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  March 21, 2005 VOL. 43, NO. 6Oakland, CA

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articles list
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Pope’s role in Holy Week uncertain
as doctors advise limitations of speech

Berkeley professor wins $1.5 million for science-theology dialogue

Church official urges Congress to help
eradicate ‘scourge’ of human trafficking

New Catholic chronicles his labored journey to faith

San Pablo man’s journey to Church began in Rome

Bishop Cummins honored

Priest offers behind-the-scenes guide
to Gibson’s ‘Passion of the Christ’

EWTN to air Holy Week liturgies

Meditation brings peace to women in prison

Prayer has reached
to harshest prisons

Martyred nun remembered as ‘mother’ of the Amazon

Dead Sea Scrolls exhibit shows oldest biblical fragments

Parochial administrator named for Walnut Creek parish

Prominent Catholics join in support of Schiavo

Presentation Sisters to mark 150 years
with April 10 celebration in Berkeley

Fremont priest returns from delivering tsunami aid

Religious educator says faith is best served family style

 

COMMENTARY
Tips for turning travel into pilgrimage

OBITUARY
Sister Mary Ann Whittman, SHF

placeholder Religious educator says faith
is best served family style

Religious truths need to be connected to everyday experience. That’s where parents can help convey the faith to their children, says Kathleen Chesto, a national consultant on family spirituality and religious education.

“As a Church, we have to tell parents we can’t give faith to their children,” said Chesto, who spoke recently at St. Anthony Parish in Sacramento.

“We have to come right out and say the Church is going to help you, but it cannot do the work for you.”
Chesto, a leader in family spirituality and religious education for 30 years, conveys much of her message to parents and families as a storyteller, captivating her listeners with the holiness of ordinary life gleaned from her experience as a wife and a mother.

Passing on the Catholic faith is the role of parents and the ability to talk about God starts in the family, Chesto said in an interview with The Herald.
The role of the Church, she said, is to identify the language and stories of God and to share the stories of the larger faith community.

“If the development of faith doesn’t happen in the family first, I don’t think it’s going to happen when kids come into a parish at six or seven years old,” she said. “If parents don’t tell the story of their experiences through the eyes of faith, then children will not find God in their own experiences.”

While there are many good programs for teaching such parenting skills, Chesto suggests that parents start more simply, such as telling family stories and starting rituals with their children.

“It’s a very human thing to ritualize,” she said. “We have to show people how what they already do every day is holy, such as their rituals at mealtime, bedtime and family events.

“Children who participate in family rituals are ready to go to the Eucharistic meal in the liturgy. They know that this is a ritual – it celebrates something we believe to be real, that God is present. But if children don’t have ritual, they aren’t given a change to recognize and truly celebrate church and the sacraments.”

Chesto, who holds a doctorate in ministry from Hartford Seminary in Hartford, Conn., and a master’s degree in theology from St. Joseph’s College in West Hartford, Conn., helped develop FIRE (Family-Centered Intergenerational Religious Education) in the 1970s and 1980s as a religious education process to help people express their spirituality in their families and small faith communities.

“We wanted to encourage our kids and our adults (in our parish) to ask the questions we hoped to answer about faith, Scripture and morality,” she said.

“One of our main objectives was to create an
atmosphere that gave rise to the questions. We eventually found, through a lot of trial and error, that the best way to accomplish this was through games and simulations that initiate questions about individual experiences.”

Ultimately the idea behind FIRE was “to bring people to prayer, to quiet them down in their busy lives, and to surprise them by opening them up to an experience of God,” Chesto noted.

“If you don’t teach people to pray, I don’t really see any point in teaching them religious education. Why walk around with a lot of religious information in your head if it doesn’t work for you with prayer?”

Religious information alone won’t forge a relationship with God, Chesto contended.

“One of the things I’ve found over my years of teaching is that people want more – more about God, more about the Church, more about support,” she said. “I worry more about people the Church isn’t servicing.

“Some people say they’re not getting the basics, but I suspect they are missing much more. That brings us to defining just what the basics of the Catholic Church are. The most basic point of our faith is a love relationship with God and Jesus that influences our whole lives. Everything else is secondary.”

In recent years, Chesto has introduced the idea of a new phase of life called “postadolescence,” examining parents and their young adults in transition, as well as the influences that shape them.

She presented her findings in a 2001 book, “Exploring the New Family” (St. Mary’s Press), which was based largely on her own parenting experience with three young adults and interviews with more than 150 parents and young adults.
Chesto contends that for many young adults, religion has little connection with their reality and it fails to satisfy their longing for the sacred.

“We raised our own children with the new fruits of
spirituality and prayer that Vatican II had given us,” she said. “We encouraged them to read the Scriptures. We taught them that they could pray in their own words, that they did not need an intermediary to be able to approach God, and they believed us. We shared with them our new social consciousness.

“It’s not that our young adults are not spiritual. It’s that they have lost the sense of need for a communal set of beliefs and a communal celebration of faith. Their individual faith journeys reflect the individualized culture of the ’80s and ’90s that gave it birth.”

Chesto suggests that parents not be so focused on
“bringing their young adults back to church.”

She contends the Scriptures “make it abundantly clear” that “as a Church we believe it is possible for differing communities to perceive the same truth differently, and yet both are still true. Both can be inspired revelation.”

Perhaps today’s young adults “have another perception of truth, perhaps theirs is a different gospel,” she said.

“Perhaps accepting this truth would free us to listen to the word of God as it is proclaimed in their lives, not to bring them ‘back,’ but to help us move forward together. When we are able to listen more openly and honestly to this generation, I suspect they will be ready to ritualize with us.”

Kathleen Chesto

 

 

 

 

 


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