in pastoral planning. For Hispanic Catholic leaders, this means that they must encourage the members of the community to be aware that all, through their baptism, are called to participate in the building of the Church. The Hispanic community needs to learn that it is not the sole obligation of ordained ministers to keep the community together, to fight for its life, to breathe for it, or to educate it.

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A New Vision For Adult Ecclesial Ministries
Our Hearts Were Burning defines in general terms the mission of adult religious education ministers. The bishops propose guidelines for parishes to form adult religious education ministries in service of their communities. Now it is left to the parish to define the necessary ingredients to formulate and clarify the specifics of this primary ministry: "Identify, invite, train, and support people to serve as lead agents in fulfilling the plan" (57). This mandate could greatly benefit Hispanics, provided they are truthfully recognized as an integral and essential part of the life of the local churches.

Parents are the first catechists and the evangelizers of their children. They need the Church's support and guidance to nurture effectively the vivid faith of the young. A family-centered catechetical program would be most suitable for ministering to Hispanics. A domestic church "celebrating" God in family is present in the "burning hearts" of Hispanic communities. Their enthusiastic, motivated, and ardent faith evokes a committed, humble, and noble voice willing to faithfully contribute to the structure of the Church. The pastoral plan encourages a course wherein God is encountered in the many gifts and talents the Holy Spirit has bestowed upon all people and in their diverse cultures. As we begin to bring these gifts and talents to the service of the whole community, we subsequently give life to multicultural ministries that work together for the Kingdom of God. We must, however, inform our congregations with regard to their surrounding cultures. Catholics respect cultures in order to foster an awareness among the people that will lead to multicultural adult ministries.

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The bishops have promised this level of commitment to adult faith formation in their pastoral plan. In defining new roles for adult education ministries, we Hispanics should challenge the local church. Leaders in the Hispanic community need to help pastoral ministers discover ways to facilitate a sense of belonging to local parishes and the broader Church. Several ways are addressed below.

Recognition
In the late 1980s, a large number of dioceses adopted the National Pastoral Plan for Hispanic Ministry; however, in many of these dioceses little has been done to implement the plan. Within many parishes, Hispanics celebrate their Catholic religion separately from non-Hispanics and do not share equally in the administration of parish life. In Our Hearts Were Burning, the bishops offer hope that adult religious educational programs rooted in the pastoral needs of all people will be inclusively developed. Such an inclusive approach to adult formation would make great strides by implementing a Hispanic pastoral plan.

Outreach
"For a variety of reasons, people leave the Church. They may seek out or be recruited into non-denominational, evangelical, or fundamentalist churches, or into New Age or other religious movements" (Our Hearts Were Burning, 12). The huge number of Hispanics leaving the Catholic Church is alarming, and unless we quickly find adequate solutions, this phenomenon will be devastating not only for Hispanics but for the entire Catholic Church in the United States. Hispanics are facing many predicaments that urgently require special attention. For instance, a great number of Hispanics have the disadvantage of living in the United States without documentation. This represents both a social and a religious issue. During the 1999 Synod for America, Archbishop Victório Pavanello stated in a speech that referenced migrants who clandestinely leave their countries in search of better lives, that "when people lose their cultural roots and religious traditions they feel insecure and are easy prey to proselytizing and fundamentalist sects." Because proselytism among Hispanics is multiplying, a closer look at the welcoming techniques of other churches could be helpful.

Inculturation
Generally, Hispanics do not concentrate solely on self-improvement for personal gain. They are more influenced by biblical attitudes in which family and community are primary. Hispanics and other ethnic groups desire liturgies that are more familiar to them. Latino Catholics are more accustomed to a more family-centered and less church-centered religious practice. Due to the meaning and importance given to essential elements of our culture, such as patterns of family, friendship, and hospitality to strangers, Hispanics tend to conglomerate with people of the same nationality, creating to some degree a diluted Hispanic culture. The challenge lies in whether the diverse Hispanic-American Catholic population can find a unified voice in the Church. The incarnation of the Gospel in the Hispanic-American culture is an inevitable conduit to assemble an orchestra that integrates the rich aspects of each Hispanic culture with the wonderful traditions of North American culture—a mutual change for a mutually unifying celebration. In order for the Church to be a sacrament of life, it has to be rooted in the essence of its people. A liturgy that does not discern and embrace mutual cultural elements in celebrating God will amputate, mutilate, and disfigure God's revelation. The faith community is richer and more alive when it is open to the cultural expressions of every ethnic community.

