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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Christianity > Roman Catholicism, Roman Catholic Church > General
Does a consumer who bought a shirt made in another nation bear any
moral responsibility when the women who sewed that shirt die in a
factory fire or in the collapse of the building? Many have
asserted, without explanation, that because markets cause harms to
distant others, consumers bear moral responsibility for those
harms. But traditional moral analysis of individual decisions is
unable to sustain this argument. Distant Harms, Distant Markets
presents a careful analysis of moral complicity in markets,
employing resources from sociology, Christian history, feminism,
legal theory, and Catholic moral theology today. Because of its
individualistic methods, mainstream economics as a discipline is
not equipped to understand the causality entailed in the long
chains of social relationships that make up the market. Critical
realist sociology, however, has addressed the character and
functioning of social structures, an analysis that can helpfully be
applied to the market. The True Wealth of Nations research project
of the Institute for Advanced Catholic Studies brought together an
international group of sociologists, economists, moral theologians,
and others to describe these causal relationships and articulate
how Catholic social thought can use these insights to more fully
address issues of economic ethics in the twenty-first century. The
result was this interdisciplinary volume of essays, which explores
the causal and moral responsibilities that consumers bear for the
harms that markets cause to distant others.
What could Roman Catholicism and Mormonism possibly have to learn
from each other? On the surface, they seem to diverge on nearly
every point, from their liturgical forms to their understanding of
history. With its ancient roots, Catholicism is a continuous
tradition, committed to the conservation of the creeds, while
Mormonism teaches that the landscape of Christian history is
riddled with sin and apostasy and is in need of radical revision
and spiritual healing. Moreover, successful proselyting efforts by
Mormons in formerly Catholic strongholds have increased
opportunities for misunderstanding, polemic, and prejudice.
However, in this book a Mormon theologian and a Catholic theologian
in conversation address some of the most significant issues that
impact Christian identity, including such central doctrines as
authority, grace, Jesus, Mary, and revelation, demonstrating that
these traditions are much closer to each other than many assume.
Both Catholicism and Mormonism have ambitiously universal views of
the Christian faith, and readers will be surprised by how close
Catholics and Mormons are on a number of topics and how these
traditions, probed to their depths, shed light on each other in
fascinating and unexpected ways. Catholic-Mormon Dialogue is an
invitation to the reader to engage in a discussion that makes
understanding the goal, and marks a beginning for a dialogue that
will become increasingly important in the years to come.
Mexican statues and paintings of figures like the Virgin of
Guadalupe and the Lord of Chalma are endowed with sacred presence
and the power to perform miracles. Millions of devotees visit these
miraculous images to request miracles for health, employment,
children, and countless everyday matters. When requests are
granted, devotees reciprocate with votive offerings. Collages,
photographs, documents, texts, milagritos, hair and braids,
clothing, retablos, and other representative objects cover walls at
many shrines. Miraculous Images and Votive Offerings in Mexico
studies such petitionary devotion-primarily through extensive
fieldwork at several shrines in Guanajuato, Jalisco, Queretaro, San
Luis Potosi, and Zacatecas. Graziano is interested in retablos not
only as extraordinary works of folk art but: as Mexican expressions
of popular Catholicism comprising a complex of beliefs, rituals,
and material culture; as archives of social history; and as indices
of a belief system that includes miraculous intercession in
everyday life. Previous studies focus almost exclusively on
commissioned votive paintings, but Graziano also considers the
creative ex votos made by the votants themselves. Among the many
miraculous images treated in the book are the Cristo Negro de
Otatitlan, Nino del Cacahuatito, Senor de Chalma, and the Virgen de
Guadalupe. The book is written in two voices, one analytical to
provide an understanding of miracles, miraculous images, and votive
offerings, and the other narrative to bring the reader closer to
lived experiences at the shrines. This book appears at a moment of
transition, when retablos are disappearing from church walls and
beginning to appear in museum exhibitions; when the artistic value
of retablos is gaining prominence; when the commercial value of
retablos is increasing, particularly among private collectors
outside of Mexico; and when traditional retablo painters are being
replaced by painters with a more commercial and less religious
approach to their trade. Graziano's book thus both records a
disappearing tradition and charts the way in which it is being
transformed.
