That makes more sense. Did you correct your own error? or are you guessing about what someone else wrote? |
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You need to go to the pastor. If he does nothing politely write the bishop. If he does nothing, politely write Rome.
In the meantime, you may have to teach your child their catechism yourself. Alternatively you may have to go out of your way to get away from the local “cluster.” Which diocese are you in. No one has a right to teach catechism. When they take on that role they become a public representative of the Church. If they’re not willing to live in accord with Church teaching, or even worse if they publicly oppose it, they have to choose one or the other. |
| Having worked in the CCD program, it's a usually a volunteer position for which they do not have enough volunteers. So, good luck with this. You may end up teaching the class yourself. |
| Does she actually disagree with the church teaching and values, or does she just disagree with legislating them for all citizens? |
| I would be grateful. Likely my kid will have some crotici |
| So homeschool your child. |
Is this true for priests and pastors as well? |
+1, are prepared to step and teach the class OP? |
This. I don't know a ton about Catholic doctrine specifically. But like OP, I also take religious instruction seriously. As an Orthodox Jew, I expect Judaics teachers in my children's school to agree with and comply in their personal lives with a reasonable semblance of normative Jewish Orthodox standards. At the same time, if they ran for office, I wouldn't expect them to propose legislation against Jewish/Christian intermarriage, just for instance. |
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OP you know that Catholics have freedom of conscience, and that this is an essential Catholic doctrine, right? Unless she is espousing literal heresy (like that Jesus wasn’t divine or the Eucharist is just symbolic) there is likely nothing about her personal views that makes her unfit to teach CCD. If you truly believe that she is unfit you should talk to the priest. But otherwise, I am not sure why you think, say, her position on gay marriage has anything to do with what she will teach 1st graders about the Eucharist?
https://www.scu.edu/ethics/focus-areas/religious-and-catholic-ethics/resources/catholicism-and-conscience/ |
that is completely false. where are you getting that from? |
The best kind! I love the Catholics with deep social values and who practice "love thy neighbor" over hate |
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This is a private religious school, so I think it's appropriate to question the public stances of a teacher turned candidate. Unless your mind is made up that there is no way forward then I'd approach the teacher first, in an attempt to salvage that relationship in case your child remains in her class. As long as she is fulfilling her duties and following the curriculum, then her personal views, even those made publicly, shouldn't really matter (it's not as though 7 year olds are watching local political debates, right?). If not satisfied, then I'd speak to the assistant principal or equivalent, and so on.
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You need to inform your diocese stat. |
It's not a school. |