What is it about?

This paper explores how through narrative pedagogies inspired simultaneously by divine pedagogy revealed in Scripture and the power of modern media to visually represent the human heart's most profound longings, divine revelation can, through Catholic Religious Education (CRE), reach and transform adolescent hearts. Such a transformation is made possible through adolescents’ expression of transcendence in a communal context that is facilitated when metaphor’s power in helping adolescents tell stories about themselves is unlocked through photography and film. These media teach young people use their capacity for imagination and critical thinking more effectively and produce narratives of self through which they narrate who they are and would like to be. Such media impact identity through the process of merging words, imagery, music and movement, and can be so dynamic and effective in representing self. CRE can thus enable young people to become critical, even of their own past experiences, make them more integrated and coherent, empower them to meet life’s challenges, and afford them the opportunity to project their lives in the future as they wish them to be. All throughout such a process, adolescents learn more what God’s revelation entails and its potential to make human life more beautiful and meaningful.

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Why is it important?

We need to explore ways how to make God's revelation to us accessible through narrative learning that is facilitated by the propensities of creative media technologies. In this way religious education becomes much more relevant to students, as God's revelation is concretized in their everyday life experiences.

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This page is a summary of: Voicing the Longing of the “Adolescent Heart” through Photography and Film: Connecting Transcendence and Revelation in Catholic Religious Education, The Person and the Challenges The Journal of Theology Education Canon Law and Social Studies Inspired by Pope John Paul II, March 2021, Pontifical University of John Paul II in Krakow,
DOI: 10.15633/pch.3888.
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