From 1962 to 1965, in perhaps the most important religious event of
the twentieth century, the Second Vatican Council met to plot a
course for the future of the Roman Catholic Church. After thousands
of speeches, resolutions, and votes, the Council issued sixteen
official documents on topics ranging from divine revelation to
relations with non-Christians. But the meaning of the Second
Vatican Council has been fiercely contested since before it was
even over, and the years since its completion have seen a battle
for the soul of the Church waged through the interpretation of
Council documents. The Reception of Vatican II looks at the sixteen
conciliar documents through the lens of those battles. Paying close
attention to reforms and new developments, the essays in this
volume show how the Council has been received and interpreted over
the course of the more than fifty years since it concluded. The
contributors to this volume represent various schools of thought
but are united by a commitment to restoring the view that Vatican
II should be interpreted and implemented in line with Church
Tradition. The central problem facing Catholic theology today,
these essays argue, is a misreading of the Council that posits a
sharp break with previous Church teaching. In order to combat this
reductive way of interpreting the Council, these essays provide a
thorough, instructive overview of the debates it inspired.
Vincent de Paul, the Lazarist Mission, and French Catholic Reform
offers a major re-assessment of the thought and activities of the
most famous figure of the seventeenth-century French Catholic
Reformation, Vincent de Paul. Confronting traditional explanations
for de Paul's prominence in the devot reform movement that emerged
in the wake of the Wars of Religion, the volume explores how he
turned a personal vocational desire to evangelize the rural poor of
France into a congregation of secular missionaries, known as the
Congregation of the Mission or the Lazarists, with three
inter-related strands of pastoral responsibility: the delivery of
missions, the formation and training of clergy, and the promotion
of confraternal welfare. Alison Forrestal further demonstrates that
the structure, ethos, and works that de Paul devised for the
Congregation placed it at the heart of a significant enterprise of
reform that involved a broad set of associates in efforts to
transform the character of devotional belief and practice within
the church. The central questions of the volume therefore concern
de Paul's efforts to create, characterize, and articulate a
distinctive and influential vision for missionary life and work,
both for himself and for the Lazarist Congregation, and Forrestal
argues that his prominence and achievements depended on his
remarkable ability to exploit the potential for association and
collaboration within the devot environment of seventeenth-century
France in enterprising and systematic ways. This is the first study
to assess de Paul's activities against the wider backdrop of
religious reform and Bourbon rule, and to reconstruct the
combination of ideas, practices, resources, and relationships that
determined his ability to pursue his ambitions. A work of forensic
detail and complex narrative, Vincent de Paul, the Lazarist
Mission, and French Catholic Reform is the product of years of
research in ecclesiastical and state archives. It offers a wholly
fresh perspective on the challenges and opportunities entailed in
the promotion of religious reform and renewal in
seventeenth-century France.
Cultural conflicts about the family-including those surrounding
women's social roles, the debate over abortion, and in more recent
years, debates about stem cell research, same-sex marriage, and
contraception-have intensified over the last few decades among
Catholics, as well as among American citizens generally. In fact,
these conflicts comprise much of the substance of the moral
polarization that currently characterizes our public politics.
Scholars have demonstrated the importance of the media in the
endurance of these conflicts, as well as the important role played
by elites, particularly religious elites. But less is known about
how individuals in local settings and cultures-especially religious
settings-experience and participate in them. Why are these
conflicts so resonant among ordinary Americans, and Catholics in
particular? By exploring how religion and family life are
intertwined in local parish settings, this book strives to
understand how and why Catholics are divided around these cultural
conflicts about the family. It presents a close and detailed
comparative ethnographic analysis of the families and local
religious cultures in two Catholic parishes: religiously
conservative Our Lady of the Assumption Church and theologically
progressive St. Brigitta Church. Through an examination of the
activities of parish life, together with the faith stories of
parishioners, this book reveals how two congregational social
processes-the practice of central ecclesial metaphors, and the
construction of Catholic identities-matter for the ways in which
parishioners work out the routines of marriage, childrearing, and
work-family balance, as well as to the ways they connect these
everyday challenges to the public politics of the family. The
analysis further demonstrates that these institutional processes
promote polarization among Catholics through practices that
unintentionally fragment the Catholic tradition in local religious
settings.
