Vatican to Catholic Homeschoolers
Vatican to Catholic Homeschoolers: "I truly admire parents, who take on this great commitment"
VATICAN CITY, December 13, 2006 (LifeSiteNews.com) -
Three veterans of the United States Catholic home school movement spent
Thanksgiving week in Vatican City meeting with officials of various
congregations and councils of the Holy See to discuss the positive results of
Catholic home schooling. Dr. Mary Kay Clark, Director of Seton Home Study
School, as well as Dr. Catherine Moran, President of the Catholic Home School
Network of America, and Mrs. Virginia Seuffert, home schooling mother of 12 and
a frequent speaker at Catholic Home Schooling conferences, were encouraged by
the positive response of the Vatican prelates.
Many of the prelates were already familiar with Seton Home Study School, a
Catholic home study program in the diocese of Arlington, Virginia, which has
been operating for the past twenty-five years, with a current enrollment of
approximately 11,000 students. Officials were presented with textbooks from
Seton Press, the publishing arm of the school, and the largest publisher of
Catholic schoolbooks in North America with over 100 titles and hundreds of
thousands of books sold. Students are enrolled primarily in the United States,
but also from many countries from around the world, such as Canada, Australia,
England, Ireland, Mexico, the Philippines, Japan, the Czech Republic, Germany,
Colombia, and India.
The home school envoys emphasized to the Vatican cardinals and bishops the
primary importance of the Faith in Catholic home schooling. They explained that
when parents teach the Faith to their children on a daily basis, teaching not
only with textbooks but through the daily practice of prayer, good example, and
frequent reception of the Sacraments, children will develop a love for the Faith
and vocations will increase. They quoted one Midwest bishop who says that over a
five-year period, 23 percent of young men graduating from one home school
cooperative in his diocese entered the seminary. They pointed out that Justin
Ferguson, the seminarian who gave the first reading at Pope Benedict's papal
installation mass, is an alumnus of Seton Home Study School.
Vatican officials, including cardinals, bishops and monsignors, expressed
curiosity about the qualification of mothers and fathers to teach their own
children at home, but the three Americans were able to assure them of the
ability of parents to teach their children. The Americans reported that home
school students consistently outperform their counterparts in institutional
schools. Officials were impressed to hear that the 2006 graduate with the
highest grade point average at West Point was a graduate of Seton Home Study
School.
The response of the Vatican officials was encouraging and positive. Bishop Karl
Josef Romer of the Pontifical Council for the Family thanked the home schoolers:
"I would like to thank you for your Catholic home schooling initiative that
opens up new horizons for the family. I truly admire parents, the mothers and
fathers who take on this great commitment and give their children not only food
for their bodies and physical well-being, but also all the necessary formation
for their minds and instruction in the Catholic Faith, which before being a
doctrine, is the lived example of parents themselves. You are the most perfect
model of teachers because you live what must shape the lives of your
children."
Francis Cardinal Arinze, Prefect of the Congregation for Divine Worship and
Discipline of the Sacraments noted, "The primary educators of children are
parents. The child is the child of the parent first, and the parents are the
first to answer to God for their children." He urged parents to,
"Train children in a way that gives them hope."
Dr. Clark says of their visit, "We wanted to assure the bishops and
cardinals that the Catholic home schooling movement is strong, growing, and
faithful. And in turn, we were assured of the continued support for Catholic
home schooling by the Church hierarchy. There is no question that the officials
of the Catholic Church at the highest levels realize the importance of Catholic
home schooling. I think it should be a comfort to parents, during their day to
day joys and difficulties, that the Church understands and appreciates the work
that they are doing."