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Education for Justice: Stitching a Seamless Garment

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 September 2014

Joseph M. Incandela*
Affiliation:
Saint Mary's College

Abstract

This essay aims to present the challenges of teaching Catholic social thought to undergraduates at a Catholic college. It begins with a review of the three foundational principles of the Church's social tradition: dignity, community, and preferential option for the poor. It next moves to three primary obstacles to making these concepts come alive for college students: (1) the prevalence of social and economic stereotypes, (2) a Romanticized reduction of Christianity which emphasizes charity to the neglect of justice, and (3) an unwillingness to allow the resources of one's faith to challenge the policies of one's government. The essay concludes with some reflections on the appropriateness of all of these subjects at a college dedicated to the liberal arts. Throughout this paper, generous use is made of writings by my students that demonstrate the pedagogical principles and pitfalls I narrate.

Type
Creative Teaching
Copyright
Copyright © The College Theology Society 2000

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References

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9 See also the recent revisions of the Catechism of the Catholic Church on capital punishment (especially par. 2267). Available: http://www.christusrex.org/wwwl/CDHN/fifth.html#HUMAN

10 Various internet sites have arisen which facilitate such correspondence. See a collection of them on the webpage for my “Catholic Social Thought Course”: http://www.saintmarys.edu/~incandel/cst.html#CAPITALCORRESPOND

11 James Heard, “The Shape of My Heart,” unpublished poem written in September, 1997 and included in personal correspondence of November 5, 1998.

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17 I prefer to withhold this student's name.

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