Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Planning the Sacraments class, part trois

OK, so I wasn't quite thinking clearly last night, since I was thinking I would have two semesters to teach the class. HA! One semester for me. So I guess that means I need to do some more aggressive abbreviation here.

On the bright side of things, I learned what class I'm going to teach next semester: World Religions! But since my background is in philosophy and theology rather than religious studies, who could blame me for teaching the class like a "philosophy of religion" course? I'm seriously considering devoting half the class to discussing the matter of religious plurality itself, rather than simply doing a survey of religions. In particular, I want to explode any notion that "the religions" (a meaningless phrase) are a buffet, displayed side by side for our perusal. Such distorts not only the individual traditions but the notion of religion itself.

All right, so I need to rethink the semester... First, let's get specific about exactly how much in-class time I have. Spreadsheet time!



What can I say, I'm awesome with the spreadsheetin'.

Now, let's bring up an even further condensed version of my outline from last night:

  • Sacrament & Liturgy
    • Sacrament - History and Meaning
    • Sacraments as the Work of the Trinity
    • Liturgy
      • Grace and Prayer
      • Church and Salvation
  • For each Sacrament:
    • Its particular origin in revelation
    • Its history/ritual and symbols
    • Practicum (?) and significance
  • Challenges to the Sacramental Imagination
    • Iconoclasm
    • Naturalism
    • The analogical imagination
OK, now let's expand the middle part to include all of the sacraments:

  1. Sacrament & Liturgy
    1. Sacrament - History and Meaning
    1. Sacraments as the Work of the Trinity
    2. Liturgy
      1. Grace and Prayer
      2. Church and Salvation
  2. Baptism
    1. Its particular origin in revelation
    2. Its history/ritual and symbols
    3. Practicum (?) and significance
  3. Confirmation
    1. Its particular origin in revelation
    2. Its history/ritual and symbols
    3. Practicum (?) and significance
  4. Eucharist
    1. Its particular origin in revelation
    2. Its history/ritual and symbols
    3. Practicum (?) and significance
  5. Penance
    1. Its particular origin in revelation
    2. Its history/ritual and symbols
    3. Practicum (?) and significance
  6. Anointing of the Sick
    1. Its particular origin in revelation
    2. Its history/ritual and symbols
    3. Practicum (?) and significance
  7. Matrimony
    1. Its particular origin in revelation
    2. Its history/ritual and symbols
    3. Practicum (?) and significance
  8. Holy Orders
    1. Its particular origin in revelation
    2. Its history/ritual and symbols
    3. Practicum (?) and significance
  9. Challenges to the Sacramental Imagination
    1. Iconoclasm
    2. Naturalism
    3. The analogical imagination
This is ridiculous. OK, let's try the Catechism's trick, and use the traditional three groupings:
  1. Sacrament & Liturgy
    1. Sacrament - History and Meaning
    2. Sacraments as the Work of the Trinity
    3. Liturgy
      1. Grace and Prayer
      2. Church and Salvation
  2. The Seven Sacraments
    1. Sacraments of Christian Initiation
      1. Baptism and Confirmation
      2. Eucharist
    2. Sacraments of Healing
      1. Penance
      2. Anointing of the Sick
    3. Sacraments at the Service of Communion
      1. Matrimony
      2. Holy Orders
  3. Challenges to the Sacramental Imagination
    1. Iconoclasm
    2. Naturalism
    3. The Catholic Response: The Analogy of Being

OK, I like this. Now I can gauge how much time I'm going to need for each lesson:

  1. Introduction, Syllabus, Procedures, Maybe early start on lesson 2.1 - Week 1
  2. Sacrament & Liturgy
    1. Sacrament - History and Meaning - Week 2
    2. Sacraments as the Work of the Trinity - Weeks 3 & 4
    3. Liturgy - Week 5
      1. Grace and Prayer; Church and Salvation - Week 6
  3. The Seven Sacraments
    1. Sacraments of Christian Initiation
      1. Baptism and Confirmation - Weeks 7 & 8
      2. Eucharist - Weeks 9 & 10 (Mon & Tues)
    2. Sacraments of Healing
      1. Penance - Weeks 10 (Thurs & Fri) & 11
      2. Anointing of the Sick - Week 12
    3. Sacraments at the Service of Communion
      1. Matrimony & Holy Orders - Weeks 13 & 14*
    4. Sacramentals - Week 15
  4. Challenges to the Sacraments
    1. Iconoclasm - Week 16
    2. Naturalism - Week 17
    3. The Catholic Response: The Analogy of Being - Week 18
  5. Review for Final - Week 19 (Mon & Tues)
All I can say is BAM.