Evangelization
An evangelizing parish community in this new millennium must ask crucial questions to identify the many faces dwelling in it and its neighborhood. For instance, in A Time to Listen . . . A Time to Heal, Sr. Patricia Wittberg provided some questions that I find pivotal: "Are there any non-European ethnic groups in our parish area? How can we invite them and make them welcome? Are there ways our parish can reach out to ethnic and economic groups outside of our parish? Are there young adults in our area who rarely participate in parish life? How can we include them?"6 The following are similar questions that I ponder in relation to Our Hearts Were Burning: Is the Church in the United States ready to undertake a similar course of change? Or are we expecting the different ethnic groups living in our parishes to celebrate in solely the "American way"?

Integration
The growth of the Catholic Hispanic population can be easily detected in religious education programs for children. Religious education classes have substantial percentages of Hispanic students that regularly receive catechetical instruction. Faithful parents gather at the entrance and surrounding areas of the schools to bring and wait for their children. I beheld this as an opportunity in my own parish to approach, invite, and welcome parents to become active participants in their church. Even though we have a very good Hispanic team, much can be done to educate the members in religion. This represents a great challenge for the Church in the United States today. Much needs to be accomplished to creatively form local plans that will sufficiently prepare Hispanics to properly serve their communities. Our Hearts Were Burning states that this preparation does not happen on a timetable; we will have to wait and meticulously reflect from time to time in order to observe the progress and effectiveness of the plan.

Conclusion
As we work toward unity, parishes and dioceses serving the Hispanic community are facing a multifaceted challenge. As an ethnic group composed of many different segments, we Hispanics should focus on unifying all our nationalities and eliminating all barriers that fragment our Hispanic culture into remnants that have ineffective voices. We need to evangelize the evangelized. We need to free the Spirit by catechizing the entire Hispanic community, not only by religiously educating our children but most importantly, and in general, the adult Hispanic population. The path to a new vitality in the Church has to be trodden by our own reflected life experiences so that we may discover the wider and deeper essence of God's love. Let us walk together utilizing our parishes as the "curriculum" in the faith formation of our adult communities. The road is uneven, but God walks with us as we journey and unveil new possibilities for shaping, harmonizing, and nurturing those hungry for faith.

Jorge Diez, a doctoral candidate in the graduate school of religion and religious education at Fordham University, is director of religious education at Saint Sebastian Church in Woodside, N.Y.



[This excerpt is from the article "The American Cinema's Challenge to Adult Faith Formation" by Guerric Debona., The Living Light Fall 2000, Vol. 37, No. 1. Subscribe to The Living Light.]

"Cinema has always been interested in God."—Andre Bazin1

In 1997, the U.S. Catholic bishops unanimously adopted a national Pastoral Plan for Church Communication that suggests "ways in which church communicators can respond to the increasingly complex communication situation in the United States today."2 In the statement, the bishops emphasized the value in using print, film, and television in the Church's evangelizing mission. They underscored the importance of deploying new technologies in order to bring the Gospel to a diverse, pluralistic modern world. The specific actions recommended by the plan included an examination of how media has influenced the "values, judgments and actions of U.S. society" (3). Because of media's effect on American society, it must necessarily affect adult faith formation. The bishops' 1999 adult formation plan Our Hearts Were Burning Within Us also recognizes the role of media in American society when it states, "Fidelity to the Gospel means engagement with the world, and so we begin . . . with a look at some of the concrete challenges and opportunities that we face."3

What are those concrete challenges and opportunities in the area of communication for adult faith development? In terms of popular media, nobody would question that the dark side of Hollywood film culture has often encouraged what Our Hearts Were Burning calls "secularism, materialism, atheism, ethical relativism, religious indifference" (11). But anti-religious cinema is not really the issue here; adult formation is. I would argue, therefore, that American film culture influences and forms values in much more sophisticated and subtle ways than those evinced in the thematic content of specific films. In fact, to investigate the historical relationship between Church and cinema in this country is to examine a long process of tension and negotiation.

Particularly in its early days, Hollywood borrowed traditional religious codes and symbols in order to attract an ever-growing and ever-diversified audience in America. Thus, the film industry has impacted adult faith development for one-hundred years; Catholics would do well to face the "concrete challenges and opportunities" beginning with a critical cultural analysis of the relationship between Church and cinema.

The thesis of this brief article is that media-driven, ideological conventions have had a substantial, formative relationship with film-going, religious immigrants in this country, and this experience poses questions for today's religious educator. I will suggest that early American film culture owes a lot to standardized religious conventions and that religious environments—together with a sense of community values and even the story of God—became highly successful secular sites for the burgeoning film business. My three categories of focus—environment, community, and story—are hardly exhaustive; they simply open discussion with religious educators about the way in which media, particularly Hollywood film culture, continues to negotiate important symbols and traditions for today's viewer, and thus pose a challenge to adult faith formation.

