Vatican City, 7 December 2015 (VIS) –
An education in the fullness of humanity is should be the defining
feature of Catholic schools, said Pope Francis this morning to the
members of the Association of Catholic School Parents in Italy
(AGESC), whom he received in audience in the Clementine Hall.
“Speaking about a Catholic education is equivalent to speaking
about the human, about humanism”, he emphasised. “An inclusive
education finds a place for all and does not select in an elitist way
the beneficiaries of its efforts”.
“Your association is at the service
of the school and the family, contributing to the delicate task of
building bridges between the school and the territory, between the
school and the family, between the school and civil institutions. …
As parents, you are the depositories of the primary and irrevocable
duty and right to educate your children, in this way helping in a
positive and constant way in the task of the school. You have the
right to demand a suitable education for your children, an integral
education open to the most authentic human and Christian values.
However, it is also your responsibility to ensure that the school is
up to the educational task entrusted to it, especially when the
education it proposes is described as 'Catholic'. It pray to the Lord
that the Catholic school never take for granted the meaning of this
adjective”.
The Pope went on to list the
prerequisites for a school to describe itself as truly Catholic.
These included transmitting “an integral, not ideological culture”
and “promoting harmony in diversity”. However, he said to the
members of AGESC, “How can this be applied in practice? It is not
an easy task”. To this end, he invited the parents of pupils in
Catholic schools to build bridges between the school and society, and
always to remember theneed to construct an educating community in
which, along with the teachers, various workers and students, parents
are able to be agents in the educational process”.
“Do not be extraneous to this world;
live within it like leaven in the dough”, he said. “My invitation
to you is simple but bold: know how to make the difference with a
high quality formation. Find methods and ways of not passing
unnoticed behind the scenes of society and culture, without arousing
clamour, not with projects full of rhetoric. Know how to distinguish
yourselves for your constant attention to the person, especially the
least among us, those who are cast aside, denied and forgotten. Know
how to be noticed not for your 'facade', but for educational
coherence rooted in the Christian vision of humanity and society”.
He also remarked that at a time when the economic crisis has led to
the closure of many private schools, “the temptation of 'numbers'
becomes increasingly insistent, and this leads to discouragement. But
despite all this I repeat: it is the quality of your presence that
makes the difference, not the quantity of resources you have at your
disposal”.
“Never betray the human and Christian
values you bear witness to in the family, in school and in society.
Give generously your contribution so that the Catholic school never
becomes a fall-back option or a meaningless alternative among the
various educational institutions. Collaborate so that Catholic
education has the face of new humanism. … Strive to make Catholic
schools truly open to all”, concluded the Holy Father.
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