Vatican City, 13 February 2014 (VIS) –
“Catholic education is one of the most important challenges for the
Church, currently committed to new evangelisation in an historical
and cultural context that is undergoing constant transformation”,
remarked the Holy Father in his address to participants in the
plenary session of the Congregation for Catholic Education (for
Educational Institutions), whom he received in audience in the Sala
Clementina this morning.
The agenda of the plenary session, the
Pope commented, includes themes of primary importance such as the
implementation of the Apostolic Constitution “Sapientia
Christiana”, the consolidation of the identity of Catholic
universities, and the preparations for the events which will fall in
2015: the fiftieth anniversary of the Conciliar Declaration
“Gravissimum educationis” and the twenty-fifth anniversary of the
Apostolic Constitution “Ex Corde Ecclesiae”.
Pope Francis proposed three aspects for
consideration by the participants: the value of dialogue in
education, the qualified preparation of formators and the
responsibility of educational institutions to express the living
presence of the Gospel in the fields of education, science and
culture.
Referring to the first of these points,
he said, “Effectively, Catholic schools and universities are
attended by many students who are not Christian or do not believe.
Catholic educational institutions offer to all an approach to
education that has as its aim the full development of the person,
which responds to the right of every person to access to knowledge.
However, they are also called upon to offer, with full respect for
the freedom of each person and using the methods appropriate to the
scholastic environment, the Christian belief, that is, to present
Jesus Christ as the meaning of life, the cosmos and history. Jesus
began to proclaim the good news of the 'Galilee of the people', a
crossroads of people, diverse in terms of race, culture and religion.
This context resembles today's world, in certain respects. The
profound changes that have led to the ever wider diffusion of
multicultural societies require those who work in the school or
university sector to be involved in educational itineraries involving
comparison and dialogue, with a courageous and innovative fidelity
that enables Catholic identity to encounter the various 'souls' of
multicultural society”.
With regard to the second aspect, the
Pope remarked that during his meeting with the Superior Generals, he
had emphasised that education in our times “is guided by a changing
generation, and that, therefore, every educator – and the Church as
a whole is an educating mother – is required to change, in the
sense of knowing how to communicate with the young”.
In relation to the responsibility of
educational institutions to “express the living presence of the
Gospel in the field of education, science and culture”, Pope
Francis reiterated the need for Catholic academic institutions to
avoid “isolating themselves in the world”, and instead to “know
how to enter, with courage, into the Areopagus of contemporary
cultures and to initiate dialogue, aware of the gift they are able to
offer to all”.
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