The Environment: Temple/Theater
Religious educators instinctively know how important the liturgical environment is in shaping and defining the Christian assembly; Hollywood production companies at the turn of the century also knew in a similar way that houses of exhibition would transform moviegoers. Early movie palaces functioned as divinized encasements for mass cultural spectacle. At their zenith, the grandest movie theaters would appropriately be called "cathedrals." Historically, long before the English Puritans closed the theaters in 1642, dramatic spectacle was indeed performed in the environs of churches themselves. On a more philosophical level, spectatorship hints at a kind of sacred, irresistible aura present in the transactional encounter between the viewer and the theater, which mass culture would only further accentuate. The famous closing sequence of Billy Wilder's Sunset Boulevard (1950) seems to capture the essential and indeed quasi-devotional role that cinema had with its spectators when the doomed and aging vamp, Norma Desmond, faces the audience and tells us, "There's nothing else. Just us. The cameras and those wonderful people out there in the dark."4

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The Community: Saint/Celebrity
Early Hollywood production companies not only formed communities of film "believers" through this use of religiously coded, sacred space, they also influenced the moral behavior of religious immigrants who attended these films. By 1928, even before the wide use of sound or color, an astonishing sixty-five million attended movie theaters weekly. Diverse communities were formed in urban areas and elsewhere as the peepshows disappeared and public theatrical exhibitions became common. In addition to "sacred" theaters harboring a sanctuary for spectacle, the nascent film industry in America relied heavily on a cult of personality or celebrity to help mold its audience from a group of Victorian immigrants into modern cinematic consumers. Indeed, the film industry shaped moral and social behavior of community life in America through a highly publicized star system that effectively used religious language to describe the pantheon of Hollywood movie actors and actresses gracing the silver screen, as Charles Affron explains in a 1991 essay:

The women are goddesses, the men are matinee idols; they are all stars who command devotion and veneration. The reverential and celestial vocabulary has been consecrated by decades of usage and press agentry. The cliches' first connotations effectively separate public from performer by an expanse of astral geography. The gods reign on high, the stars blink in solar systems light-years away, and we mere mortals, worshiping at their shrines in blissful ignorance, celebrate the distance."10
The Hollywood star system probably has its roots in the practices of people like P. T. Barnum, who—with the help of photography, the penny press, and a keen skill for publicity— "became an international figure for the way he focused attention to create fame and illusion."11 The twentieth-century emergent cult of celebrity would grow up around the technology of film and its ability to access middle class ideation. Fan magazines like Photoplay, which began in 1910, helped to turn stars into consumable goods because, "like the new public-relations profession, the studios depended on manipulating not only attention but also belief" (Gamson, 27). Looking to the pantheon of the worldly blessed had important implications for the Church. Instead of relying on traditional methods of learning ethical behavior (i.e., the Bible and the local parish priest), film stars and the aura and status of celebrity would come to define for Americans the value of right and wrong.

According to May, the celebrity status of early Hollywood superstars Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks would have a major effect in reorienting and recreating moral behavior in middle-class life: They modeled new images for the modern era. As audiences came to the movies (particularly after 1914, when producers began to draw featured celebrities from a large, ethnically diverse pool of Broadway players), "they carried with them the aura of upper and lower class styles that the bourgeois had previously avoided. Now marquee favorites might offer models for dealing with the questions of cultural mixing and sexual experimentation" (May, 100).

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The rise of the matinee idol in film culture, then, suggests the power of images to engage, educate, and shape an audience, even in moral decision-making. Seen from one perspective, the aura of stars in film culture was rooted in success stories of secular "saints." Contemporary journalistic accounts of actors like Fairbanks and Pickford read like modern hagiographies; they are "blessed" in their own way and serve as moral guides in a secular culture.

The Word: Sacred Story/Micro-Plot
The influence of the star system on the audience in early American film culture would extend well beyond the boundaries of advertising or fan mail. In a way, the audience's growing identification with and sympathy for its favorite stars reveal the tendency for modern Americans to move away from a grand narrative (a unified concept of salvation history, as presented by the Bible) and towards what author Jean Francois Lyotard calls "micronarratives."14 It is commonplace to say that the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries ushered into existence a preference for subjectivism, for values centered inside individual worlds. As more prose fiction began to concentrate on psychology and behavioral motivation, the overarching sweep of a large historical narrative became less important to artistic expression. James Joyce's Ulysses (1922) was the high-water mark in literary aesthetics because it parodied the epic (a grand narrative) by turning it into a day in the life of an ordinary man from Dublin. While the novels of Joyce and Virginia Woolf are the most famous examples of this, canonical representation of cultural formation was also beginning to shape popular, technologically driven mass media as well. Director Kevin Smith's religious satire Dogma (1999) articulates the problem of cultural subjectivism rather bluntly when the fallen angel, Loki, says to a troubled nun at an airport, "Organized religion destroys who we are. . . . Listen, my advice to you . . . find some man, find some woman that you can connect with even for a moment. 'Cause that's really all life is, sister: it's a series of moments."15