* - Week 14 is a very short week because of Thanksgiving. Rather than decide which of Holy Orders and Matrimony I want to give the short shrift, I'll teach both in a single lesson with a single quiz. This will allow me to illustrate their complementarity and how each life images eternal life in its own unique way. Woo John Paul II (and Christopher West!)

Sacraments lesson planning, part deux (8/05/07)

OK, let's start simple and then get specific. What all the outlines have in common is that they cover two topics:
  • Sacrament in general
  • The seven Sacraments
There are certain common sense subheadings we can put in here, so let's do that:

  • Sacrament in general
    • The meaning of "sacrament"
  • The seven Sacraments
    • Baptism
    • Confirmation
    • Eucharist
    • Penance
    • Anointing of the Sick
    • Holy Orders
    • Matrimony
Let's take this and collapse the seven sacraments into the subtopics that will be common to all of them.

  • Sacrament in general
    • The meaning of "sacrament"
  • The seven Sacraments
    • The Sacrament's particular origin in revelation
    • Its meaning/purpose
    • Its relations to other sacraments
    • Its ritual and symbols
    • Its history
    • Significance to daily life
    • Practicum
All right, now let's expand a bit on Sacrament in general

  • Sacrament & Liturgy in general (Judging by the Catechism it seems I can't very well separate these two terms, though they will need to be distinguished.)
    • Historical development (from mysterion to sacramentum)
    • Definition
    • The Trinity
    • The Paschal Mystery
    • Grace/Prayer
    • Significance for action
  • The seven Sacraments - for each:
    • Its meaning/purpose
    • Its particular origin in revelation
    • Its history
    • Its relations to other sacraments
    • Its ritual and symbols
    • Significance to daily life
    • Practicum
OK, I think I've over-expanded a bit, especially when you consider that the second "part" of the above outline is multplied 7x. Let's pare down some topics here.

  • Sacrament & Liturgy in general (Judging by the Catechism, it seems I can't very well separate these two terms, though they will need to be distinguished.)
    • The origin and meaning of the word, "sacrament"
    • Sacrament in Salvation History (incl. Trinity/Paschal Mystery)
    • Leitourgia: The Participation of People in the Work of God on Their Behalf
      • Prayer, Grace, and Salvation
    • Significance for the Christian
  • The seven Sacraments - for each:
    • Its meaning/purpose
    • Its particular origin in revelation
    • Its history/ritual and symbols
    • Significance to daily life/Practicum
  • Conclusion - challenges to the sacramental vision (or "Don't let bad ideas limit your spiritual destiny!")
    • Protestantism and iconoclastic piety
    • Modernity and nature's glass ceiling
    • What they have in common
    • The analogical imagination

The last section is a kind of a "bonus" section; although I don't expect to be able to cover everything that quickly, there's always the off-chance I could wind up with extra time. In any case, my teaching books say to always prepare more material than you need; I am first applying this advice at the annual level.

The order of subjects is, I think, logical. A part of me wishes there were more symmetry between the four points of the first and "second" sections. However, their present order allows me to tie them together quite neatly. When I finish discussing the word "sacrament," this provides a perfect lead-in to differentiating between pagan vs. Christian understandings of the word--hence revelation comes into play. I believe Grace deserves its own section here; it is such a poorly understood topic and so important to sacraments.

In the case of the seven individual sacraments, I felt that starting with a straight-up "here's what it means" would be easiest simply because students are used to that approach. But then I want to take things more "chronologically", moving from the seeds of each sacrament, its fulfillment in Christ, its growth in the Church, and finally its particular fullment in saving you.

