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Published by The National
Herald, February 18, 2005
Hellenic College |
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There was a story in the New York Times this past
week that the Roman Catholic Church in New York is
considering turning the management of its schools
over to professionals, instead of keeping them
under the control of priests and nuns, like they
always have.
Why? Well… because priests and the nuns are
typically not trained to run schools, let alone an
entire educational system.
The result is that, in today’s very competitive
educational environment, the crisis facing
Catholic schools is so severe, the Catholic
Archdiocese of New York announced it would shut
down nine of its schools in the New York City
area.
The Roman Catholic decision seems to us to be the
appropriate course of action for Hellenic
College/Holy Cross, too.
Some of the professors at Hellenic College are
complaining of interference in running the school
by the Ecumenical Patriarchate. Someone complained
of episcopal meddling.
This is a longstanding problem which only makes
things worse by the year.
If the College finds valid reasons to justify its
continued existence – and this is a big if – and
if all parties agree upon its mission, then it
should be left to professionals, rather than
ecclesiastics, to run it.
Then, and only then, it might stand a chance of
long-term survival.
To an extent, the same applies to Holy Cross. The
Theological School ’s core purpose is to train
seminarians who wish to enter the priesthood. As
such, there is no question that the Church should
be involved with the seminary’s mission.
But why don’t the Archbishop and the Eparchial
Synod exert greater influence and seek to bring
some professors from the universities of Athens
and Greece to Holy Cross on an exchange basis, for
example, or invite them to be visiting professors?
The school has serious financial problems, of
course, so such action seems to be prohibitive,
but perhaps new initiatives are needed in order to
help lift the school out of its current mess.
In any case, most observers agree that, based on
the way the School is functioning today, it is not
measuring up to its intended purpose, and it ought
to be restructured.
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