Hollywood has long emphasized the character-oriented screenplay, which could be self-contained and in which naturalistic psychology of an ordinary life could play a crucial role. Author Kristin Thompson has argued that forms of European positivism, particularly those witnessed by Zola's French fiction, came to dominate the Hollywood screenplay between 1909 and 1928: "A concentration on character psychology could provide the motivational material necessary to a unified work. The two main issues concerning character revolved around character development and psychology."16 In a general sense, Hollywood was providing Americans with a way to make sense of their lives through the little stories of other, idealized selves on the silver screen; all this was accomplished without recourse to the Bible—and continues to play that pedagogical, therapeutic role until the present day. We might recall that for centuries Scripture and Tradition were the most important catechetical instruments, but an evolving film culture and technology based on individual stories of people in struggle and conflict became like morality plays without the religious allegory or biblical instruction. For moderns, there is certainly less need to consult Sacred Scripture or historical memory when your favorite star manages to resolve his or her own problems on the silver screen.

Clearly, the movement away from sacred history to individual story was an intense compilation of cultural forces and occurred only over a period of many years. Early Hollywood agencies helped a Bible-centered, Protestant America move towards a more secular, character-driven ethic and epistemology. For example, Cecil B. DeMille, like D. W. Griffith, came from a religious background. The son of an Episcopalian priest, DeMille built his reputation on religious epics. In the hands of DeMille, the biblical genre in Hollywood combined a fascinating blend of history, biblical representation, and personal story. He created character interest within the boundaries of biblical history so that the audience could acknowledge their Judeo-Christian heritage while at the same time discovering a strong interest in character.

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

A Proactive Approach
Film culture has a symbiotic relationship with popular religion and the faith development of millions of viewers. Throughout its early history, Hollywood clearly borrowed (and continues to borrow) themes, religious symbols, codes, and practices in order to make the film product much more palatable for consumers. So how do religious educators respond?

Our Hearts Were Burning recommends a proactive approach; it is the task of "the adult formation team" or the "catechist of adults" to address appropriate questions regarding religious formation in a complex, pluralistic culture. In regard to American film culture and its ongoing relationship with the Church, I recommend to religious educators the following questions:

  • In the twenty-first century, how can ecclesial and catechetical leaders structure liturgical space to a media-savvy American populace (perhaps along the lines recently recommended by author Richard S. Vosko in Worship)?17
  • What must be said about the status of celebrity as a teaching instrument?
  • What is the impact of magisterial authority in a world driven by technology, glamour, and stardom? How can salvation history be made to carry significance for Catholics who appear to interpret their lives in light of a series of private moments as portrayed in sitcoms, talk shows, and movies?
  • What are effective ways of teaching and preaching Scripture so that a culture dominated by subjectivism can access Christian liturgical and biblical history?
In short, the Church must take proactive, forward-thinking steps to renegotiate the place of worship, the dignity of a non-glamorized community, and the treasure of the sacred story so as to bring it back to the people of God. Will the Church take these steps? One would hope so, but these are no easy tasks.

Guerric DeBona is assistant professor of homiletics at St. Meinrad School of Theology. Fr. DeBona, OSB, is a member of the St. Meinrad Archabbey in Indiana.



[This excerpt is from the article "Does Catechetical Sunday Have a Future?" by Carol Dorr Clement, The Living Light Fall 2000, Vol. 37, No. 1. Subscribe to The Living Light.]

September 17, 2000, marks the sixty-fifth annual, national celebration of a day honoring those involved in catechetical ministry. An attractive four-color poster for Catechetical Sunday 2000 and an accompanying program kit have been created to celebrate this anniversary. The quality of these materials indicate the creativity and vitality of the kit's authors and of the staff at the United States Catholic Conference's (USCC) Department of Education and Office for Publishing and Promotion Services. Religious educators in many parishes across the country will use the kit (booklet, poster, prayer cards, and catechist certificates) throughout the year in the religious education of adults and children. However, the decreasing percentage of parishes utilizing the USCC's program materials compared with the increasing number of catechists in the United States signals that perhaps something is amiss in the traditional observance of the annual event.

