Formative Presence: What Happens When Parents Bring Children to the Places Faith Built
EWTN's new series follows Jessica Rey homeschooling her children across Catholic Europe, using cathedrals and pilgrimage routes as the primary classroom. The show raises a question with real psychological weight: what changes in a child's formation when faith is not a subject studied but a world physically inhabited? The answer touches the roots of resilience, identity, and integrated personhood.

Standing inside a Romanesque church built in the eleventh century, a child understands something that a photograph cannot convey: the building is larger than she expected, the stone is cold, and people have been praying here for nearly a thousand years. This is formative presence.
EWTN Studios' new series Fork in the Road, hosted by Jessica Rey, follows the Rey family as they homeschool their children across Catholic Europe, using the continent's living heritage as the primary text. Rey described the project in a recent interview with the National Catholic Register as a deliberate choice to educate on location, in the places where the Catholic intellectual and spiritual tradition took its historical form. What she is describing, stripped of its television frame, is an argument about anthropology.
Being there
Environmental psychology has documented what it calls place attachment: the bond between a person and a location through accumulated meaning and experience. Environments that carry personal or cultural significance contribute measurably to a stable sense of identity, belonging, and psychological coherence. For Catholic families, the built landscape of Europe is not merely culturally significant — it is theologically saturated. The cathedrals, pilgrimage routes, and market squares are sites where the Church's memory is still physically present.
When children encounter these spaces with their bodies rather than through screens or textbooks, something different happens in the formation of the self. The Catholic Christian Meta-Model of the Person understands the human being as a unity of body, soul, intellect, and will, ordered toward God.[^1] Formation shaped by that anthropology cannot be reduced to information transfer. It requires an environment that supports the shaping of the whole person. Pilgrimage routes and medieval chapels, experienced in the company of a parent who can explain what they mean, do that work in ways a classroom worksheet cannot.
This is not an argument for Europe as the only or superior classroom. It is an argument that physical presence in historically and spiritually charged places engages the body and the senses in ways that accelerate and deepen formation.
Parental presence as the irreducible variable
The therapeutic alliance — the quality of the relationship between a clinician and a patient — is one of the most robust predictors of positive outcomes in psychotherapy research, consistently outweighing the specific technique used. Its core elements are shared goals, agreed-upon tasks, and the quality of the bond itself.
Homeschooling, seen through this lens, is a sustained therapeutic alliance in the domain of formation. The parent who teaches a child on location across Catholic Europe is not simply delivering content. That parent is co-creating a shared world, agreeing implicitly on the goals of human flourishing, selecting tasks that embody those goals, and building the bond through daily, intentional presence. The child is not left to make meaning alone. The parent is present as a witness and interpreter, which is precisely what formation requires.
Developmental psychology calls the result a secure base: the relational foundation from which resilient human beings venture into the world and to which they can return. When that base is oriented toward the transcendent, its stability has a different quality. It does not depend on the parent's health, income, or mood for its ultimate coherence. It draws on something the parent is themselves pointing toward.
Integration as the goal
Research in psychology and religious practice has documented consistent associations between coherent religious commitment and lower rates of depression and anxiety, greater life satisfaction, and stronger prosocial behavior. The proposed mechanisms include social support, meaning-making, moral self-regulation, and the experience of transcendence.
What Fork in the Road models is integration rather than supplementation. Faith is not a wellness practice added onto a secular life to improve outcomes. It is the organizing principle through which history, geography, family, education, and daily experience are understood together. Clients who possess that kind of integrated sense of self — whose values, relationships, daily practices, and ultimate commitments form a coherent whole — tend to demonstrate greater psychological stability and greater capacity for recovery from adversity.
The most durable resilience research points toward one conclusion: the protective factors that allow human beings to flourish under pressure are built long before the pressure arrives. They are built in families, in communities, in the patient transmission of meaning across generations. The Rey family's project is a public witness to what that work looks like when it is done with intention, on location, and in the presence of a tradition that has been making the same argument for a thousand years.
The fork in the road is always present. The direction taken shapes everything that follows.
References
[^1]: Paul Vitz, William Nordling, and Craig Steven Titus, A Catholic Christian Meta-Model of the Person (2020), ch. 4.
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