Catholic Education Needs Civic Formation

Catholics have a tendency to want to escape particulars without doing the hard work of transposition into the messier concrete realm where we meet our neighbors.

(Image: Mikael Kristenson/Unsplash.com)

There is a movement afoot in American education to restore the teaching of civics in a way that presents America as lovable and worthy of its citizens’ service. The most prominent places to see this new movement at work are in the creation of new civics institutes at public universities (for instance, ASU, UT AustinUFLOSUUTKUNC, and USU). Catholics are well-positioned to join this movement. What we need now is for Catholics to do so eagerly.

Catholic schools and universities speak frequently, and rightly, about the formation of the whole person. They speak about service, solidarity, human dignity, vocation, and the call to holiness. What they often speak about less confidently is citizenship. One can move through a good deal of Catholic education in America today hearing many worthy things about community and discipleship, while hearing much less about the formation required for life in a republic. That lack is a problem—and an opportunity. In the American context, civic education should not be considered an optional supplement to Catholic formation, but rather essential to that formation. It is one of the ordinary ways in which Christians are called to love their neighbors.

That claim may seem odd to ears accustomed to hearing politics discussed either in procedural, therapeutic, or activist terms. Civics is often reduced to instruction in the mechanics of government: the branches, the separation of powers, elections, courts, Congress, and the Constitution. Those topics are, of course, important and should not be neglected. But they are the base, not the heights, of civics. Sometimes, civics—or a substitute for it—is treated as training for activism under the heading of some politically correct ideology and has for its goal the production of the Social Justice Warrior of common parlance. Neither approach reaches the heart of the matter. Since we all live concretely in the world, and politics concerns the widest field of human action, Catholics need to treat civics as formation in the discipline where we first and foremost meet our neighbors, whom our Lord calls us to love.

The reason is not difficult to state, though it is easy to forget. We do not love our neighbors in the abstract. We love them as persons living alongside us in families, towns, parishes, neighborhoods, schools, and nations. We share with them a political community, and that political community does not sit lightly atop an otherwise self-sufficient private life. It shapes imagination, conduct, expectation, speech, memory, aspiration, and the ordinary moral temper of a people. It shapes the schools our children attend, the laws under which we live, the level of trust or mistrust in our common life, and the conditions under which friendship and family life themselves flourish or decay. It affords us a field of action and deliberation broader than any other. If that is so, then part of loving one’s neighbor is caring whether he has been formed to think and act well as a citizen—and carrying out our own obligation to make sure that we ourselves are.

Christians should be especially well-equipped to see this. The Christian knows that the earthly city is not the city of God and that politics is not the highest thing. But it does not follow from that truth that politics is of little account. We are placed, by providence, among particular persons in a particular order of common life. We do not encounter one another simply as isolated bearers of rights or as disembodied souls passing through neutral space. We meet one another as people formed by a history, a language, a set of institutions, a national inheritance, and a way of life. If one wants to know one’s neighbor in any concrete sense, one has to know something of that inheritance and those institutions. Charity moves through such particulars. It does not hover above them.

For that reason, the old Christian and classical insight into political life remains indispensable. Thomas Aquinas understood the political community as the most comprehensive community in the temporal order. He did not mean that it comprehends man’s highest end. The political community gives broad scope to speech and action concerning the things held in common, and it is in the political community that we find a distinctively rich field for the exercise of human excellence. A republic, such as our own American republic, above all, depends upon citizens capable of ruling and being ruled in turn. It therefore depends upon judgment that comprehends the goods of that republic.

Judgment means the capacity to deliberate about contingent matters under conditions that do not admit of strict demonstration, to weigh goods that are genuinely goods and yet may stand in tension, to discern fitting means in the midst of inherited circumstances, and then to act. This is why civic education, if it is more than information transfer, has an intimate relation to prudence. And prudence, though it is not the whole of moral life, is no small thing. It is among the virtues most necessary to those who must live and act with others in the world as it actually is. And prudence must take into account the various particulars of the political community’s historical situatedness. Catholics have a tendency to want to escape particulars by reference to metaphysics, cosmology, or the principles of the faith, without doing the hard work of transposition into the messier concrete realm where we meet our neighbors. Civics education is an indispensable aid in doing the work of transposition from the more abstract realms of thought into embodied human life, for the sake of charity.

That is also why a serious liberal education remains bound up with civic formation. Liberal education is an education for the responsible exercise of freedom. In the American case, all of this has a particular urgency. Ours is a constitutional republic that presupposes an uncommon degree of moral and intellectual formation among ordinary citizens. It assumes citizens who know their own history, culture, and laws; who are able to make distinctions, to deliberate about means and ends; to weigh claims advanced in the name of the common good; and to bear the discipline that self-government requires. Such a regime cannot finally be sustained by technique alone. Nor can it be sustained by citizens who have been trained chiefly in suspicion.