According to USCC sales records, fewer than 50 percent of the eighteen thousand parishes in the United States purchase the Catechetical Sunday kit to plan and celebrate the day. In the past ten years, the USCC has experienced a 36 percent drop in the number of kits purchased, although the sale of prayer cards and catechist certificates has increased significantly. At present, the quantity sold is the only index available to indicate the number of dioceses and parishes that celebrate the day. While many parishes and dioceses do celebrate Catechetical Sunday, some do not, and thirteen dioceses and archdioceses in the northeastern United States now promote a separate catechetical week sometime in November.

These statistics call for a revisiting of Catechetical Sunday and raise a number of significant questions: Does Catechetical Sunday have a future? Is one Sunday too little or too much? Is it celebrated at the best time of the year or should it be shifted to another spot on the calendar? What will the celebration be like on its seventy-fifth anniversary?

Origin and Purpose of Catechetical Sunday
Three significant factors have shaped the history of Catechetical Sunday: (1) its beginning in a decree of a Vatican congregation, (2) its promotion by the national center of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine (CCD) in Washington, D.C., and (3) the absorption of the CCD into the United States Catholic Conference.

Prompted by the desire to ensure religious instruction for children, young persons, and adults, and by the interest of Pius X and Pius XI in teaching the Catholic faith, the Sacred Congregation of the Council (now the Congregation for the Clergy) issued "On the Better Care and Promotion of Catechetical Education." The decree of January 12, 1935, suggested, among other things, that a catechetical day be established in every parish and stipulated that a "celebration of Christian Doctrine be held with as much solemnity as possible." The congregation acknowledged that the different needs and circumstances of each diocese would determine if and when such a day could be celebrated. Directed to the entire Church and universally known by its Latin name, Provido sane concilio, the decree also required bishops to submit a report every five years on various aspects of the "teaching of Christian Doctrine" in their parishes, including "whether and how the Catechetical Day is celebrated?"1

Well aware of the need for better catechesis for persons of all ages and animated by Acerbo nimis (the 1905 encyclical letter of Pius X), Bishop Edwin O'Hara organized the national center for the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine (CCD) in Washington, D.C. With the help of an episcopal committee, O'Hara, then bishop of Great Falls, Mont., established the center as a bureau of the National Catholic Welfare Conference in May 1935.2

The national center staff worked through the summer to prepare for the celebration of a national catechetical day on October 30, 1935, in Rochester, N.Y. Delegates from around the country attended a one-day event that was later developed into an annual series of national CCD congresses. By 1942 the national center was distributing a small booklet to help plan the day. The Catholic News Service reported in August 1944 that 80 percent of the diocesan confraternities of Christian doctrine celebrated a catechetical day in the autumn of the year to coincide with the opening of the new school term. The remaining 20 percent held the day "either in February, to stimulate flagging interest in the middle of the school year, or in June to mark the beginning of the Religious Vacation School program."3

In its 1950 mid-century survey on the CCD in the United States, the national center reported that 78 (or 69 percent) of the 113 reporting dioceses (out of the 128 officially listed for the United States) celebrated an annual catechetical day. A speaker at the following year's CCD national congress urged the delegates to celebrate the event on a Sunday, preferably in late September or early October. By 1955 most dioceses celebrated the day on the third Sunday in September, but the national center stipulated that "where no date is set by the Ordinary, the parish priest is free to name his own date." Throughout its sixty-five-year history, the date for the observance has been optional, although there have been periodic efforts to standardize it.

A Synergy: CCD and Catechetical Sunday
Prior to its reorganization with the USCC in the mid-1970s, the national center gave both motivation and practical support to the observance of Catechetical Sunday. Its manuals for diocesan CCD directors stressed their role in the celebration of the day across the nation. Manuals for the parish CCD emphasized that "a Catechetical Day or Confraternity Sunday shall be celebrated annually as the feast of Christian Doctrine."

At the national level, the center organized annual CCD congresses until World War II. After the war, the congresses took place every five years until 1971, and the center coordinated Catechetical Sundays with them. During congress years, the center urged all dioceses to hold the event on the same day across the nation.

Center publications helped parishes to organize the day, and the center distributed "sermon helps" that addressed various issues relevant to catechesis. The center asked the CCD diocesan directors to report back on how their parishes commemorated the day, thus providing yearly data on parish involvement. Our Parish Confraternity, the national quarterly CCD newsletter, publicized the event and gave celebration tips. In 1975 another reorganization streamlined the staff and reorganized its tasks within the USCC's Department of Education. Despite its limited staff, the USCC then began publishing an excellent series of annual booklets for organizing and implementing the day.

