Show Your Interest in a New Catholic School

Plans for a new Wichita Catholic school, in the classical liberal arts tradition, are underway. If you are a Wichita-area parent interested in sending your children to such a school, please let us know of your interest by filling out this survey form. It will only take a few minutes. This information will help our Founding Committee form a better understanding of the active interest in attending the school.

All feedback is appreciated; if you have further questions or comments, please contact us using the address provided through the survey.

Please also forward the survey to anyone else you know that may be interested.

Let Your Pastor Know

In our conversations about establishing a Diocesan K-12 Catholic classical school, it has become very clear that the support of Parish Pastors is pivotal. Perhaps the most important thing that you can do is let your Pastor know of your interest in this school–in passing after Mass, by email, by phone, etc.. Feel very free to direct him to this site or contact us if you would like us to make a presentation.

Sample email/talking points:

Dear Fr. ________,

Greetings! We hope that this finds you doing extremely well.

We are writing to let you know about an exciting initiative that is underway in our Diocese to establish a diocesan Catholic classical K-12 school. We understand that this would require a large commitment on the Doicese’s part in terms of resources and energy. We believe that this commitment would be well repaid in terms of benefit to our youth. Catholic classical education points children to God by immersing them in the highest and best that the Church’s tradition has to offer.

We acknowledge that our Diocese’s schools to a fantastic job of implementing pastoral programs and religious instruction, of hiring teachers that offer powerful witness to Christ’s love, and of facilitating frequent encounters with Christ in the Sacraments. We are hoping for a school that directs the student to God not only in what happens around the curriculum, but especially through it; divine purpose pervades the entire Catholic classical curriculum and all of its components are directed to transcendent ends.

Please feel free to visit catholicclassicalict.com for more information about the vision that we are attempting to realize with other Catholic and classically-minded families in our Diocese. And please do ask us if you would like for someone to come present the vision to you in person or over the phone; there are many enthusiastic proponents among us who would love to share their understanding of this amazing way of pointing our children towards God.

We would treasure your prayers for this effort and please be assured of ours for your ministry.

In Christ,

____________________

Let Us Know Who You Are

In order to know if we are moving together as 25 or 250 families, we created a signup page here. There is no obligation whatsoever attached to signing this; it is strictly to help us understand who is interested in Catholic classical education in Wichita and for you to find like-minded families in the Diocese. You may get a few emails about upcoming events or new information, but we won’t use it as a subscription list or as any sort of marketing campaign.

Letter to Bishop Kemme–Please Consider Signing


We will meet with His Excellency in December and would love to be able to show him as many signatures of support as possible. There is no commitment attached to this; it is merely an expression of a desire for a diocesan K-12 Catholic classical school in the City of Wichita.

Here is the link to sign, also posted at the end.

Dear Bishop Kemme, 

We write to humbly request that you establish a diocesan K-12 Catholic classical school in the city of Wichita.  We believe that such a school would help our kids know and love God because first, the form of Catholic classical education is pervasively oriented towards God, second, the content conveys the highest and best of Catholic culture, and third, Catholic classical education is an antidote to some of the most inimical aspects of secular culture.

The Catholic schools in our diocese do a fantastic job of implementing superb pastoral programs and religious instruction, of hiring teachers that offer powerful witness to Christ’s love, and of facilitating frequent encounters with Christ in the Sacraments.  If there is anything lacking in the diocesan approach to education, it would not be apparent from the contemporary vantage point.

The lack that we feel is due to our discovery of an educational tradition that directs the student to God not only in what happens around the curriculum, but especially through it; divine purpose pervades the entire Catholic classical curriculum and all of its components are directed to transcendent ends.  Classical education begins in piety, gymnastic, and music, which attune the heart and body to goodness and beauty.  Then, the seven liberal arts cultivate the skills necessary for philosophy and theology, which perfect the intellectual virtues so that the student can contemplate beauty, goodness, and truth directly, and ultimately their source in the divine.  Every level of organization has a form that points beyond itself, and finally to God.

Not just the form, but the content too points the pupil Heavenward; the classical curriculum is an immersion in the highest and best culture that the Church’s tradition has to offer—literary, linguistic, philosophical, and otherwise.  Indeed, classical education is merely Catholic education as it has been conceived for most of the Church’s history; the liberal arts and classical culture were the educational soil from which grew the likes of St. Augustine, St. Thomas Aquinas, St. Thomas More, St. John Henry Newman, Pope Benedict XVI, and many other heroes of the Faith across the centuries.  It seems to us the most natural thing in the world that the Church should simply receive the gift that is already hers by heritage; such are these strange times when cultural amnesia has prevented us from adopting it as a matter of course.

We now find ourselves in a culture that not only lacks divinely oriented form and content but is overtly inimical to them.  Whereas society and education were previously oriented towards truth, beauty, goodness, and finally God, the regnant philosophy of our age is to dispense with final ends in favor of utility and pragmatism.  One can see how easy it is for children to internalize the message that transcendence is a matter for private religion and Theology class while the serious work of school is to achieve economic and social significance on secular terms.  We suppose that this may partially explain the crisis of the “nones” and flight from the pews beyond high school.

We invite you to envision with us a renaissance of purpose where math and science are no longer means for analyzing and manipulating the world, but rather for wondering worshipfully at the Logos or divine order throughout it; where literature and history are not objects of study, but rather immersions in Christian culture; where languages launch children not only across the globe but also across the millennia; where poetry, music, drama, and art remind them of their Heavenly home and unsettle them in this one.  In all of these ways, classical education is merely catholic education in the fullest sense of the word; for the universality of the Church extends not only to different cultures, but throughout the whole of reality and all of history.

It is for these reasons and many others that we humbly ask you to establish a diocesan K-12 Catholic classical school in the city of Wichita.  We believe that such a school would greatly aid us in our chief duty as parents, and you in your role as our shepherd, to guide our children to “dwell in the house of the Lord forever” (Psalm 23). 

In Christ our salvation and under the patronage of Mary, Seat of Wisdom,

The Undersigned

Click to Sign