This is one of the reasons Catholic education in America should recover its confidence in teaching America itself. That does not mean a pious nationalism, or a neglect of all of the various tensions quite obviously present for American Catholic life, still less a refusal to tell the truth about slavery, injustice, hypocrisy, and the many ways in which the nation has failed to live up even to its own standards. But neither does truthfulness require a Howard Zinn- or 1619 project-style deconstructive pedagogy in which the country appears chiefly as a villain and oppressor. A student taught to regard his country primarily as an engine of oppression will be condemned to live out a cynical and demoralizing delusion, more likely to become alienated from the actual inheritance that he must understand if he is to judge, serve, improve, or reform it. What is much more likely to produce young Catholic men and women who are passionately dedicated to serving America under God is not deconstruction, but love.

Every student deserves the chance to discover what is genuinely lovable in his own country. In the American case, that includes real political and moral goods. For all the flaws and complexities involved in the historic relation of Catholics with America, America has proven to be a place in which Catholics can flourish, serve, contribute, and even lead, in ways that exceed many—perhaps most—of the historically Catholic European countries in which the relation of Church and political order was first charted out.

Catholic institutions have special reasons for undertaking this work. They often describe themselves as preparing students for leadership and service, but service in a republic has an inescapably civic dimension, which must not ignore the particularities of the American republic: its constitution, founding, institutions, history, language, culture, territory, etc. The graduate of a Catholic school or university will vote, hold public office, serve on boards, work in industries with both economic and trans-economic effects, raise children, speak in public, judge laws, weigh political claims, and help sustain or weaken the institutions nearest to him. If he has been formed to be morally earnest but civically unserious, then his education has been incomplete in a way that matters. He may possess generous sentiments while lacking the habits by which one actually contributes to a common life. Or he may carry into public life a religiosity or moralism detached from the texture of American political existence, as though Christian witness could afford to be innocent of institutions, history, and prudence. It cannot.

Something more specific is therefore needed. Catholic education should acquaint students with the American constitutional order and the arguments surrounding it. It should familiarize students with the language, culture, and territorial space that shape America through time and space. It should teach American history in a way that is truthful without being merely corrosive. It should place the American experiment in relation to the longer inheritance from Jerusalem, Athens, Rome, Christendom, and early modern constitutionalism out of which it emerged. It should reintroduce students to the language of the common good, to the discipline of prudence as practiced in light of the knowledge of particulars, and to the distinction between technocratic expertise and political judgment. It should help them see that citizenship is not a distraction from Christian discipleship, but one of the ordinary fields in which discipleship must be expressed.

It should also recover a certain confidence that Christians, when well-formed, can be among the best citizens. Augustine understood very well the limits of politics, but he also understood that rightly ordered loves shape temporal life. A Christian whose loves are being healed and ordered is not thereby made indifferent to the earthly city. He is made more capable of acting within it without illusion and without despair. He is freed, at least in part, from the intoxications of ideology and from the moral vanity that so often accompanies political fervor. He is better positioned to seek justice without imagining that politics can save him. This is no small civic advantage.

If the Church in America wants renewal, its schools and universities cannot leave civic formation to chance. The Catholic Church is used to taking a counter-cultural stance in America. We should welcome the prospect that, in a time when most institutions of public instruction are ideologically captured by deconstructionists, Christian faith empowers us to teach what is lovable about America and our fellow American citizens under God. It is not only good for us to do so, but also good for our non-Catholic fellow citizens to see us do so.

We should form citizens capable of understanding the country we have inherited, judging it truthfully, loving what is good in it, and serving their neighbors within it with charity and intelligence.

(Editor’s note: This essay was published originally on the “What We Need Now” site and is republished here with kind permission of the author.)


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About Thomas P. Harmon 22 Articles
Dr. Thomas P. Harmon is Professor and Scanlan Foundation Chair in Theology at the University of Saint Thomas in Houston, Texas, where he is also Division Dean of the Core and Centers for Excellence and directs the MA in Evangelization and Culture. He is the author of The Universal Way of Salvation in the Thought of Augustine (T&T Clark, 2024). and is co-editor of Augustine and Frontiers of Pluralism (Routledge) and Wisdom and the Renewal of Catholic Theology: Essays in Honors of Matthew L. Lamb (Wipf and Stock/Pickwick). He lives in Sugar Land, Texas with his wife and six children.

17 Comments

  1. We should not allow secular (i.e. God-less) thinking to influence Catholic education. Our understanding of civics necessarily implies that God is of pre-eminent importance and not Man.

  2. We read: “Something more specific is therefore needed. Catholic education should acquaint students with the American constitutional order and the arguments surrounding it.”