USCC Catechetical Sunday Booklets
As they so often would do in years to come, the editors of the first Catechetical Sunday booklet focused on an important catechetical document of the U.S. bishops, in this instance To Teach As Jesus Did: A Pastoral Message on Catholic Education. Timeliness with regard to national and worldwide church events and documents is a usual characteristic of the annual booklets published by the USCC.

A team of writers produced this 1973 booklet. Its "modules" gave suggestions on composing the homily and general intercessions of the Sunday liturgy, on planning a meeting with parents in regard to religious education, and on initiating an adult religious education program for the year. The booklet also proposed a ceremony for commissioning parish religious education personnel.

According to records in the USCC archives, ninety-nine diocesan directors later evaluated the booklet and also indicated how they observed Catechetical Sunday. Twenty-three dioceses made an "all-out effort" to promote the day; thirty-nine gave moderate support, and twenty-five dioceses promoted the day "to some degree." Fifty-nine dioceses mailed the 1973 Catechetical Sunday booklet to their parishes. Eighty-two diocesan directors stated that a similar booklet for 1974 would be helpful, but some asked for more liturgical assistance or more material on adult education and high school catechetics. Others wanted posters or a more pastoral orientation. Some asked for a less expensive format, and several directors pointed out that the occurrence conflicted with planned programming in their dioceses. A few indicated that there was no need for Catechetical Sunday.

Responding to these 1973 evaluations, Carl Pfeifer and Janaan Manternach, then assistant directors of the National Center of Religious Education, prepared a bigger, more comprehensive booklet for 1974. In it they were careful to state that while the national celebration would take place on Sunday, September 15, "local conditions may dictate another date." Their work became the prototype for subsequent annual issues.

Booklets from 1979 and 1980 addressed and resolved two issues about Catechetical Sunday. First, apparently in response to the issue of liturgical appropriateness, the 1979 booklet argued that the designation "Catechetical Sunday" did not supplant or substitute the names or meanings of the day on which the community gathers for worship (the Day of the Lord, the Day of Resurrection, etc.). Rather, the special Sunday recognizes the community's role in handing on the faith. Second, the same booklet pointed to a trend in some parishes of splitting the single observance into multiple Sunday "observances" such as Youth Sunday, Family Sunday, Social Development Sunday, School Sunday, and Lay Ministry Sunday. This booklet called for a more holistic concept of ministry and the development of an overall pastoral plan for the parish. Editors of the 1980 booklet resolved the question of multiple celebrations, citing the 1971 General Catechetical Directory's definition of catechesis as a form of ministry of the word. Using this more comprehensive concept, the editors noted that "catechesis functions within the context of all parish ministries, to the extent that those ministries proclaim the Word through formal instruction and action." They declared that if the purpose of the commemoration "is to call attention to the parish's ministry of the Word, there is a need to celebrate it via a total parish approach."

Themes and Topics
During the next quarter-century, the booklets continued to be timely and practical. Anticipating the 1976 national bicentennial, the 1975 Catechetical Sunday celebration had as its theme "Liberty and Justice"; and for the first time, the USCC printed two editions, one in English and one in Spanish. A wall poster accompanied the booklets. Subsequent booklets contained essays on multicultural approaches to catechesis, on religious education for those with special needs or disabilities, and on the scriptural background for the Sunday homily. Well-known authors and catechetical leaders contributed essays on the Bible, liturgy, justice, stewardship, catechetical theory, the parish community, inculturation, and God's wisdom and mercy. Editors included quotations from recent church documents, prayers for catechists, practical tips for publicizing Catechetical Sunday, and model programs to promote religious education in the parish. Recent booklets have added suggestions for the spiritual formation of the catechist. Booklets for the years 1997-2000 have emphasized preparations for and celebration of the jubilee year. Another topic covered routinely is how to provide catechesis in Native American, African American, and Asian American cultures. During the last twenty-five years, the booklets have evolved into manuals that give theological and catechetical updates for diocesan and parish catechetical leaders. The materials also provide tools for them to use in their annual religious education programs.

Catechesis for Children, Youth, and Adults: A Constant Theme
Not to be confused with pedagogy for children, catechesis addresses itself to persons of all ages.4 Provido sane concilio asked the world's bishops to report on the catechetical instruction of both children and adults. Every five years the bishops were to answer the question: "What means according to the different circumstances of time and place are deemed most fitting to bring about a more fruitful religious instruction of adults?"

