Vanessa:
Our bishop just published some unfriendly rules for homeschoolers receiving the sacraments. This has led to a lot of conversation among us. Someone said that 30 hours of CCD a year can’t accomplish much positive and certainly can’t do harm either. I don’t agree.
I’m not talking about a physical molestation or anything overt like that. But an ignorant catechist, teaching nonsense to a budding young adult makes that student judge the Church by this person of authority and gives them feelings of disgust and superiority.
I believe this is harmful. All is not lovely in the Church, never was, and never will be. But I want my children to focus as much as possible on the beautiful, the ideal. That’s how they think at this age.
I don’t understand your concern…
It sounds like you are justifying your intent to home-school your child in the 30 hours required per year of Religious Education. While I don’t agree with your reasoning to not have your child educated through the parish program, you certainly have the right to train him/her yourself so what is the problem?
As a religious education instructor we are the
2nd line of Catholic instruction to any child. The parents are the
1st. Always have been, always will be. Each parish follows a particular curriculum in instructing the children so the teachers aren’t free to teach their own brand of Catholicism. There are specific chapters to cover and specific tests which need to be passed - all in line with the magesterium of the faith.
Your child has just as much a risk of being exposed to erroneous Catholic teaching from a relative as he/she does from a religious education instructor. If your child attends public or private school the risks are even higher that they will receive poor instruction from friends and friends’ families (if they spend time at their house playing). The hours of exposure in that setting far exceed the 30 hours in one year exposed to a possible ‘liberal’ religious ed instructor. And what about your child’s cousins, uncles, aunts? Are you certain that any time your child spends with them they will only hear and witness authentic Catholic teachings from them?
Bottom line, if there is an erroneous religious education instructor in any parish program it is easy to deal with. First of all, as an active parent you would be reviewing with your child what was taught in the classroom. If your child tells you something the teacher taught which is blatantly wrong, then you have the right to approach the instructor about what was said. It’s not as if your child goes to class and never speaks to you about what he/she is learning so that you have no clue whether the teacher is good or not. If going to the teacher does not work, then you go to the director. If that doesn’t work then you pull your child out of the program and home school them
using the parish curriculum so that the child is meeting the requirements for sacrament preparation set by the parish.
I home-schooled my two children in religious ed not because the teachers or the program were bad but because the kids in those classes didn’t want to be there and my kids’ resented that. The director gave me the teacher’s instruction book and the kids’ books for each grade each year so I was able to teach my children what they needed to know without the other kids holding them back and they were able to receive their sacraments without any glitches.
What instruction are you suggesting needs to be required from a home schooling parent to ensure the child receives proper sacramental preparation if not the 30 hours of a specific religious education curriculum?