
This week's Tablet has a good article by Nicholas Lash and some excellent letters on the subject.
I am leading a workshop for parish musicians next week; will my music degree and thirty years of practical parish experience disqualify me?

Moderators: Dom Perignon, Casimir
Psalm Project wrote:What's all the fuss?
musicus wrote:will my music degree and thirty years of practical parish experience disqualify me?
musicus wrote:Well, his words do seem to admit of only one interpretation: "Education is a Bad Thing, which gives the lower classes ideas above their station. Oh for a return to simpler times, when they would do as they were told!"
One of the great truths recognized by the Second Vatican Council is that the Church is part of human history and culture. Therefore, it shouldn't surprise us that the shadows cast by the distortion of education, and corresponding societal changes, have also touched members of the Church. As Pope Benedict XVI puts it, even in the Church we find hedonism, selfishness and egocentric behavior.
The Second Vatican Council tends to be misinterpreted most by Catholics who have had a university education -- that is, by those most exposed to the intellectual and moral spirit of the age. These well-educated Catholics have gone on to occupy influential positions in education, the media, politics, and even the Church, where they have been able to spread their so-called loyal dissent, causing confusion and discord in the whole church.
This failure of leadership has exacerbated the even greater problem of the mass departure from the Church of the working-class and poor. For example, the relentless diatribe in the popular media against Christianity has undermined the confidence of the ordinary faithful in the Church.
I strongly support Catholics receiving a university education, but we have to ensure that they also have a firm grounding in the fullness of the faith from an early age in our homes, schools and parishes, and that they are equipped to challenge the erroneous thinking of their contemporaries
...I strongly support Catholics receiving a university education, but we have to ensure that they also have a firm grounding in the fullness of the faith from an early age in our homes, schools and parishes, and that they are equipped to challenge the erroneous thinking of their contemporaries