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History of the
Faith and Life Series
The
main reason for the founding of Catholics United for the Faith
more than 35 years ago was to respond to the dimming of the
faith and the proliferation of error which had hit the Church
like a tsunami. We wanted to defend, advance, and spread the
true Catholic faith. As parents we had first-hand experience
with the defective catechetical texts suddenly appearing in
our Catholic schools. They only became worse over the next
decade, so much so that one could foretell that a whole generation
was in danger of being quite ignorant of the faith, and even
of losing the faith.
The prayer composed by my husband for CUF: “Give us
the grace to know what services, small or great, you ask of
us,” was answered when Monsignor Eugene Kevane, former
Dean of Education of Catholic University, came to visit CUF
headquarters, and urged us to do something about the state
of catechesis of our children. Then Fr. John A. Hardon, S.J.,
came many times and urged us even more. We went to Rome, and
Cardinal Wright encouraged us.
Lyman was enthusiastic about the project. But where would
we get the means and the trained personnel to do this? It
seemed beyond us. We prayed. Then divine Providence opened
a way.
Enter Pip (Patricia I. Puccetti Donahue). A graduate of Thomas
Aquinas College, Pip came to work in the CUF office while
studying for a degree in Catechetics at St. John’s University,
Long Island, New York, under Fr. Robert I. Bradley, S.J.,
and the late Monsignor George A. Kelly, among others. Soon
my late husband, Lyman Stebbins, became aware of Pip’s
talent and put her in charge of the whole project, that is,
of what became to be known as the Faith and Life
series in the early 1980’s.
What we wanted was a religion series that taught the complete
Catholic faith. We wanted a series with student texts, activity
books, teacher’s manuals for each of eight grades, not
only the true faith as in the Baltimore Catechism, but also
with explanations of the doctrines based on Scripture and
Tradition, an attractive and joyful teaching style, exposing
the children to Catholic art and culture through its illustrations,
an inclusion of Bible history, as well as an overview of Church
history, stories of the saints and excerpts from liturgical
and devotional texts to inspire minds and hearts in each age
group.
Pip is to be commended for a prodigious work. She did the
blueprint, planning, choice of authors, editing, layout—in
short, every detail of the 24 books in the series. What I
appreciated especially was her taste in choosing the beautiful
artwork, working with museums here and abroad.
It
is simply the best religion series in the English-speaking
world. Although it was published before the Catechism of the
Catholic Church, it was the first and only catechetical series
found in conformity with the Catechism by the U.S. Bishops’
Ad Hoc Committee to Oversee the Use of the Catechism.
It has since been translated into German and revised by Bishop
Andreas Laun, Auxiliary Bishop of Salzburg, Austria, with
a foreword by Cardinal Schönborn of Vienna. Cardinal
Ratzinger has mentioned that Faith and Life, ‘Glaube
and Lieben,’ is 'the best catechetical series in
the German language.'
—Madeleine
Stebbins
Wife of CUF Founder, H. Lyman Stebbins
In 1978 CUF had a job opening as I began work on my master’s
degree at St. John’s University, studying under Fr.
Robert Bradley, S. J., Fr. John Hardon, S.J., Msgr. Eugene
Kevane, and others. Naturally, I was delighted, not just to
get a job that would pay the rent, but to have one that would
assist me with my studies.
CUF
had long desired to make a contribution in the catechetical
field and had done tremendous work on the American National
Catechetical Directory. Through several people’s
prayers and efforts we began work on our own series for children.
These
were the days before any talk of a new Catechism of the
Catholic Church so our main guide was the General
Catechetical Directory published in 1971. From the GCD
we knew the content of our series had to be “Christocentric,”
since “Christ Jesus…is the center of the Gospel
message within salvation history” (GCD 40). We also
knew that the instruction had to be presented in a concentric
way; that is beginning “with a rather simple presentation
of the entire structure of the Christian message” and
with each subsequent year a more detailed and developed presentation
of that same whole would be made. So for each grade the four
components of our faith, the Creed—what we believe;
the Commandments—the way we live, the Sacraments—the
means to live as Christians; and Prayer—what we hope
for, are presented at the appropriate level. All of that was
done so wonderfully by the writers of the series.
We
had many discussions about the illustration of the series
and finally settled on the use of great masterpieces of religious
art. There were several reasons for that. First, from a practical
point it would help the series from looking outdated in five
years. But more importantly, the artwork was another way of
teaching the children the truths of the faith through beauty
and immersing them in the traditional art of the Church. What
wonderful hours I spent researching that part of the series!
So
many people were so devoted to and supportive of the series;
the writers for all the texts, children’s activity,
and teacher’s manuals, the whole CUF staff and apostolate,
the staff of Ignatius Press, and many outside advisors. It
is truly gratifying and humbling to see so many new, talented
people coming forward to work on the Faith and Life
series so it can continue to make a contribution to the life
of the Church.
—Patricia
“Pip” Donahue
The Faith
and Life series, first published in the middle and late
1980’s, ranks among the foremost achievements of CUF.
It is a superlative instrument of teaching and learning the
faith through the first eight (and all-important) years of
formal Catholic education. Monsignor Eugene Kevane, the “dean”
of all things catechetical, directed the enterprise; while
its general editor, Miss “Pip” Puccetti (now Mrs.
Patricia Donohoe) supervised its attractive layout and composition
and selected its splendid illustrations. With Mr. and Mrs.
Stebbins and their staff, I was privileged to observe at close
quarters the marvelous patience and panache of its completion.
Here
is a true opus magnum: twenty-four “volumes” (a
text, an “activity book,” and a teacher’s
manual for each of the eight grades) which, on its humble
level, is a worthy precursor of the definitive statement for
all catechesis—The Catechism of the Catholic Church.
May its forthcoming second edition contribute to the greater
renewal of catechetics—which for our time is the greatest
renewal of all.
—Fr. Robert I. Bradley, SJ
CUF's Former Spiritual Advisor (for 30 years)
Austin, TX
I think
my daughter can lay claim to being the original Faith
and Life kid! I had the great honor of being chosen to
write the first three texts in the series (grades two, five,
and one, written and published in that order). Theresa was
age three or four at the time. As I wrote each chapter in
the grade two text, I would read it aloud to her. She certainly
enjoyed these stories about God, even if her applications
of the lessons were a little quirky: Shortly after learning
that our souls leave our bodies when we go to heaven, she
came to me after an unpleasant swimming lesson, and said,
‘I’m glad that when we go swimming in heaven,
the water won’t get in our eyes—no heads!’
Anyway,
my Faith and Life guinea pig graduated from Franciscan
University of Steubenville recently with a degree in anthropology—now
there’s a field that needs believing Catholics!
—Daria
Sockey
Venus, PA
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