Millions of Catholics in the United States were educated in Catholic schools during the past two centuries. It is no secret that such education has yielded amazing fruits for this particular faith community and for the larger society.
One could highlight the impact of Catholic education in “worldly” measures such as exposure to a holistic curriculum, preparedness to attend and complete higher education, and even social mobility.
According to the National Catholic Educational Association, 99 percent of students from Catholic high schools graduate and 85 percent of graduates go to a four-year college. That is an impressive record.
The list of well-known social, political, economic, intellectual and artistic leaders who attended Catholic schools is long.
By the middle of the 20th century, more than half of Catholic children, mostly Euro-American, attended Catholic schools. Today, Euro-American adult Catholics constitute one of the most educated bodies in our society. Simply connect the dots.
[hotblock]
Yet, the “worldly” measures tell only one side of the story. Perhaps the most important measures when highlighting the value and impact of Catholic schools are “ecclesial.” In other words, Catholic schools exist to be at the service of the church’s evangelizing mission.
Catholic schools are spaces where faith and life engage in dialogue in explicit ways. The spiritual dimension is the axis upon which the life of these institutions revolves. In Catholic schools, religion matters.
The vast majority of Euro-American Catholic priests, women religious and Catholic school teachers and administrators attended Catholic schools. So did most of the U.S. Catholic theologians and pastoral leaders I have met throughout my life.
When I meet Catholic women and men with awe-inspiring life commitments, clearly living the Gospel values at the service of God and others, I often ask them whether they ever attended a Catholic school. The answer most of the time is yes.
Just as these institutions have served well many generations of U.S. Catholics, with remarkable effects upon church and society, they also need to serve well the next generation of Catholics in our country.
There are about 14.6 million school-age Catholic children in the U.S. Of these, 8 million are Hispanic. Our Catholic schools presently enroll close to 1.9 million students. If anything, we should be building new Catholic schools — or at the very least, not closing those that already exist!
Those 8 million school-age Hispanic Catholic children will play a significant role defining the present and the future of Catholicism in the United States. We cannot afford to take them for granted. As a church, we cannot lose them.
We know that the number of Hispanic children enrolled in Catholic schools is remarkably small, compared to the size of the population: 315,610 during the academic year 2016-17. That is 4 percent of the 8 million.
There are many social, economic and even political reasons to educate Hispanic children in Catholic schools — they will be the Catholic voice in this country when casting their votes, serving in public office and advancing their careers a few years from now.
But the most important reason, I think, remains ecclesial. The Catholic Church in the United States needs priests, women and men religious, Catholic school teachers, lay ecclesial ministers, theologians. It needs well-rounded Catholic social, political, economic, intellectual and artistic leaders. It needs solid families.
Where will they come from? If we look closely at demographics, most will come from the Hispanic Catholic population.
Who will prepare them with the best education to serve church and society? Catholic schools definitely must play a central role. They have done it in the past. They can and should do it today.
***
Ospino is professor of theology and religious education at Boston College. He is a member of the leadership team for the Fifth National Encuentro of Hispanic/Latino Ministry.
In order to fill the classrooms with these children, church leaders need to figure out a way to cut the red tape and get the undocumented children into the schools. Certainly the charitable benefactors of catholic education need to provide workable admission standards to fill the classrooms before parishes are forced to close and lock the doors because of declining enrollment and financial strains .
Traditional Catholic parents are having difficulty paying for their children’s tuition. Who will any for these new students?
It would be nice if schools weren’t being closed and new ones built, however, with the escalating cost of Catholic education and dwindling support in some parishes, nothing else can be expected. Without vouchers, the future of Catholic education is doomed. No one but the elite will be able to afford it.