Fr. John Hardon on

Catholic Home Education

 

Christ Speaks to Us -

Words from One of Our Spiritual Fathers

 

On this Page:

What the Church Considers as Homeschooling

The Church's Condition in This Country

Four Reasons Why Catholic Homeschooling is Necessary

Where the Church Has Survived

Channels of Grace

How Parents are to Provide

Catholic Homeschooling is Not Easy - It is the Cross

CKnow Your Faith in order to Give Your Faith

Catholic Homeschooling Must Be Organized


As it appeared in the premiere issue of

The Catholic Family's Magnificat! Magazine.

Copyright 1994. All Rights Reserved.

Written by Fr. John Hardon, S.J.


I would like to address the subject of Catholic homeschooling in the tradition of the Catholic Church, and my plan is to cover three areas of a large subject.

 

What has the Catholic Church considered as homeschooling in the Church's history? Secondly, why is homeschooling necessary? And thirdly, how should homeschooling be done most effectively?

 

The focus I would like to take is of homeschooling as authentically Catholic. I would like to begin first with a general definition of Catholic homeschooling, and then distinguish various kinds of homeschooling in the Church's history.

 

Catholic homeschooling is the planned and organized teaching and training of children at home, for their peaceful and effective life in this world, and for their eternal salvation in the world to come.

 

I distinguish teaching from training, for I say that teaching addresses itself mainly to the mind, and training to the will; indeed, the training of the mind is in order to motivate the will.

 

We get our principles for authentic Catholic homeschooling from Christ's closing directive to His apostles: "To teach all nations" -- that's the mind -- "to observe all that I have commanded you" -- that's the will. Homeschooling, therefore, addresses itself to the mind in order that the will might be motivated to do God's will. It is the teaching and training of children at home that distinguishes it from teaching and training in formal school situations.

 

Having said that, we must immediately distinguish among the different forms that Catholic homeschooling has taken over the centuries, depending on the conditions of the Church at any given time in her history. The conditions are as follows:

 

first, in missionary times before the Church had been established in any particular country or locality;

second, homeschooling once the Church had been firmly established;

third, homeschooling where the Church is strongly opposed,

and finally, where the Church has been disestablished, especially by civil authority.

 

I will identify the Church's condition in our country: the Church under opposition and not yet formally disestablished.

 

Homeschooling in the United States is the necessary concomitant of a culture in which the Church is being opposed on every level of her existence and, as a consequence, given the widespread secularization in our country, homeschooling is not only valuable or useful but it is absolutely necessary for the survival of the Catholic church in our country.

 

Homeschooling, in our country, is that form of teaching and training of children at home in order to preserve the Catholic faith in the family, and to preserve the Catholic faith in our country.

 

Our second reflection is why. There are four principle reasons why Catholic homeschooling is necessary...

 

Homeschooling has been necessary in the Catholic Church since her foundation. The necessity, therefore, is not the necessity that is the result of an emergency. No, Catholic homeschooling is necessary -- period. And one reason is that it was so widely neglected before. So many parents practically abdicated their own obligation to teach their own children, and then found out, sadly, their children were not being given a Catholic education.

 

How do we know that homeschooling is necessary? First, we know it from divine revelation. The early Church is normative not only on what we should believe as Catholics but on how we ought to learn our faith...and live it. There were not established Catholic schools in the Roman Empire back in the first 300 years of the Church's history. Except for parents becoming, believing, and being heroic Catholics in the early Church, nothing would have happened. The Church would have died out before the end of the first century.

 

Church's Teaching and History

 

There is no single aspect of religious instruction that, over the centuries, the Church has not more frequently, or more consistently, taught the faithful, than of the parents on how to provide for the religious and, therefore, also human education and upbringing of their offspring. So true is this that it is the second and coequal purpose for Christ instituting the Sacrament of Matrimony -- for the procreation and the education of children.

 

By whom? By the parents! That is why Christ instituted the Sacrament of Matrimony. So how do we know that homeschooling is necessary? Because the Church has always taught it.

 

Where has the Church survived? Only and wherever -- and this is historically provable -- homeschooling over the centuries by the Catholic parents has been taken so seriously that they considered it their most sacred duty, after having brought the children into the world physically, to parent them spiritually.

 

The necessity for homeschooling is not only a natural necessity; it is a supernatural necessity. Have parents over the centuries, in all nations, from the dawn of human history, in every culture, had the obligation to teach and train their children? Yes, the same ones who brought the children physically into the word have a natural obligation binding in the natural law, to provide for the mental, moral, and social upbringing of their offspring. Yet since God became man, the necessity, and therefore the corresponding obligation, becomes supernatural.

 

What do we mean when we say that Catholic homeschooling is a supernatural necessity? We mean that in God's mysterious but infallible providence, He channels His grace from human beings who already possess that grace. It is a platitude to say that we cannot give what we do not have. Nobody would ever learn the alphabet. We would not know how to read or write...or even how to eat.

