91ŗŚĮĻ is unique among American colleges and universities, offering a faithfully Catholic education comprised entirely of the Great Books and classroom discussions.
Truth, and nothing less, sets men free; and because truth is both natural and supernatural, the Collegeās curriculum aims at both natural and divine wisdom.
The intellectual tradition and moral teachings of the Catholic Church infuse the whole life of 91ŗŚĮĻ, illuminating the curriculum and the community alike.
Do you enjoy grappling with complex questions? Are you willing to engage in discussions about difficult concepts, with the truth as your ultimate goal?
There is always something to do at TAC ā something worthwhile, something fulfilling, and something geared toward ever-greater spiritual and intellectual growth.
Nothing speaks more to the versatility of the Collegeās academic program than the good that our alumni are doing throughout the Church and the world.
āIn Little Ways, He was Always Thereā ā A Sophomoreās Path to Christ
California
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April 24, 2023
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Chaplain Rev. John Mary Chung conditionally baptizes Josiah Savannah (ā25) at the Easter Vigil
Josiah Savannah (ā25) loved the Great Books even as a teenager, though he never thought that love would eventually lead him to the Catholic faith. Yet in the late hours of April 8, in the warm light of Our Lady of the Most Holy Trinity Chapel at 91ŗŚĮĻ, California, he was fully received into the Churchās open arms.
Josiah attended public school in Glendale, Arizona, until his mother enrolled her children at Great Hearts Anthem Prep, where alumnus Bruce Clark (ā89) was teaching at the time. āAristotle says āAll men by nature desire to know,ā but it seems like thereās a real need to point that out to people,ā says Josiah. āThatās what Mr. Clark did for me.ā
Reinforcing Mr. Clarkās example was Great Heartsā pedagogical model itself, which in many ways resembles the Collegeās own Great Books curriculum and use of Discussion Method in the classroom. Overall, Josiah found this education transformational: āIt implanted the desire to talk about books and showed me that reading the Great Books can be a really good thing.ā
But at the same time Josiahās mind was opening to the Great Books, it was closing to the non-denominational Christianity of his youth. āI did a lot of looking into it, and looking at arguments,ā he recalls. āI realized I didnāt have a reason to believe the things I did, and I thought, āWell, if I donāt have a reason for believing these things, why believe them?āā
This realization left Josiah intellectually hostile to Christianity, and he declared himself an atheist at around 16. āI was never bitter about my Christian upbringing,ā he says. āIt was just, āI used to believe and now I donāt; wasnāt it foolish that I ever believed?āā That dismissiveness diminished, however, during a gap year after high school, when he found himself thinking, āOther people believe this, and I donāt. I think that theyāre wrong, but I can see how people could deceive themselves into thinking that.ā
Drawn by the opportunity to continue studying the Great Books, Josiah came to TACās California campus as a freshman in 2021. Yet beyond entering a community that shared his love for classical education, he made friends who had examined the Christian faith, as he had done, but embraced it. These fellow young people lived morally upright lives with uncommon joy, which, he says was āa powerful witness and testimony,ā and it gave him pause.
āI wanted to more fully understand where these people ā who were living their lives for Christ ā were coming from,ā Josiah reflects. He began to consider the Faith. āIt developed from a āyou can be a not-silly person and believe this stuffā into āthis a pretty internally consistent system of beliefs,ā and then āthis is a really good and beautiful thing, if only it were true,āā he says. āI wanted to believe, but I didnāt have that in me.ā
Things changed in 2022, when some of Josiahās friends embarked on Exodus 90, a program designed to help men get the most out of Lent and Easter, and invited him to join them. Though open to the programās ascetic side, he was hesitant about its prayer requirements. āBut my friends convinced me,ā he says. āI thought it would be at least meditation ā but itās hard to pray for an hour a day without God working something in you!ā
This spiritual regimen revived Josiahās anemic relationship with God, and by last yearās Triduum he had decided to begin OCIA with the Collegeās chaplains. That preparation deepened his knowledge of the Faith, clearing the way for his full initiation into the Church at this yearās Easter Vigil.
āIt feels really good being Catholic and receiving the sacraments,ā Josiah reflects, who received a conditional baptism, was confirmed, and made his first Holy Communion. āIt makes me so appreciative of what God has done in my life. In little ways, He was always there, showing me a new perspective, and it all culminated in my being fully united with His Church.ā
Josiah is especially grateful to his friends for their example. āA big part of what made me interested and kept me going on the pursuit was seeing people committed to Christ; people should never underestimate the impact they can have on others,ā he says. āThe witness of people for their Christian faith in everyday moments, in little sacrifices, the little things that make sense only when youāre doing them for Christ, is powerful.ā
Fr. Chung confers the Sacrament of Confirmation upon Josiah at the Easter Vigil