Finally, a note on the section on "leitourgia": The second and third sections of the first block form a nice antipode; first we talk about God's side of things (the Paschal Mystery), and then we talk about ours (the liturgy). But even while we talk about "holding up our end of the eschatological bargain", we also negate it at every step. Thus, (and I don't care who hears it), I'll warn my students that the word "liturgy" does NOT mean "the work of the people." Even in its more ancient, secular use, it designated works done on behalf of the people. Enter Grace and Prayer, and I get a perfect opportunity to disabuse any students of the notion that we earn any part of our salvation.

A Trinitarian Theory of Catechesis (from 8/05/06)

Mind's been in overdrive since my arrival here at the St. Meinrad Archabbey. Wait for another political analysis. But for now, I want to put my notes on Catechesis here.

Soon I will be teaching an introductory Catechism class to parents and their young children at the same time. The difficulty of the project has forced me to consider my goals and strategies. What began as a reflection on the nature and purpose of games and toys in Catechesis, has developed into something like a Trinitarian theory of Catechesis. Let's see how it looks.

Considering that the doctrine of the Trinity is not the product of speculative reason (though neither is it arbitrarily historical), it has a shocking degree of value for speculation. The Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, along with their varying roles and intrinsic unity within revelation, yield an unending series of correlates which have assisted in human thought about mind, time, being, and pastoral theology. Consider these various correlations:

[by the way, everything in this post falls under the universal theologian's disclaimer. You know, that thing about all language is analogical and symbolic, God is ungraspable mystery, etc. and so on, ad infinitum. It also falls under the amatuer theologian's disclaimer: I make no claims to originality or accuracy. In other words, set your expectations low.]

TrinityFatherSonHoly Spirit
TimePastPresentFuture
MindMemoryConsciousnessExpectation
TranscendentalsTruthGoodnessBeauty
Theological VirtuesFaithCharityHope

Now, these classical correlations have a coextensive connection with the Trinitarian formula; they inform one another. All of the first terms tell us something distinctive of the Father; that he is the begetter, pure mystery, Origin of Origins (though, of course, not in a temporal sense). Fr. Robert Baron of Mundelein Seminary teaches that Buddhism and other schemas of pure negative theology can be said to have a profound spirituality of the Father. Thus God has allowed us to attribute to God the Father elements of originality, of being the source, the root, that which is our highest desire but which does not come to us unmediated. Thus the Father is symbolically Lord of the Past, whence flows our wellspring of revelation and salvation.

The second Person of the Trinity, Son, the Logos, the Incarnation, is the middle (and hence 'central', 'pivotal') term of the Trinity; the beloved of the Father, and the Father's love for beloved Creation, the one and only Mediator. Mediation, as distinct (but not separate) from Origin, is the common characteristic of the Son. The soteriological principle--what is not assumed is not redeemed--places Christ as the fulfillment of what comes before and the impetus of what comes after; at the same time the completion of human destiny and the entire Word of God.

The Holy Spirit is the advocate, the one sent by the Son, who directs, protects, and empowers the Church as the visible Body of Christ. Emphatically, the Holy Spirit not only shows us Christ but empowers us to say yes to what we are shown; the Spirit is thus the very life of the Church, making possible the inclusion of the Church within the dynamic of the Father and the Son as the Lover and Beloved. I will take a risk here and suggest that the central term for thinking the Spirit is Transformation.

The pattern of Origin, Mediation, and Transformation forms something like a logical skeleton around which Trinitarian 'analogies' are formed. In the case of the Transcendentals, Truth has the most immediate reference to 'What Is' and hence yields something of the character of primacy, whence Goodness and Beauty (no less vital) emerge; Goodness corresponds to Mediation because Truth ceases to be 'cold' and 'objective' and instead takes on value, thus for the first time soliciting the attention of the valu-ers... in other words, that which is both True and Good takes on a kind of hypostatic union of the objective Original and the subjective anthropological--a union which ends the futility of desire and the unattainability of the Original. Beauty corresponds to Transformation because of the transformative power of eros, as inspired by awe.

