Archive for » February 18th, 2012«

St. Gregory’s Academy Alumnus Response to closing of SGA

The following was a comment in response to a post about St. Gregory’s Academy back in 2012 on Orbis Catholicus blog when the school was being closed down. I re-printed the comment here because I feel it really captures well an alumnus’ sentiment about the goodness of the school on him personally, but also highlights the importance of the school in the broader context of contemporary boy’s education. 

Note: since this article was published, by the grace of God, the Academy re-formed, retaining much of the original characteristics, leadership, and traditions of St. Gregory’s Academy. Information can be found on their website: https://www.gregorythegreatacademy.org


Headmaster’s Address at SGA Graduation 2005

SGA is a special place and one which is sorely needed in the US and throughout the world. Speaking as a direct beneficiary of this truly unique place of formation, I believe it is the obligation of all of us who have received such a gift from the Lord to sacrifice so that this education may be passed on to future lads from around the world for their benefit, the benefit of the Church, the country and the world. As you noted, the reputation of the Academy has spread like wildfire across the world by the example of her graduates and thus students have come from homes as far away as Canada, Alaska, and France to seek out this particular unapologetic Catholic formation in manly virtue within the context of a classical liberal arts education and a unique Highlander brotherhood that inevitably forges real friendships that last far beyond the High School years.
It would answer a high calling and provide a noble service to the Church and to the future lads of St. Gregory’s Academy if those blessed with means to do so would help in a practical way to preserve this pearl of great price. At this point in its history, the Academy is looking to independently seek out its glorious mission by severing its formal ties with the FSSP. While no doubt both organizations have benefited from their relationship with each other, the particular founding mission and vision of St. Gregory’s Academy (which has thus far profoundly changed the lives of ordinary young Catholic boys for the better by orienting them toward a lifelong pursuit and love of the Good, the True, and the Beautiful) simply does not coincide with the chosen charism of the FSSP. It is a difference of two good visions of a Catholic school and thus the need for parting is mutual. This has been a point of tension and evaluation over the past several years and the decision has now been made to allow the opportunity for the Academy to continue true to its original mission separate from the FSSP. While this is certainly a great opportunity for the future flourishing of SGA, it comes with some serious material difficulties. An attempt to purchase the current property upon which the school has operated for the past 20 years (in Elmhurst, PA) failed on the business end of the negotiations and thus the Academy is in desperate need of a new home.
This is where some of your readers may be able to make a real difference in preserving this treasure hidden in the rolling hills of the Poconos. Information about SGA’s current situation and property may be found on the above post. It is vital that the Academy be continued, if at all possible, right into the next academic year. There are many students currently at SGA who will not be able to finish the formation they have begun if they are not helped now. An organization deeply connected with SGA alumni and faculty (ranging back to the founding of the school) is currently undertaking the task of relocating the school. As you might guess, this is a monumental task and many prayers and sacrifices will be needed to ensure any kind of transition into the coming years. This organization is called the Clairvaux Institute and one can find out all about it by going to:

https://clairvauxinstitute.org/about.html

From there one can contact them for further information about providing donations and/or ways in which one can become a part of this noble cause.

Graduation Mass at St. Gregory’s Academy 2005

Solid Catholic institutions in education are rare enough in our present day and age and Our Holy Father, Pope Benedict XVI, continues to stress the huge role that education must play if there is going to be any revival in culture, especially Catholic culture, and in the Church. So, let’s not stand by and allow this essential work of the Lord, under the patronage of St. Gregory the Great, fall beneath the very real financial and logistical obstacles that are now presented with the separation from the FSSP and the exile from the Elmhurst property.

Support St. Gregory’s Academy by your prayers, sacrifices, and (when possible) whatever material means the Lord has blessed you with for the benefit of your fellow man.

“Though much is taken, much abides; and though
We are not now that strength which in old days
Moved earth and heaven, that which we are, we are;
One equal temper of heroic hearts,
Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will
To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.”
-Alfred Lord Tennyson “Ulysses”

Yours in Christ,
SGA Grad




The Silence of Friendship

Brother Innocent Smith, O.P.

Br. Innocent Smith entered the Order of Preachers in 2008. He is a graduate of the University of Notre Dame, where he studied music and philosophy, and St. Gregory’s Academy.

Take a moment to read Brother Innocent’s article “The Silence of Friendship” in Dominicana.  

https://www.dominicanablog.com/2012/01/17/the-silence-of-friendship/

The Keen Delight by Harold Weatherby and other musings on Aesthetics

This school year I have been slowly making my way through Etienne Gilson’s book The Arts of the Beautiful.  I have been doing this with some other colleagues of mine at Glendale Prep.  We’ve been getting together and discussing the book as part of a “Philosophy of Beauty” reading group.  It was one of my “intellectual projects” this year to augment and intensify my understanding of Beauty– historically, philosophically, and practically.

la Donna Velata - Rafael Sanzio

I chose Etienne Gilson’s book, mostly because I liked his Aristotelian approach to art and beauty.  I have since decided that it would probably have been better to have started with Plato, and progressed through Aristotle, Aquinas, Burke, Kant, Joyce, Maritain, Umberto Eco, and then making it to Gilson and others (bold are either Thomists or arguing for a Thomistic aesthetic…yes Aristotle was a Thomist).

It is so easy to get carried away with someone’s aesthetic philosophy.  I thought while reading The Arts of the Beautiful, “How convincing Gilson is!”  He makes a great argument for why art is, in its essence, something made.  Gilson argues it cannot be in its essence thinking.  I agree with this thesis, however, I find his philosophy of Beauty to be problematic only in so far as it is a serious departure from the conversation.

His aesthetic departs from the Thomistic aesthetic of integritas, consonantia, et claritas.  I am not saying that he has nothing to say, or that he is wrong because he didn’t follow Thomas; but it is a statement in itself that he has departed from Thomistic aesthetics.  I am actually fairly happy that Gilson is doing something new with aesthetics and really trying to forge his own conception of Beauty according to reason, rather than merely fitting his conception into an old framework that might limit it.  I’m not expert on the history of beauty or aesthetics, but I do know that no one can claim to have the whole understanding of the Beautiful, especially when the whole Thomistic aesthetic is based on so few lines in Aquinas.  Nevertheless, I am convinced that Aquinas has a firm grasp of reality and that his aesthetic is salvageable, even necessary in the world today.

The Lute Player - Caravaggio

I have come to understand that Harold Weatherby has written an absolutely wonderful book called The Keen Delight.  I am eager to read it.  I heard that Dr. Hanssen told Dr. James M. Wilson that it was her favorite book.  Her favorite book.  It is subtitled “The Christian Poet in the Modern World.”  Read a short review about it here: https://www.jstor.org/pss/437717

Weatherby talks mostly about the Christian poet in the modern world, but then devotes the last chapter of the book to a critique of Gilson’s aethetics.  I have heard that he absolutely demolishes him.  I recommend reading the Keen Delight, if only because Dr. Hanssen likes it.  I know that I will be doing it…as soon as I finish Gilson!

-Peter Bloch

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