As early as 1942, in its first promotional materials, the CCD's national center proposed that the parish Catechetical Day program demonstrate an adult discussion club. The clubs functioned to help adults to discuss their faith and then, in turn, to help them act as instructors of the faith at home. National center bulletins often reminded parish leaders to develop other programs for adults. The USCC booklets have consistently featured articles on young adult, family, and adult religious education, some with these titles: "Adult Catechesis and Following in Jesus' Steps," "Getting to Know God's Many Faces," and "Involving the Family in Catechesis." However, the close connection between Catechetical Sunday and the beginning of school for parish children in the fall may have served to reinforce the misconception that education in faith is primarily for children.

Catechetical Week: A Once and Future Celebration?
Half a century ago, the national center suggested that the week following Catechetical Sunday be a time to promote and organize catechetical activities. Parish leaders attended a "Diocesan Confraternity Day" one week prior to each year's event. At that time, diocesan officials outlined the CCD program for the coming year, exhibited CCD literature, demonstrated various phases of the CCD, and promoted attendance at regional CCD congresses. Beginning on each Catechetical Sunday, parish leaders then sponsored a week of organizational, promotional, and spiritual activities connected with the CCD program. By 1960 the national center was asking parishes to hold a formal reception ceremony on the following Sunday for those new members of the CCD who had registered on Catechetical Sunday itself. Thus, in a loose sense, Catechetical Sunday took two weeks, one of preparation and one of implementation.

In order to promote "a greater appreciation of the total educational mission of the Church," the National Catholic Educational Association (NCEA) joined with the USCC in a September 1972 celebration of "Christian Education Week." Staff at the national level encouraged diocesan and school administrators to use Catechetical Sunday to reach those six million children and youth in public elementary and high schools and "another five million entirely untouched by religious education."5 The program for the final Sunday of Christian Education Week was to emphasize total religious education for "all the people of God." Both in the homily and in the Sunday programs, "the people should be alerted again to the crisis in Catholic education which follows hard upon a kind of crisis in faith."

In 1973, the Catholic schools, with the sponsorship of NCEA, then moved their Catholic Schools Week to February, thus beginning an annual and successful celebration for Catholic elementary and secondary schools. That same year the USCC suggested that Catechetical Sunday be extended over the following week to include "meetings with parents and . . . the continuing education of adults." The USCC also noted that "Catechetical Sunday has taken on new importance at this time of crisis for Catholic schools and the rapidly growing enrollment of Catholic youngsters in public schools." Annual booklets for the late 1970s sometimes referred to a catechetical week, presumably in September, and more recent books have suggested extending the day's theme throughout the year. In some parishes, the theme and kit will indeed inspire the year's activities, but in others the booklet may serve only to help parish directors of religious education (DRE) plan for just one Sunday in September.

The Catechetical Sunday celebration is often the responsibility of the DRE (or another specified leader), who is usually already busy in September with registering students, recruiting teachers, and organizing classes for the parish school of religion. Practically speaking, then, DREs find little time in August and September to organize and promote a week similar to that of the February celebration of Catholic Schools Week. Thus, the best-known aspect of Catechetical Sunday is often the commissioning of parish catechists.

Consequently, parish catechetical personnel might continue to commission catechists without purchasing the USCC kit every year, or they might under-utilize the kit. Certainly, many find it impossible to begin a parish program for the year while simultaneously conducting a September catechetical week.

Catechetical Week in November—A Grassroots Idea
Parish administrators in several northeastern states have found the month of November to be a more suitable time to tell the story of religious education in parishes and to acknowledge the work of parish catechists.

Several catechists in the Diocese of Worcester, Mass., asked Msgr. Louis Piermarini, diocesan director of religious education, if they could publicize the work of religious education in the parishes of the diocese. They wanted to develop a week comparable to Catholic Schools Week. The director endorsed the idea, and the diocese held its first religious education week in November 1997. The Catholic Free Press, Worcester's diocesan newspaper, published a special religious education supplement to recognize and thank the catechists and volunteers in the religious education programs of the diocese. Parishes included special quarter-page or eighth-page notices in support of their programs. Publishers of religious education materials, religious goods stores, and various diocesan offices and ministries also contributed advertisements. The supplement featured articles interviewing Bishop Daniel Reilly and Msgr. Piermarini, as well as features on parish programs.

As president of the New England Conference of Diocesan Directors of Religious Education, Piermarini presented the results of Worcester's 1997 experience, and by 1998 all ten dioceses and two archdioceses in New England celebrated a "religious education month" during November. They could choose one week during the month "to celebrate in a variety of ways the good work of our parish catechetical programs." Directors of the New England dioceses talked of a National Religious Education Week but agreed to a trial run in New England first.