Now, in the midst of all this ethereal speculation, I have a very practical Trinitarian set:

MotivationConvictionDelightAwe
CatechesisDoctrinePlayExperience

Here we see that the practical foundations of good catechesis can make use of the same categories. Catechesis is a deeply different activity than simply teaching, because its goal is salvation; thus, whatever its methods, it should be conductive to the sanctification of the students. Doctrine is the root (the 'Origin') of Catechesis. Transformation takes the shape of Grace-accompanied experience (liturgy, service, devotion, etc). But the most controversial element of this schema is the middle term.

Among my conservative seminarian friends, there is a popular contempt for the use of games in catechesis. This is a reaction to a reaction; the post Vatican II popular church raged against the stilted and hyper-disciplinarian Baltimore memorization of the past. With all of the flair and romanticism of Robin Williams in Dead Poet's Society, Catechism teachers of children and adults jettisoned, in varying degrees, objectivity from the parish classroom. The reign of Schleiermachian psychologized cuddly-wuddliness has been dominant for more than 30 years--longer than most of my conservative friends have lived. Hence, to us, it is self-evident that we have systematically encouraged a generation of Catholics to understand God predominantly as a projection of their most deeply rooted satisfactions and personalities. "Who is God for you?" asks the grandmotherly sister to her RCIA students. God is as I have experienced her/it/them.

The standard prejudice is that the deepest root of this phenomenon, where it happens, is simply a vapid, wide-eyed, ideological niceness--once called "nicety-nice at any price" by a bitter Catholic forumite (shockingly, not yours truly). Nice-ism has come to be viewed as a great plague of parishes, both in liturgy and in catechesis. Accordingly, seminarians like to scoff at the use of games in catechesis; such teachers "sell out," in a sense, to the promise of a non-conflictual, "nice" time spent with their students. In exchange, they give up any partaking in the preparation of the student to understand their faith in a world where it is more likely to be attacked than ever.

But I believe these seminarians, while having a strong point, forget the indispensibility of delight--delight which was, more likely than not, an ingredient of their own reception of the faith, whether they like to admit it or not. (And if their catechesis was in fact joyless, one wonders at the quality of their wish to inflict the same upon others). All age groups need play, games, fun; certainly, especially children. But even adults need to be given reason to laugh when they learn--no amount of importance of the material can withstand the power of the appetite to sleep through boredom.

Play, I suggest, has three critical purposes, one of which I would like to elaborate in more detail. In the first place, it is simply and immediately healthy. In the second, play is the school of enjoyment and hence of all value; games, toys, sports, and stories delight the child even while they continually broaden the child's notion of the delightful. It is incredibly important that the lessons our Faith grants us be transmitted in a delightful way; and moreover, I suggest that, through delight, there is virtually no limit to the real complexity of the concepts which can be transmitted to even the youngest children. Anthropologically speaking, there is nothing immediately intuitive about the whole business of driving a car; yet hardly a teenager in this country does not expect to, thanks to the toys they had as chidlren. Why should we not then use games to inculcate the expectation to receive the Sacraments?

But the third purpose, I believe, is less obvious and even more vital. Play is not only the school of what is good, but the school of the very hope for the good. Play is the realm of surprise, of the unexpected, of joy that leaps effortlessly above the predictable rat race of appetite and wish-fulfillment. Play does not obey that determinitive logic, and I am certain that a healthy play life is the best immunization to any satisfaction or infatuation with utilitarianism, either as an ideal or a way of life. Salvation is not (essentially) the fulfillment of any natural need we feel on earth. It does, de facto, fulfill all needs; but more importantly it is the promise of infinitely more joy than we could have imagined, come to us even in this life. In fact, as C.S. Lewis demonstrates in The Great Divorce that too meager a desire can itself be the thing that keeps us from God. Evangelization is not only promising that in God people's wishes are granted; nor is it to get people to think predominantly of others' needs before their own; it is to show how the Glory of the Lord explodes our needs and those of others. It invites us to be daring in our quest for that Glory, in which the service of others ceases to be an important, difficult thing, but a weightless trifle.

Delight in catechesis teaches students, especially children, the most important lesson they could learn: that the greatest things in life are things we never thought to ask for. After all, we didn't ask for Jesus Christ, either--all the more reason why both occupy the "middle term" of the Trinity.

