Skole and Historia: A Role for the Study of History in a Catholic School of Leisure
Abstract
:But what—someone may well ask—are we to do about it? Well, the considerations in this essay were not meant to give advice and draw up a line of action; they were meant to make men think.
1. An Education for Leisure
Pieper seemed to think that this sort of education would provide complementary development of both the receptive power of intellectus as well as the active power of discursive reason. He was especially concerned that the intellect would be developed. The young must be encouraged to see creation as something to be contemplated as well as used. So, perhaps most importantly, education must foster wonder (Pieper [1952] 2009, p. 102). The inability to wonder, or even to tolerate it in others, is a mark of spiritual impoverishment which leads a person to see his environment only through his earthly needs and those of society. According to Pieper, leisure, contemplation, and wonder can only exist if the world has been created by spirit. Consequently, even classical humanism, if worship is kept out of the schola, ceases to educate and becomes mere training, and the academy without worship at its center becomes “sterile, pointless, and unreal,” “an intellectual trompe l’oeil [optical illusion]”.[It aims] to give the mind clearness, accuracy, precision; to enable it to use words aright, to understand what it says, to conceive justly what it thinks about, to abstract, compare, analyze, divide, define, and reason, correctly.
2. A Pieper-Esque School: St. Jerome Academy
In 2010, St. Jerome Academy, a parochial elementary school in the diocese of Washington, D.C., became the first diocesan school in the United States to re-found itself on the basis of the classical liberal arts. In preparation for this transition, it produced a thorough, 120 page educational plan that has made it a model for a growing number of Catholic schools in the United States and elsewhere. The thoroughness of its Educational Plan (hereafter SJEP) makes it a great example of what it looks like to fulfill the call of the 1977 document of the Sacred Congregation for Education, The Catholic School, to every Catholic school “to review its entire programme of formation, both its content and the methods used, in the light of that vision of the reality from which it draws its inspiration and on which it depends”.
True education, the document states, forms the whole person to love the beauty of truth, and so be humble enough to allow himself to be judged by truth. Beauty is mentioned 119 times in the document. One entire section is devoted to the importance of cultivating beauty in every aspect of the school’s life. Pieper (The Four Cardinal Virtues) is quoted explicitly at the beginning of this section: “Joseph Pieper has said that in its original sense beauty is―‘the glow of the true and good irradiating from every ordered state of being’” (p. 106).St. Jerome School educates children in the truest and fullest sense by giving them the necessary tools of learning and by fostering wonder and love for all that is genuinely true, good, and beautiful. We emphasize classical learning because we want our students to read well, speak well, and think well and ultimately because truth and beauty are good in themselves and desirable for their own sake.
For in worship we acknowledge the goodness of truth by surrendering to it, offering ourselves in Christ to the Father. And it is in worship, by God‘s gracious initiative, that our longing for beauty and truth finds its rest in the mystery of God who is beauty and truth. Contemplation and adoration, prayer and praise are therefore the highest form of knowledge and are foreshadowed by all others…(p. 108)
The prevailing vision of education is thoroughly pragmatic and utilitarian. It is all about the acquisition of skills; this is what “preparing for college, career, and life” means in our society.
So when we exclude God and the Church from the curriculum, we both lose sight of the profoundest [sic] achievements of human culture, and we eliminate the very longing after truth that has always compelled people to desire education in the first place.
3. History Oriented to Leisure
These are the missions for the historian: to examine important events of the past with painstaking care and the greatest possible objectivity, to seek a reasoned explanation for them based on the fullest and fairest possible examination of the evidence in order to preserve their memory and to use them to establish such uniformities as may exist in human events, and then to apply the resulting understanding to improve the judgment and wisdom of people who must deal with similar problems in the future.
Truth and falsity, goodness and evil, beauty and ugliness—these are proper even to secular history. But, as the document goes on to say, this is not the whole of history, for God is the author of history. The properly religious dimension of history arises when human activities are considered under the light of the “divine history of universal salvation”. In a Catholic school, teachers should lead students in reflecting on what we can see of God’s salvific work as it has played out in human activity.To this end, the teacher should help students to see history as a whole. Looking at the grand picture, they will see the development of civilizations, and learn about progress in such things as economic development, human freedom, and international cooperation. Realizing this can help to offset the disgust that comes from learning about the darker side of human history.(n. 59)
4. Reasonable and Meaningful
Data thus confirmed counted as ‘facts,’ and insistence on facts separated ‘history’ from speculations about the past once thought to be history… Sir James Bryce wrote in 1911 that “it is better to be tedious and monotonous and dreary almost up to the verge of unreadability than that our facts should be wrong or that such of them as are right should be smothered under festoons of florid verbiage.”.
Hence the human sciences, such as history, psychology, sociology and philosophy, attempt to conform themselves to this canon of scientificity… While we rejoice in the new possibilities open to humanity, we also see the dangers arising from these possibilities and we must ask ourselves how we can overcome them. We will succeed in doing so only if reason and faith come together in a new way, if we overcome the self-imposed limitation of reason to the empirically verifiable, and if we once more disclose its vast horizons.
