Let
My Children Go!
by
Fr. Vincent Fitzpatrick
Every
Christian child has a right to a Christian education. The Popes
for the past two centuries have reiterated this truth countless
times. Why particularly since about 1820? Because it is only since
about then that the State, first in Europe, a little later in America,
has arrogated to itself the task of schooling non-Christian schooling,
of course.
A
Christian education, as described by the modern Popes, does not
resemble the education that the vast majority of Christian children
in North Dakota receive. And for Catholic children, an hour of CCD
each week is not even a faint wisp of what the Church means by a
Christian education.
Moreover,
over the past few decades, the public schools have gradually taken
control of every evening of the week. If you suggest that children
might be present at Stations of the Cross on a Friday in Lent, or
at Benediction on a Thursday, or a choir practice on a Tuesday,
people laugh out loud. And the schools do not reliably respect even
Wednesday evening so-called "Church night."
The
fact is that, without doing anything so dramatic as marching the
children off to concentration camps, government (with the collaboration
of their parents) has succeeded in separating Catholic children
from the Church’s heritage of chant and other sacred music, from
parish-based entertainment and sports, from the time and opportunity
necessary for really learning and pondering Catholic dogma, from
possible charitable activity in the parish, and the Church’s tradition
of devotions.
For
all but the small minority of children attending Catholic school,
Catholic culture has become an anemic shadow of itself. Catholic
culture for the majority is Mass on Sunday period.
My
own Parish Council has recommended having Mass at seven a.m. (seven
a.m.!) on Holy Days of Obligation because it is taken for granted
that no child would dare to be tardy for school. It is also taken
for granted that children simply are not free to attend Mass on
any weeknight. And indeed it is true: Even children who are reliably
present at Sunday Mass are a rare sight at Mass even on Holydays
of Obligation.
Considering
that a Christian child has a right to a Christian education,
it is a grave injustice that the State forces Christians to pay
for something different, something useless to them. If a grocery
store obtained the power to tax, and was forcing all citizens
to pay for food they could not eat, food that was ruinous to their
health or merely not to their taste, everyone would recognize that
as an injustice. Yet in hundreds of towns in North Dakota, a business
does exist that is coercively financed through taxes. And this business
offers only one product, a product that is less than useless to
Christians a non-Christian education.
This
system of injustice coercively-financed godless schooling is mandated
in the North Dakota Constitution and in the Century Code. Therefore,
ending this injustice will take some effort and some years.
In
the meantime, parents have the duty to take some steps immediately.
Most urgently, Catholic parents have the obligation to make sure
that their children are not taught information about sex in a secular
situation. Sex education that is not Christian can never be anything
but pornography. And below a certain age, when a child is in the
Latency Period, sex information can never be anything but mental
rape, virtual child molestation. This is not an optional matter
for Christian parents. They are strictly obliged to keep their children
away from non-Christian sex information imparted in government sex
programs.
Another
duty that parents can fulfill without waiting for changes in the
law is to be vigilant regarding the State’s takeover of their children’s
time. Have you allowed your child to become an inmate of a State
institution six nights a week as well as five days a week? Is your
child in sports to have fun and to make him strong and healthy,
or is he being exploited and even injured as an unpaid worker so
that other citizens can have budget-priced spectator sports?
And
even though ending government’s entanglement with schooling will
take years, Catholics should, in the meantime, vote again and again
against any taxes destined for government schools, and against any
spending or borrowing on behalf of government schools. In this way,
the tax burden might at least be lightened, and at least some parents
will be enabled for the first time to afford a Christian education
for their children.
Catholics
here in North Dakota are very far from taking their children’s right
to a Catholic education seriously. But an injustice does not cease
to be an injustice merely because the victims do not care.
It
is time for Catholics to perceive this situation of injustice for
what it is, to perceive it as a mortal threat to the survival of
the Church in North Dakota and, infinitely more important, their
children’s eternal life. It is time to tell government to let the
children go.
August
25, 2001
Fr.
Vincent Fitzpatrick is a priest of the Diocese of Fargo, in North
Dakota.
Copyright
2001 LewRockwell.com
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