 

We have to be taught everything we know. The real necessity for Catholic homeschooling is neither because we naturally need someone else to bring us into the world, nor to teach us what we need to know and do as human beings. Since the coming of Christ, we are not longer mere human beings.

 

Becoming Channels of Grace

 

At baptism, we receive the life which is the very life of God shared by Him with His creatures. And just as no one gives himself natural life, so no one receives or nurtures or develops or grows in that supernatural life that we receive at baptism.

 

The main reason for homeschooling is that only those who have God's grace are used by Him as channels of grace to others.

Over the centuries, our principal Jesuit apostolate has been teaching. And we are told, in the most uncompromising language: "You will be able to teach others -- you will share with them only what you are yourselves."

 

No one else can teach the faith -- except the person who has it. But possessing divine grace, beginning with the value of faith, is not only a condition, it is also the measure for the communication of grace. Weak-believing parents will be weak conduits of the grace of faith to their children. Strong-believing parents will be strong conduits of the grace of faith. This is not good psychology and it is not good example. This is Divine Revelation.

 

In the mysterious providence of God, this is the law: Only those who possess the supernatural life and the measure of the possession of faith, hope and charity will God use as the channels of His grace to their children.

 

Live Our Holy Faith

 

How are parents to provide for the Catholic homeschooling for their children? First, the principal and most fundamental way is by living strong Catholic lives. All the academic verbiage and planned pedagogy are useless. Only persons who have God's grace will He use as the channels of His grace to others, and no one, but no one, cheats here.

 

What then is the first way to be an effective homeschooling parent while living a good Catholic life?

 

For Catholic parents to live good Catholic lives in our day requires heroic virtue. Only heroic parents will survive the massive, demonic secularization of materially super-developed countries like America.

 

And consequently, far from being surprised, parents should expect that homeschooling will not be easy. Any homeschooling in the U.S. which is easy today is not authentic Catholic homeschooling. If it is easy, something is wrong.

 

Today, Catholic parents must not only endure the cross, resign themselves to living the cross, but they are to choose the cross. In case no one has told you, when you choose homeschooling, you chose a cross-ridden form of education.

This is the age of martyrs - and a martyr is one who suffers for the profession of his faith. There is red martyrdom and white martyrdom. There is bloody martyrdom and unbloody martyrdom.

 

You have to live a heroic Catholic life in America today. God will use you and provide you with knowledge and the wisdom, providing you are living the authentically heroic Catholic life.

 

Know and Impart the Faith

 

Secondly, if you want to teach and train your children, you must know your faith. You must grasp and understand the faith. Read the 14th Chapter of Matthew where Our Lord tells the parable of the sower sowing seeds. Seeds fell on four kinds of round. The first three kinds were unfruitful. As Jesus said, birds came along and picked up the seed, and nothing grew.

 

The disciples asked Jesus for the meaning. The Lord explained that the seeds falling on the way side are those persons who have received the Word of God into their hearts and fail to understand it, and therefore the evil one comes along and steals it from their hearts.

 

That is why America now has millions of ex-Catholics. They have never understood their faith.

 

I have strong encouragement from the Holy See to train parents. You are all welcome to learn your faith so that you grasp and understand your faith. Then God will use you to teach your children as a channel of faith. Teach, not only by rote memory, to grasp the faith.

 

Many Catholics, before they finish college, discard their faith as a remnant of childhood. They don't understand. I myself had 15 years of Jesuit education and 15 more years before I started teaching. There are oceanic depths to our faith, and you must learn as much as you can, so that God will use you as an effective channel of grace so you can communicate your faith to your offspring.

 

True Schooling and the Sacramental Life

 

Next, Catholic homeschooling must be schooling. There must be organization, administration, a pattern, a schedule, and a program. Somebody has to be in charge. Mother and father must cooperate in the homeschooling.

 

Homeschooling must be sacramental. In other words, the Church that Christ founded is the Church of the Seven Sacraments, especially the Sacraments of Eucharist and Confession.

 

You, yourselves, should receive the Sacraments of Holy Communion and Confession. Train your children to live a sacramental life.

 

Finally, to be authentically Catholic, homeschooling must be prayerful. The single most fundamental thing you can teach your children, bar none, is to know the necessity and method of prayer.

 

You must pray yourselves. Without prayer, all the schooling in the world will not produce the effect which God wants homeschooling to give because homeschooling is a communication of divine grace, from Christ to the parents to the children. And the principle way parents communicate grace from Christ to their children, the grace upon which those children will be saved, is prayer.


Excerpted from a speech originally given by Fr. John Hardon, S.J. at a homeschool seminar in October 991 in St. Paul, MN. Reprinted here with permission. Fr. John Hardon, S.J., a noted theologian and homeschool advocate, is also the author of numerous books. Copyright 1994. All Rights Reserved.


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