This is the first full study of English Catholic spirituality in
the modern period. Mary Heimann reassesses Roman Catholic piety as
practised in Victorian England, stressing the importance of
devotion in shaping the characteristics of the Catholic community.
Prayers, devotions, catechisms, confraternities, and missionary
work enabled traditional English Catholicism not only to survive
but to emerge as the most resilient Christian community in
twentieth-century England. Dr Heimann's scholarly and original
study offers a controversial analysis of the influence of
long-established recusant devotions and attitudes in the new
context of the re-establishment of Roman Catholicism in England
from the mid-nineteenth century. Challenging widely held
assumptions that Irish influences, government legislation, or
directives from Rome can account for English developments in this
period, this book offers important new insights into religion and
culture in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
What is the secret of John Henry Newman's enduring appeal? It
perhaps lies in the freshness and persuasiveness and brilliance of
his descriptions of Christianity. The word Newman often uses to
describe the process of becoming a Christian is not 'faith' or
'belief' but 'realization'. The moment when 'one opens one's heart
to a truth'. This collection of sermons - the ones Newman himself
thought were his best - is the ideal introduction to one of the
greatest writers in the Christian tradition.
The Roman Catholic leadership still refuses to ordain women
officially or even to recognize that women are capable of
ordination. But is the widely held assumption that women have
always been excluded from such roles historically accurate? How
might the current debate change if our view of the history of
women's ordination were to change?
In The Hidden History of Women's Ordination, Gary Macy offers
illuminating and surprising answers to these questions. Macy argues
that for the first twelve hundred years of Christianity, women were
in fact ordained into various roles in the church. He uncovers
references to the ordination of women in papal, episcopal and
theological documents of the time, and the rites for these
ordinations have survived. The insistence among scholars that women
were not ordained, Macy shows, is based on a later definition of
ordination, one that would have been unknown in the early Middle
Ages. In the early centuries of Christianity, ordination was
understood as the process and the ceremony by which one moved to
any new ministry in the community. In the early Middle Ages, women
served in at least four central ministries: episcopa (woman
bishop), presbytera (woman priest), deaconess and abbess. The
ordinations of women continued until the Gregorian reforms of the
eleventh and twelfth centuries radically altered the definition of
ordination. These reforms not only removed women from the ordained
ministry, but also attempted to eradicate any memory of women's
ordination in the past.
With profound implications for how women are viewed in Christian
history, and for current debates about the role of women in the
church, The Hidden History of Women's Ordinationoffers new answers
to an old question and overturns a long-held erroneous belief.
The End of an Elite is the first scholarly study in English of the
bishops of the French church at the outbreak of the French
Revolution. The 130 members of the episcopate formed an elite
within an elite, the First Estate of France. Nigel Aston explores
the role of the episcopate in national and provincial politics in
the last years of the ancien regime. He traces the policies and
patronage of episcopal ministers such as Lomienie de Brienne and
J.-M. Champion de Cice, who were as much politicians as pastors,
and examines their relationships with their fellow bishops. Dr
Aston emphasizes the leading role of the bishops in the Assemblies
of Notables and offers a fresh interpretation of clerical elections
to the Estates-General of 1789. This is an intensively researched
and immensely readable account, which will be invaluable to all
historians of late eighteenth-century France.
How can religion contribute to democracy in a secular age? What can
the millennia-old Catholic tradition say to church-state
controversies in the United States and around the world?