5. Teaching History in a Classical Way
I emphasize here how the teacher of history should approach his subject, for if he does not understand what history is or feel its beauty and drama, he will not be able to pass on a proper sense of history to his students.
Thus the historian needs to couple the creative imagination of the novelist with a docility to factual evidence characteristic of the scientist. Zehnder sees this approach implicit in the ancient historians’ practice of putting speeches suitable to the situation into the mouths of historical figures. Love of literature, training in the liberal arts, and proper grounding in philosophy and theology help the historian to accomplish his difficult task of seeing sympathetically yet truthfully into the complex reality of human action.An historian must exercise a faculty we may have thought peculiar to the storyteller: intuition. The historian must contemplate the actions of historical characters and ask himself, “What do these actions suggest about the person’s motives?” What kind of men act in the way, say, Luther acted or Napoleon? The task, of course, is difficult and complex, for the historian cannot rely on facile judgments; for the human character is a very complex thing.
Historians attentive to the drama of their study face a temptation to cynicism and despair. Zehnder suggests an antidote in “sacred imagination”, one that “assumes that history is the work of a master storyteller whose characters act out the roles assigned to them, but with a self-moving, radical freedom.”In order to fulfill their respective tasks, the historian and the storyteller both must be graduates of the same school—the school of experience, of living in the world and encountering and contemplating human beings and their ways.
Zwerneman describes what he calls “a liberal approach to history,” which he believes can provide answers for teachers and historians who want to see meaning in their work. History studied in a liberal spirit will contribute to the development of the mental and spiritual virtues necessary for living a mature life. Making good decisions for oneself, caring for the good of others, and participating effectively in common efforts tend to follow from personal orientation to what is true and lastingly worthwhile. Truly free persons fruitfully criticize both themselves and others.How do we stay objective and, at the same time, allow history to shape our students’ vision and responsibility? What can we say in the face of criticism that basically dismisses our culture as corrupt? Is there an approach to history that we can all share?
Seeing the past for what it is helps us to see ourselves for what we are. Our horizons on the possibilities of human nature are expanded; we can begin to see that many things we take as “the way things are” are really the result of choice, and only became established through difficult development and great human effort. When advocating for reading old books, CS Lewis warned that one who only knows the present will be blind to whatever might be faulty but pervasive cultural assumptions. His advice also underscores one of the values of historical study.First of all, the liberal approach to history is observational. Our study of the past is driven by wonder and the desire to know, to see the past for what it is… The study of history is primarily intended to cultivate habits of the mind: wonder, inquiry, discovery, knowledge, and understanding.
None of us can fully escape this blindness, but we shall certainly increase it, and weaken our guard against it, if we read only modern books. Where they are true they will give us truths which we half knew already. Where they are false they will aggravate the error with which we are already dangerously ill. The only palliative is to keep the clean sea breeze of the centuries blowing through our minds.
History can encourage hopeful action in the present by revealing enduring changes that deliberate action has brought about. Because of this, students of history can have hope for the future, seeing that meaningful change can be achieved. Though evil and failure abound, history is not, as Macbeth would have it, “a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.” Yet history also chastens any utopian idealism, and provides materials for the development of practical wisdom.If understanding is well established by the study of history, and if the goodness of our existence is held sympathetically in our public memory, then our shared responsibility emerges chiefly as a matter of preserving and improving the order of things(p. 7).
6. History and Civilization
A school [is] a place of integral formation by means of a systematic and critical assimilation of culture. A school is, therefore, a privileged place in which, through a living encounter with a cultural inheritance, integral formation occurs.
Zwerneman warns that only through public memory can a unified people exist. Shannon and Blum, writing under the influence of Alisdaire MacIntyre, concur:History is the chief recollection of a society’s past. As public memory, it collects what we know of ourselves as a society plus the continuity of our existence across time… The culture we hold in common affords us shared experiences and a shared memory: national elections, public spectacle in liturgy, sports matches, parades, festivals…; language, manners, and customs.
The historian’s craft…can play a significant role in the service of the common good. For we hold that healthy communities, that is, communities constituted by living traditions and perpetuating themselves for future generations, to be communities sustained by narrative.
I am loath to close. We are not enemies, but friends. We must not be enemies. Though passion may have strained it must not break our bonds of affection. The mystic chords of memory, stretching from every battlefield and patriot grave to every living heart and hearthstone all over this broad land, will yet swell the chorus of the Union, when again touched, as surely they will be, by the better angels of our nature.
7. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
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Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Seeley, A. Skole and Historia: A Role for the Study of History in a Catholic School of Leisure. Religions 2023, 14, 467. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14040467
Seeley A. Skole and Historia: A Role for the Study of History in a Catholic School of Leisure. Religions. 2023; 14(4):467. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14040467
Chicago/Turabian StyleSeeley, Andrew. 2023. "Skole and Historia: A Role for the Study of History in a Catholic School of Leisure" Religions 14, no. 4: 467. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14040467
APA StyleSeeley, A. (2023). Skole and Historia: A Role for the Study of History in a Catholic School of Leisure. Religions, 14(4), 467. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14040467