Piermarini has emphasized that the week's purpose is to "set aside time to acknowledge the importance of what people are doing in their parishes," and this includes religious education for adults. The Catholic Free Press's 1999 religious education supplement emphasizes the work of adults in both learning about and handing on their faith. In its section devoted to Religious Education Month, Church World, the Diocese of Portland's weekly publication, discusses faith formation and family catechesis, describes the work of parish religious education, and runs essays by two national catechetical leaders. Newspapers for the participating dioceses have served a triple function in presenting the efforts of parish faith formation work, in recognizing catechists and volunteers in the parishes, and in educating diocesan readers about the theory and practice of religious education.6

In the meantime, not aware of the New England efforts, catechists of the Diocese of Brooklyn asked its Office of Religious Education to conduct a week for religious education that would be comparable to Catholic Schools Week. With Bishop Thomas Daily's approval, the diocese held its first catechetical week in November 1999. The impetus of the week was to inform the people of the diocese of the great work being accomplished by wonderful people. Parishes sponsored a variety of activities to recognize catechists and to publicize the work of religious education. Holy Family parish included a special luncheon for the grandparents of the children in the religious education program. Although most parishes participated, some were not ready in 1999 but promised to be so in 2000, while some others suggested that the week be celebrated at a different time of year. As part of Catechetical Week 1999, William H. Sadlier Publishers sponsored a dinner for almost three hundred catechetical leaders in the Brooklyn diocese.7

Commenting on the weeks in the northeast, Daniel Mulhall, assistant secretary for catechesis and inculturation in the USCC's Department of Education, commends them. Reflecting on such developments in a direct interview, he emphasizes that "whatever we can do to honor and support catechists and the work of religious education itself is praiseworthy. That includes fostering creative programs that strengthen catechetical ministry."

Catechetical Sunday—A Look into the Third Millennium
This brief survey of the sixty-five years of the observance of Catechetical Sunday indicates the strengths and possible future direction for the day's celebration.

With the leadership and support of the national center, Catechetical Sunday activities publicized and helped to organize CCD work in the parish, diocese, and nation. As such, the day has enjoyed the support of a relatively large and enthusiastic national center staff. In the years following Vatican II, when the bishops of the United States organized the USCC and CCD became part of the Department of Education, Catechetical Sunday underwent two major changes. First, the USCC began publishing an attractive and educational annual catechetical kit. Second, because of staff limitations at USCC, the responsibility for local promotion of the day devolved upon diocesan directors of religious education (formerly the diocesan CCD directors) and upon individual parishes (often the DRE or another catechetical leader in the parish). Dioceses no longer reported to a central office about their observance of the day, and a central office no longer could help them on a year-round basis. Autonomous diocesan directors are responsible for numerous aspects of religious education in their dioceses, and the USCC can only offer its Catechetical Sunday kit in support of their efforts. But the USCC could also serve as a locus for the beginning of a conversation on the future direction of the commemoration of Catechetical Sunday and/or a National Religious Education Week or Month.

The resurgence of interest in a catechetical week, as evidenced in New England and the Diocese of Brooklyn, suggests that a week of celebration and education across the nation is a sound possibility. Flexibility demands that dioceses and parishes be able to choose the proper time; a nationwide observance requires that the week be held within a small time frame or "religious education month" in order to focus interest and energy.

What would become, then, of Catechetical Sunday? If it remains in its present place on the third Sunday of September, where it marks the beginning of parish programs of religious education, a catechetical week could follow in late October or in November. Or the bishops of the United States might switch the day to one in October or November when a religious education week occurs. The latter seems more practical. The present "Rite of Commissioning" could continue to be held on a Sunday in late September, as parish catechists begin their new programs. Parish and diocesan leaders would then be free to publicize their efforts and explain their programs during a catechetical week later in the year.

The USCC theme for 2000 "A Year of Favor: Making All Things New" may be prophetic for Catechetical Sunday itself. Not in decline, but in transition, the day—and the week that it may inspire—promise new development, possibly before Catechetical Sunday approaches its seventy-fifth anniversary.

Carol Dorr Clement has been, until recently, DRE of St. Bernard's Parish in Riverdale, Md. Dr. Dorr is currently writing a history of Catholic religious education in the United States based on the lives of outstanding women.

Email us at catholiceducation@usccb.org
Secretariat of Catholic Education | 3211 4th Street, N.E., Washington DC 20017-1194 | (202) 541-3132 © USCCB. All rights reserved.





Email us at CatholicEducation@usccb.org
Secretariat of Catholic Education | 3211 4th Street, N.E., Washington DC 20017-1194 | (202) 541-3132 © USCCB. All rights reserved.