Secularism, Catholicism, and the Future of Public Life, presents a
dialogue between Douglas W. Kmiec, a prominent scholar of American
constitutional law and Catholic legal thought, and an international
cast of experts from a range of fields. In his essay, "Secularism
Crucified?," Kmiec illustrates the profound tensions around
religion and secularism through an examination of the Lautsi case,
a European judicial decision that supported the presence of
crucifixes in Italian classrooms. Laying out a church-state
typology, Kmiec argues for clarifying U.S. church-state
jurisprudence, and advances principles to prudently limit the
over-stretching impulse of religious conscience claims. In the
process, he engages secular thinkers, popes, U.S. Supreme Court
rulings, and President Barack Obama. The respondents, scholars of
legal theory, international relations, journalism, religion, and
social science, challenge Kmiec and illustrate ways in which both
scholars and citizens should understand religion, democracy, and
secularism. Their essays bring together current events in Catholic
life, recent social theory, and issues such as migration, the Arab
Spring, and social change.
A number of critics and scholars argue for the notion of a
distinctly Catholic variety of imagination, not as a matter of
doctrine or even of belief, but rather as an artistic sensibility.
They figure the blend of intellectual, emotional, spiritual and
ethical assumptions that proceed from Catholic belief constitutes a
vision of reality that necessarily informs the artist's imaginative
expression. The notion of a Catholic imagination, however, has
lacked thematic and theological coherence. To articulate this
intuition is to cross the problematic interdisciplinary borders
between theology and literature; and, although scholars have
developed useful methods for undertaking such interdisciplinary
"border-crossings," relatively few have been devoted to a serious
examination of the theological aesthetic upon which these other
aesthetics might hinge.
In A Theology of Criticism, Michael Patrick Murphy proposes a new
framework to better define the concept of a Catholic imagination.
He explores the many ways in which the theological work of Hans Urs
von Balthasar (1905-1988) can provide the model, content, and optic
for distinguishing this type of imagination from others. Since
Balthasar views art and literature precisely as theologies, Murphy
surveys a broad array of poetry, drama, fiction, and film and sets
it against central aspects of Balthasar's theological program. In
doing so, Murphy seeks to develop a theology of criticism.
This interdisciplinary work recovers the legitimate place of a
distinct "theological imagination" in critical theory, showing that
Balthasar's voice both challenges and complements contemporary
developments. Murphy also contends that postmodern
interpretivemethodology, with its careful critique of entrenched
philosophical assumptions and reiterated codes of meaning, is not
the threat to theological meaning that many fear. On the contrary,
by juxtaposing postmodern critical methodologies against
Balthasar's visionary theological range, a space is made available
for literary critics and theologians alike. More important, the
critic is provided with the tools to assess, challenge, and
celebrate the theological imagination as it is depicted today.
Belief in the Jesuit Conspiracy is one of the most important and
enduring conspiracy theories in modern European history, and France
was one of its major focuses. In this scholarly and detailed
survey, Geoffrey Cubitt examines the range of polemical literature
through which the prevalent conviction of Jesuitical plots was
expressed, and explores political attitudes both within and outside
the Catholic church. Cubitt uses the available evidence to contrast
perceptions and reality, and to trace the development of a
widespread and powerful myth. The Jesuit Myth offers valuable
insights into the political and religious climate of
nineteenth-century France.
Most readers first encounter Augustine's love for Scripture's words
in the many biblical allusions of his masterwork, the Confessions.
Augustine does not merely quote texts, but in many ways makes
Scripture itself tell the story. In his journey from darkness to
light, Augustine becomes Adam in the Garden of Eden, the Prodigal
Son of Jesus' parable, the Pauline double personality at once
devoted to and rebellious against God's law. Throughout he speaks
the words of the Psalms as if he had written them. Crucial to
Augustine's self-portrayal is his skill at transposing himself into
the texts. He sees their properties and dynamics as his own, and by
extension, every believing reader's own. In Christ Meets Me
Everywhere, Michael Cameron argues that Augustine wanted to train
readers of Scripture to transpose themselves into the texts in the
same way he did, by the same process of figuration that he found at
its core. Tracking Augustine's developing practice of
self-transposition into the figures of the biblical texts over the
course of his entire career, Cameron shows that this practice is
the key to Augustine's hermeneutics.
Between 1920 and 1994, the Catholic Church was Rwanda's most
dominant social and religious institution. In recent years, the
church has been critiqued for its perceived complicity in the
ethnic discourse and political corruption that culminated with the
1994 genocide. In analyzing the contested legacy of Catholicism in
Rwanda, Rwanda Before the Genocide focuses on a critical decade,
from 1952 to 1962, when Hutu and Tutsi identities became
politicized, essentialized, and associated with political violence.
