Abstract

This article highlights one likely ‘fall’ to which Catholic education is susceptible in the modern era due to the oppressive climate in which it operates. Our critical method in arguing for this position is to oscillate between two texts—one written and one visual: Genesis 3: 1–18 and Masaccio’s painting of ‘The Expulsion’. The hope is that one will inform and enrich a deeper understanding of the other. As part of this exercise in creative hermeneutics, we first argue that the dramatic story of the fall through pride or amor sui (self-love) and its resultant feeling of shame is a universal one in which readers (listeners) glimpse the long history of their own fears and desires. Second, we show how one 15th century Italian painter represented the tragic consequences of the Faustian self by examining Masaccio’s painting in some detail. Third, we investigate St. Augustine’s writings on this narrative and suggest how some forms of self-elevation align dangerously with the promotion of the autonomous self in contemporary education. We also critically examine exegetical writings from Jewish and Christian perspectives to draw out further meanings of the narrative. Fourth, we point to the themes of hiding and forgiveness embedded in the account which leads us neatly into the last fifth section where we discuss the text’s implications for contemporary Catholic education. Here, the focus is on one likely ‘fall’ of Catholic education when it fails to live up to its distinctive mission to place love unconditionally at its centre. In a highly market-driven, managerial climate of competition where league tables, bureaucratisation, and data analysis assume an overwhelming significance allied to institutional survival and kudos, the temptation is to show the worth of the school by emphasising its examination success and employment rates rather than through its service to others, especially those who have been forgotten. Although we are highly sensitive to the conflictual demands on Catholic institutions at the present time from a variety of stakeholders, we conclude that their healthy continuation depends on their public, ethical avowal to love everyone unreservedly with assistance from God’s grace and when this aspiration fails, to seek forgiveness. The article is not concerned with strategies of resistance against those developments in education contrary to a Catholic philosophy.

Highlights

  • Introduction iationsThis article highlights the likely ‘fall’ to which Catholic education is susceptible in the modern era

  • American Jewish literary critic Greenblatt argues that the story of Adam and Eve continues to enrapture treaders and listeners from across and beyond the boundaries of religious traditions due to its mirroring nature: ‘For reasons that are at once tantalising and elusive, the few verses of the story of Adam and Eve in an ancient book have served as a mirror in Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland

  • We suggest that over the last 30–40 years, Catholic schools in England and Wales have become in danger of ‘falling’ to various temptations

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Summary

Masaccio’s The Expulsion

The Expulsion is based on Genesis 3: 23–24: ‘ . . . the Lord God sent him forth from the garden of Eden, to till the ground from which he was taken. The depiction of the bodies and gestures of the Edenic couple highlight their nakedness and by doing this Masaccio contradicts the earlier verse 22 that ‘the Lord God made for Adam and his wife garments of skins and clothed them’. Adam and Eve saw for the first time what they had never seen or felt before—that they were naked—and it filled them with shame and impelled them to reach for fig leaves to cover as a veil for when ‘grace was removed and a punishment commensurate with their disobedience inflicted on them, there appeared a certain shameless movement of the body ...’ (615) They became victims of both involuntary desire and voluntary arousal for satisfaction. Paul in his Letter to the Philippians previously denounced this latter tendency: ‘Their god is the belly; and their glory is in their shame; their minds are set on earthly things’ (3, 19)

The Way of Redemption
Temptation and the ‘Fall’ of Catholic Education
Conclusions
Full Text
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