Teaching about the Sacraments (from 8/05/07)

I have begun preparing this class in earnest. Looking over the school calendar for the year, I have about 175 class sessions to cover everything a high school student should know about sacraments. That equals 35 total "weeks", but that doesn't account for the fact of Mass days and Rally days, which reduce class length to 40 minutes and 32 minutes, respectively. Thus to be on the safe side, I will imagine that I need to cover the material in 30 50-minute sessions.

Or another way I could look at it is: I actually have 37 "weeks" if by that we mean Mon-Fri periods where "most" of the days are teaching days, although some of them have as few as three days in them.

How I divide the course material, of course, depends on what the course material actually is. An initial look at my resource reveals the following:

  • The course textbook.
  • The Catechism + footnotes to source material; the Documents of Vatican II; Denzinger's Sources of Catholic Dogma;
  • Seminary handouts from Sacraments courses.
  • Seminary bibliographies
  • The Internet
  • The ASU library
To get a sense of how the course material should be divided, I compared the table of contents of the course textbook, the Catechism, and the list of course objectives given to me by the school.

Sacraments: Course Objectives


  1. The Catholic Sacramental Vision

    1. Sacramental awareness

    2. Grace

    3. Symbols and rituals

    4. Prayer

  2. Christ and the Sacraments

    1. The Paschal Mystery

    2. The Incarnation

    3. The Church (+ models)

    4. Death – Resurrection – Pentecost – Sacraments

  3. History of sacrament and Sacraments

  4. Sacraments and human life

  5. Symbols and rituals

Textbook TOC


  1. “Sacraments: encountering the sacred”

  2. “Symbols: doorways to the sacred”

  3. “Rituals: meaning in symbolic actions”

  4. “Prayer: worshiping in word, in act, and in silence”

  5. “Jesus Christ and the Church: sacraments of God's love for the world”

  6. “The Sacraments in History: changing church, changing sacraments”

7-13. The Seven Sacraments

*. “Conclusion: the sacrament you”

Catechism TOC


  1. The Sacramental Economy

    1. The Paschal Mystery in the Age of the Church

    2. The Sacramental Celebration

  2. The Seven Sacraments of the Church

    1. The Sacraments of Christian Initiation

    2. The Sacraments of Healing

    3. The Sacraments at the Service of Communion

    4. Other Liturgical Celebrations


How do I organize this jumble? I've been thinking about this for a while. What the course objectives are asking me to do is to survey a heaping ton of material in a short time. But perhaps I'm moving too quickly. What are my hopes for this class? How do I plan to inspire my students to care about this "object of study", these "sacraments"?
  • I hope that my students develop their sense of the sacred; the fact that the liturgy is God's tearing open the veil that separates this world from the spiritual world; that in the Mass and all the other sacraments, Jesus Christ--made present by the Holy Spirit--is the Father's perfect victory over, and transformation of the world. He is revealed and made known, and we are gratuitously permitted to take part in his, the everlasting worship of the Father, together with the Holy Mother of God, the saints, and angels.
  • I hope that my students gain a proper understanding of the visible elements of rite and symbol; how the sacraments are indeed the historically-conditioned and culturally saturated outer manifestations of the sacred Mysteries. Yet their form and appearance are not, therefore, our plaything, as if history belonged to us more than it does God. Precisely in their historicity they are the God's sanctification and purification of history and culture (Just as Christ's humanity sanctifies and purifies our humanity). Thus the first determinant of rite and rubric is neither a sarcophagus filled with other men's prayers (whether ancient or medieval), nor the passing fancies of historically ambivalent modernity, but rather something else entirely (will get into later). Thus I want to communicate that many sacramental forms are subject to development in continuity. Newman to the rescue!
  • I hope my students learn not only that the sacraments are sacred but how; I would like to reveal to them the drama which is made visible for them who have eyes for it. I would like them to not only see, but experience how Catholic worship is not amorphous "praise" or disorganized, ephemeral affections; but it is patterned, structured, complex, dramatic; the re-incorporating of the present into the singular drama of eternity. We are not just telling God how much we like him; we are presenting ourselves as bodily participants in the Crucifixion that saved fallen humanity and reversed the progress of sin and death that even now threatens to push us individually over the threshold of delusional despair. (Huge breath).
So now I feel like I can answer the question: how do I organize this mess?