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My diocese still has over a dozen Catholic high schools, some sponsored by a religious order, some originally operated by the diocese itself, but now autonomous. These are listed as “The Catholic schools” and promoted by the Diocese. In order to be a “recognized” Catholic school, they follow a religious curriculum (very, very minimal doctrine, in my opinion) approved by the diocese. They also have a morning prayer, several liturgies each year, and a ministry office, which tend to serve small numbers of students. Othewise they heavily follow the public school curriculum. Only one high school had a prolife apostolate. Many had Peace and Justice. The Diocese itself promotes Catholic high schools with one slogan: that 98% of graduates go to college.
Many parents prefer public schools, which tend to ignore religion, rather than schools that have Religious Studies classes ambiguous about Catholicism. Others homeschool. This year a group of parents is trying to start a new school. These are not dissenters, they are fully in obedience with Pope Francis and our own bishop. The message from the bishop is “good luck, but I can’t *openly *support you”. The message from the diocesan education department is discouraging, but they can’t stop us; they don’t want anyone competing with “their” schools. Our school has to be advertised as “independent school in the Catholic tradition”; it won’t be a “recognized” Catholic school.
The new school will feature Theology, not Religious Studies; daily Mass; Philosophy; History, not Social Studies; some Latin, etc. Does anyone have any experience with “Independent schools in the Catholic Tradition”? It feels awkward, we are trying to be loyal to the Church, but we aren’t part of the “establishment” in the Diocese.
Many parents prefer public schools, which tend to ignore religion, rather than schools that have Religious Studies classes ambiguous about Catholicism. Others homeschool. This year a group of parents is trying to start a new school. These are not dissenters, they are fully in obedience with Pope Francis and our own bishop. The message from the bishop is “good luck, but I can’t *openly *support you”. The message from the diocesan education department is discouraging, but they can’t stop us; they don’t want anyone competing with “their” schools. Our school has to be advertised as “independent school in the Catholic tradition”; it won’t be a “recognized” Catholic school.
The new school will feature Theology, not Religious Studies; daily Mass; Philosophy; History, not Social Studies; some Latin, etc. Does anyone have any experience with “Independent schools in the Catholic Tradition”? It feels awkward, we are trying to be loyal to the Church, but we aren’t part of the “establishment” in the Diocese.