Reclaiming the Piazza II ed. by Leonardo Franchi, Ronnie Convery, Raymond McCluskey; Gracewing, 192pp, £12.99
Two notes of realism sound out from the introduction to these essays on Catholic education and the new evangelisation. First, the new evangelisation is for the long term. There is no obvious short-term fix to the profound challenges facing Catholic communities in the “old” Christian lands. Second, Catholic schools and universities cannot replace the family and parish as the nuclei of the Church’s life.
Moreover, as one of the editors reminds us, 60 per cent of cradle Catholics never attend church. Other contributors observe that, for some children from nominally Catholic homes, school is the only place they really encounter Church teaching. One wonders where the supply of knowledgeable, committed teachers and leaders needed to realise some of the ambitions in the book will come from.
That said, the role of the Catholic school is strongly reaffirmed: “to live as an ecclesial body at the heart of the world”. In his foreword, Archbishop Rino Fisichella drums a little harder. Many now live “without ever noticing the absence of God as a real absence in their lives”.
This follow-up to a previous volume on Catholic education as a cultural project goes on to strike a very welcome balance between largely conceptual reflections on its main theme and more direct accounts of theory converted into practice.
Thus, the book opens with Archbishop Leo Cushley exploring how the marriage of faith and reason is faring, cleverly employing monuments along Edinburgh’s Golden Mile to make his points; it concludes with Ronnie Convery offering advice on social media in the classroom. The other essays are almost without fail readable and thought-provoking.
The initial realism about the scale of the challenge reverberates throughout, but there is no defeatism, as the contributors pick out a path for Catholic educators to take through a pluralist world, rallying around a distinctive Catholic anthropology and the transcendental values of beauty, goodness and truth.
Areas of Catholic Herald business are still recovering post-pandemic.
However, we are reaching out to the Catholic community and readership, that has been so loyal to the Catholic Herald. Please join us on our 135 year mission by supporting us.
We are raising £250,000 to safeguard the Herald as a world-leading voice in Catholic journalism and teaching.
We have been a bold and influential voice in the church since 1888, standing up for traditional Catholic culture and values. Please consider donating.