New Credible Catholic Religious Education Programme Launched

 

As part of Catholic Schools Week 2022, Bishop Brendan Leahy of Limerick, Chair of the Bishops’ Council for Catechetics, recently launched Credible Catholic, a new religious education programme for Catholic Voluntary Secondary School in Ireland. 

Credible Catholic aims to stimulate dialogue, encourage reflection and critical reasoning, foster religious literacy, build community, and nurture faith, and in doing all of these things, to promote student wellbeing. It is an optional resource which will be very helpful to teachers of religious education. The programme speaks to, and is built around, very important questions young people of all beliefs (religious and non-religious) have about themselves, their world, God and others.

Commenting ahead of the launch Bishop Brendan Leahy said, “Pope Francis often reminds us that education involves learning three languages – the language of the mind, of the heart and of our hands. Credible Catholic is a wonderful programme that quenches the thirst of the mind, expands the outreach of the heart and points in the direction of doing many good actions. I think teachers and students alike will value this programme that responds to Jesus’ call to love not just with our heart but also with our mind.”

An earlier version of Credible Catholic was written and produced by Fr Robert Spitzer SJ and the Magis Centre, based in California, in 2018 and has been almost entirely re-developed for the Irish context, in line with feedback from RE teachers and theological advisors in Ireland.

The Council for Catechetics and the Catholic Education Partnership acknowledges the generosity of Fr Spitzer and the Magis Centre in their work with RE teachers, Catechetics Council members, schools’ trusts and others in the work of re-developing this programme for Ireland, in particular Ms Kate Liffey and Dr Tom Finnegan.

Highlighting the benefits of the programme, Dr Tom Finnegan said, “Credible Catholic is a new approach to RE that is exciting and intellectually stimulating. It encourages students to critically reflect on and debate a wide range of fascinating topics. The programme supports both faith and reasoning in the lives of adolescents by engaging with many of the most important questions in theology, philosophy and science.”

A unique feature of the Irish version of Credible Catholic is a helpful introductory lesson for teachers which prepares students for engagement with the programme modules. This introductory lesson reminds students that ultimately, in the Christian tradition faith is a gift and God is mystery. 

The Credible Catholic programme, which features seven modules, is free and the multi-media materials can be downloaded from www.catholicschools.ie/crediblecatholic

The Catechetics Council articulates policy and vision for the catechetical needs of Ireland, North and South, on behalf of the Bishops’ Conference.   It liaises with the Bishops’ Commission for Education, other Commissions of the Bishops’ Conference and with other bodies and individuals in the area of catechesis and Religious Education.  The Council for Catechetics supports the work of catechesis particularly and faith formation in general in the home, in schools and in parish as set out in Share the Good News, the National Directory for Catechesis in Ireland.