This study-the first English-language church history on Rwanda in
over 30 years-examines the reactions of Catholic leaders such as
the Swiss White Father Andre Perraudin and Aloys Bigirumwami,
Rwanda's first indigenous bishop. It evaluates Catholic leaders'
controversial responses to ethnic violence during the revolutionary
changes of 1959-62 and after Rwanda's ethnic massacres in 1963-64,
1973, and the early 1990s. In seeking to provide deeper insight
into the many-threaded roots of the Rwandan genocide, Rwanda Before
the Genocide offers constructive lessons for Christian ecclesiology
and social ethics in Africa and beyond.
This timely and up to date new edition of Biomedicine and Beatitude
features an entirely new chapter on the ethics of bodily
modification. It is also updated throughout to reflect the
pontificate of Pope Francis, recent concerns including ethical
issues raised by the COVID-19 pandemic, and feedback from the many
instructors who used the first edition in the classroom
Spanish America has produced numerous "folk saints" -- venerated
figures regarded as miraculous but not officially recognized by the
Catholic Church. Some of these have huge national cults with
hundreds -- perhaps millions -- of devotees. In this book Frank
Graziano provides the first overview in any language of these
saints, offering in-depth studies of the beliefs, rituals, and
devotions surrounding seven representative figures. These case
studies are illuminated by comparisons to some hundred additional
saints from contemporary Spanish America. Among the six primary
cases are Difunta Correa, at whose shrines devotees offer bottles
of water and used auto parts in commemoration of her tragic death
in the Argentinean desert. Gaucho Gil is only one of many gaucho
saints, whose characteristic narrative involves political injustice
and Robin-Hood crimes on behalf of the exploited people. The
widespread cult of the Mexican saint Nino Fidencio is based on
faith healing performed by devotees who channel his powers. Nino
Compadrito is an elegantly dressed skeleton of a child, whose
miraculous powers are derived in part from an Andean belief in the
power of the skull of one who has suffered a tragic death. Graziano
draws upon site visits and extensive interviews with devotees,
archival material, media reports, and documentaries to produce
vivid portraits of these fascinating popular movements. In the
process he sheds new light on the often fraught relationship
between orthodox Catholicism and folk beliefs and on an important
and little-studied facet of the dynamic culture of contemporary
Spanish America.
Of the spiritual odysseys which dominate the literature of
nineteenth-century England, Newman's Apologia Pro Vita Sua is
universally acknowledged as one of the greatest and yet one of the
most difficult. Newman wrote the Apologia in 1864, as a reply to
Charles Kingsley's attack on his veracity and that of his fellow
Roman Catholic clergy; the following year he revised it extensively
and thereafter amended new impressions almost until his death in
1890. This fine edition, long unavailable, has been reissued for
the centenary; it includes all the variants resulting from Newman's
revisions, in both the printed texts and the surviving manuscripts.
The first edition of the new Catechism went out across the world in
many language versions. This gave the local Churches the chance to
study it in depth. Through their bishops and teachers they
responded with comments on texts that needed refinement. The
present edition was developed in the light of these comments and
published in Latin as the definitive Editio Typica. This book is
the English translation of the Editio Typica.
How can we transmit a living, personal Catholic faith to future generations? By coming to know Jesus Christ, and following him as his disciples.
As we emerge from a pandemic into a post-Christian world, these are times of immense challenge and enormous opportunity for the Catholic Church in the United States. Consider these statistics:
Fully 10 percent of all adults in America are ex-Catholics.
Nearly three-quarters of young Catholics think that they could be a good Catholic without going to Mass every Sunday.
Catholic marriages have declined by almost two thirds since 1969, even as the number of Catholics in the United States has grown significantly.
Only one third of Catholics believe that the bread and wine actually become the Body and Blood of Jesus Christ at the consecration during Mass.
If the Church is to reverse these trends, the evangelizers must first be evangelized. In other words, Catholics in the pew must make a conscious choice to know and follow Jesus before they can draw others to him.
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