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Let's face it. Many professional religious educators do not want home schooling parents using the Baltimore Catechism. Such officials and educators, while not exactly fond of the new universal Catechism, may use the new Catechism as an unwitting "club" against the Baltimore Catechism. They know that all publishers have to give at least lip service to "updating" their materials in light of the universal Catechism. So they may say that parents must use such "updated" materials because they are in "conformity" with the Catechism. However, if parents are faced with this situation, they should understand that they still have a right to use the Baltimore Catechism. It is clearly spelled out in Canon Law that parents have the right to use any means that is in keeping with the doctrine of the Church, the moral law, and their particular situation. The Baltimore Catechism and the materials associated with it all have been approved by the bishops in the past. How could such materials suddenly no longer be acceptable? Parents who reject new materials have a reasonable basis for doing so. A committee of bishops recently issued a report saying that there are grave and widespread deficiencies in most catechetical materials in use today. The bishops identified ten areas of grave deficiency, including such fundamental areas as the Trinity, the divinity of Christ, the nature of sin, and the Christian moral life. New materials from mainstream catechetical publishers, even if they are allegedly based on the new Catechism, must necessarily be suspect. How can parents trust them to suddenly produce good Catholic materials when they have been producing bad catechetical texts for the last thirty years? In contrast to these new materials, the Baltimore Catechism is a known quantity. Parents can trust that it gives the basics of the Faith. It has the same four-fold catechetical structure as the new Catechism: Creed, Sacraments, Commandments, and Prayer. Parents should be able to use a time tested catechism that was approved by all the bishops of the United States and was widely used for almost 100 years. Many Catholics fondly remember the Baltimore Catechism. Usually when the Baltimore Catechism was taught in a Catholic school and a student came from a devout family, it had a positive effect. If there were any complaints against the catechism, these complaints were from perhaps teachers who had to deal with students who did not come from devout families or from these students themselves. Such teachers and students would, indeed, give the impression that it was a useless and boring exercise to study the Baltimore Catechism. That sense of uselessness and boredom, however, does not come from the Baltimore Catechism, but from students who have not been nurtured in a true atmosphere of faith. Certainly the Faith would appear boring and useless if a student has witnessed parents who do not show in the way they live a reverent adherence to the doctrines of the creed, a regular and devout reception of the sacraments, earnest attempts to live the commandments and beatitudes, and daily prayer. In addition, where parents do not show their children that faith is more than a social routine and a convention, and where parents do not talk positively about Catholic things in the home, the Baltimore Catechism, as well as any other program or text for that matter, is simply not going to work. Some say that faith is caught, not taught. This statement is true if it is understood properly. Faith first comes, not through a transfer of information, nor an entertaining game, nor an artificial "faith" experience in a classroom, but through the witness and testimony in everyday life of those who already have faith. Children are going to first see everyday life with their parents. Through the importance that devout parents give the Faith in the way they live and speak, they show it is a great good of life, a valuable thing, a grace. Through their earnest attempts to live uprightly, devout parents show their children that certain ways of living and acting are unacceptable. Such ways are under judgement; they are wrong. Children "catch" the Faith by the parents exuding an atmosphere of grace and judgement. Once the children catch the Faith, then they can be taught the Faith. However, if the Faith is not first "caught" through parents' everyday witness and testimony, no amount of teaching, no amount of creative methodology, no amount of slick packaging in colorful audiovisual formats is going to make much difference. Teaching the Catholic Faith is not like teaching many other subjects, such as medicine and science, that have rapid and continual advancements in knowledge. The doctrines of the Faith do not change! No, they don't! At most, there are developments of doctrine, but they occur very slowly and, more often than not, have little to do with the basics of the Faith--the Creed, the Sacraments, the Commandments, and Prayer--which are the concerns of the Baltimore Catechism. Yes, there are some modern issues in the new Catechism that are not treated by the Baltimore Catechism, but most of them need not be taught to children and youth preparing for Holy Communion and Confirmation. Yes, there are new and worthwhile ideas in theology, and there is a time to learn them. However, shouldn't the catechesis for children and youth stress the fundamentals that come from the 2,000-year teaching of the ordinary and universal Magisterium of the Church? It would be most helpful as well if the professional educators in the Church stopped implying that whatever is "Vatican II and post-Vatican II" is so much different and better than "pre-Vatican II." This encourages those who want to substitute the latest -ism (feminism, multiculturalism, globalism) for the True Faith. It also undermines the authentic enrichment and updating the Second Vatican Council wanted to achieve. If the alleged dualism and dichotomy between "pre-Vatican II" and "post-Vatican II" is always stressed, then people begin to think: if the Church were so wrong before Vatican II, what makes one think it suddenly got everything right after Vatican II? The Catholic Information Center has included the following quotes by several American bishops when the Baltimore Catechism was published. You may be interested in reading about their opinions about this great American catechism and a supplement called "The Explanation of the Baltimore Catechism," which helped teach children by adding questions, exercises, and Scripture references, as the St. Joseph edition does also.
His Eminence Cardinal Gibbons:
Most Rev. M.A. Corrigan, D.D., Archbishop of New York:
Most Rev. William Henry Elder, D.D., Archbishop of Cincinnati:
Most Rev. Thomas L. Grace, D.D., Archbishop of Siunia:
Most Rev. P J Ryan, D.D., Archbishop of Philadelphia:
Most Rev. William J Walsh, D.D., Archbishop of Dublin, Primate of Ireland:
Right Rev. D.M. Bradley, D.D., Bishop of Manchester:
Right Rev. Thomas F Brennan, D.D., Bishop of Dallas:
Right Rev. M E Burke, D.D., Bishop of Cheyenne:
Right Rev. L. De Goesbriand, D.D., Bishop of Burlington:
Right Rev. John Foley, D.D., Bishop of Detroit:
Right Rev. H. Gabriels, D.D., Bishop-elect of Ogdensburg:
Right Rev. N. A. Gallagher, D.D., Bishop of Galveston:
Right Rev. Leo Haid, O.S.B., D.D., Vicar Apostolic of North Carolina:
Right Rev. John J Hennessy, D.D. Bishop of Wichita:
Right Rev. A. Junger, D.D., Bishop of Nesqually:
Right Rev. John J Keane, D.D., Rector of the Catholic University, Washington:
Right Rev. W.G. McCloskey, D.D., Bishop of Louisville:
Right Rev. James McGolrick, D.D., Bishop of Duluth:
Right Rev. Camillus P Maes, D.D., Bishop of Convington:
Right Rev. C.E. McDonnell, D.D., Bishop-elect of Brooklyn:
Right Rev. R Manogue, D.D., Bishop of Sacramento:
Right Rev. Tobias Mullen, D.D., Bishop of Erie:
Right Rev. H. P Northrop, D.D., Bishop of Charleston:
Right Rev. Henry Joseph Richter, D.D., Bishop of Grand Rapids:
Right Rev. S. V. Ryan, D.D., Bishop of Buffalo:
Right Rev. L. Scanlan, D.D., Bishop of Salt Lake:
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