"In its philosophy and objectives, the Theology Department of St. Louis University High School builds upon the philosophy and objectives of the school as a whole presented in the "Grad at Grad" document. The four-year program is a progressive process designed both to inform students of the major elements of their Catholic Faith and to present opportunities which lead to an interiorization of that faith. Accordingly, members of the department strive, with the grace of God, to provide the information, ambience, and modeling which lead a student to a greater understanding, acceptance, and living of his faith.
More specifically, department members attempt to help a student begin to understand his responsibility and need to pursue his own growth as a religious person. Recognizing that humans are finite creatures with gifts and limits, faculty members encourage each student to develop as fully as he can. Furthermore, department faculty are conscious that, even with his limitations, the student is accepted by a loving, forgiving, and gracious God; thus members of the department strive to help him accept himself as he is.
Faith is dynamic. We, therefore, attempt to show how faith is actualized and celebrated in the sacraments, in the Christian community, and in the doing of the deeds of justice. We also teach that faith necessitates taking a stand against such issues as prejudice, religious indifferentism, moral permissiveness, secular materialism, and anti-religious attitudes both in the student himself and in the community and world in which he lives. Desiring that a student's outlook and concerns become broader and more global during his high school years, the department also encourages the student to a realistic practice and embodiment of his faith and values in the local communities - family, peers, parish, school, and civic - which are microcosms of the global community.
Members of the department recognize that the broader goals of Christian education and development are the responsibility of no one academic department, but of the total St. Louis University High School Community. The theology faculty, therefore, sees itself working in union with the Pastoral Program and with the other departments and programs of the school, both academic and co-curricular.
Summary of Philosophy & Goals
In sum, we attempt to present Christianity as a viable, integrated way of life, as a leaven both for the individual and for the world, and as a guiding principle and value for the building up of both the individual and his world into new entities which are more fully human and divine. In all of this, the prime exemplar and enabler is Jesus Christ who is the model, message, and incarnation of a truly generous and loving God and a truly human and integral "man for others." In our ministry of evangelization and catechesis, specifically the department attempts to enable the students to:
�encounter Christ in the Gospels so that they might take on his mind and heart;
�understand and appreciate the meaning and practice of the sacraments;
�understand and appreciate Scripture and the legitimate approaches to its interpretation;
�work through moral issues with increased clarity;
�develop a positive attitude toward religion, God, and the Church;
�develop a critical Christian consciousness by understanding the disjunction between Christian values and the dominant values of society;
�understand how commitment to Christ affects both one's daily choices and one's more basic "life choices;"
�understand and appreciate Catholic doctrine, practice, and history;
�acquire a Christian attitude toward sexuality;
�integrate the presence of God into their lives, especially through the knowledge and practice of prayer;
�achieve a better understanding of life choices, particularly marriage, and to freely and responsibly make those life choices;
�understand that the call to faith is the call to "do justice;"
�understand the nature of the human person from Christian and non-Christian viewpoints.