    About the primacy of the “common good,” and from the long perspective of the perennial Catholic Church, also this side note:

    “The role and competence of the Church being what it is, she must in no way be confused with the political community, nor bound to any political system. For she is at once a sign and a safeguard of the transcendence of the human person” (Gaudium et Spes, n. 76).

    And, about our Constitution and the Declaration of Independence, also this side note…

    Writing for the International Catholic Truth Society, Sylvester J. McNamara proposes that the philosophy of Declaration of Independence derives in considerable part from the writings of the Jesuit Robert Cardinal Bellarmine (1542-1621), as much or more than from the British John Locke, etc. (“American Democracy and Catholic Doctrine” [Brooklyn: International Catholic Truth Society, n.d., c. 1920], 106-122, esp. 155). McNamara finds that the greatest similarity between Jefferson and the original Bellarmine in the content and wording of Jefferson’s five principles in the preamble. These principles are sovereignty, equality, divine and Natural Law, the right to select magistrates, and the right to change the form of government.

    McNamara draws from Filmer’s “Patriarcha” (a compendium of Bellarmine’s philosophy) to compare in parallel columns the wording in detail. Jefferson owned a copy of the “Patriarcha” which remains in the Library of Congress.

    The same case is made separately by Matthew Bunson, National Catholic Register (July 4, 2018): https://www.ncregister.com/commentaries/bellarmine-jefferson-and-the-declaration-of-independence

  3. “Civics” is an a childish, idealized to the point of delusion if not out-right hallucinatory view of government and it’s relation to the people. It never covers, let alone considers the corrosive effect of the dependencies of welfare state (not just in the projects, but on Main Steet and Wall Steet), the effects of organized money and lobbying, the increasing ambitions and metastatic growth of the welfare state, the supremacy of the judiciary. Meanwhile serious aspirants to government employment are studying Machiavelli and Talleyrand as well as more recent and insidious architects of control such as Bernays-the father of Propaganda and Sunstein (“Nudge”)

    But what even if “Catholic education” anymore?

    A couple of years ago, some corpulent Karen fired a teacher in a “Catholic” school because he dared quote St. John Bosco’s less than complimentary view of Islam.

    Too many stories just as this and too many Catholic schools citing the number of their graduates pursuing secular “higher education” that emerge from college as “MASSless particles”.

    • Incorrect. Secular=worldly=neither good nor bad Matthew22:21. We are physical creatures in a physical world. To ignore that is unChristian.

      • To claim that men are only physical creatures in the physical world is to deny Catholic teaching on anthropology. People are “at once corporeal and spiritual.”

        “The unity of soul and body is so profound that one has to consider the soul to be the ‘form’ of the body: i.e., it is because of its spiritual soul that the body made of matter becomes a living, human body; spirit and matter, in man, are not two natures united, but rather their union forms a single nature.” [CCC 362-368]

      • To ignore the Catechism of the Catholic Church is to invite a spiritual work of mercy.

        As God’s creature, man is made in God’s image. Genesis tells the story. God formed man’s body from ‘dust’ which took on life when God breathed into him (i.e., gave him a soul). The soul is immortal and immaterial. It is the ‘form of the body,’ giving life to the body. Without the soul, the body is dust alone.

        “The unity of soul and body is so profound that one has to consider the soul to be the ‘form’ of the body… their union forms a single nature.” [CCC, paragraph 365].

        We are much more than physical creatures in a physical world. Without our spiritual form, we are nothing but dust.

        Good luck with that.

        • Because we are physical creatures in a physical world we cannot fail to acknowledge worldly reality. We may be travelers but our feet are on a physical road. That’s why we are told to shake the dust off and move on by Christ Himself. You are very correct to condemn the binary thinking that prompts “secular=bad” due to the unity of our body and soul. Thank you.

          • FYI, I didn’t mention the word ‘secular,’ nor did I condemn anyone’s binary thinking.

            Putting words into other people’s mouths is worse than plagiarism, more akin to a lie.

      • What is not of God i.e. the secular is bad. The physical is Good because God declared it to be. Those who do not acknowkedge God as the Source and Creator of all are acting ungodly which is tantamount to being bad.

  4. Until Catholics are able to critically examine their own political theology rather than accepting statism as a first principle (and subsidiarity is an insufficient counter), they should leave “civic education” to others more qualified.

  5. I am confused—this seems to suggest Catholic schools have not been teaching some Civics?
    There is the Catholic Textbook Project, for one. It is highly recommended.
    Any classical and Christian school would necessarily be forming students in the Greek philosophy, to start. They certainly will be well informed by the time the Modern world comes around.
    So I don’t know where or how any Catholic high school is NOT doing Civics. Does the “Common Core for Catholics” program do this?

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