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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Christianity > Roman Catholicism, Roman Catholic Church
Now fully revised and updated The Book of Saints is a comprehensive
biographical dictionary of saints canonised by the Roman Catholic
Church. It contains the names of over 10,000 saints, including all
modern ones, with significant information about their lives and
achievements. Each section begins with an illustration of a
particular saint, and the volume includes a list of national
martyrs, a bibliography, and a helpful glossary. Produced by the
Benedictine monks of St. Augustine's Abbey, Chilworth (formerly
Ramsgate) this classic resource is now in its 8th edition, and is
fully revised to include all the saints canonised in the last ten
years, including Pope St John Paul II and Blessed Paul VI.
Reformation in Britain and Ireland is an innovative volume which studies the coming of reform in the sixteenth century more broadly than do traditional national narratives of religious change. It argues for an interactive and comparative understanding of this crucial dimension of British and Irish history. Through the examination of political choices, of ecclesiastical structures, and of individual religious attitudes, it seeks to explain the success or failure of Protestantism in these islands.
This volume deals with the problem of State and Church in the
Middle Ages from a new angle. It not only shows how and why the
medieval popes pursued a policy of world domination, but also
discloses the ideas by which the papal monarchs were primarily
influenced.
Philippians, Colossians, and Philemon, written by Paul from prison
in the middle of the first century, were addressed to specific
Christian communities facing concrete challenges. What did these
letters mean at the time, and what do they mean for us today?
In this addition to the Catholic Commentary on Sacred Scripture,
seasoned New Testament scholar Dennis Hamm explores the
significance of these letters and their enduring relevance to the
life and mission of the church. Based on solid scholarship yet
readily accessible, the book is enriched with pastoral reflections
and applications and includes sidebars on the living tradition and
biblical background.
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God and Eros
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Colin Patterson, Conor Sweeney
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Sexuality and spirituality are two of the most powerful and
creative forces we experience as human beings. This work examines
how men of Roman Catholic background have come to understand and
integrate their homosexuality into daily life.
Homosexuality is still a topic immersed in myth and mystery. As
well as providing accurate information about intimate aspects of
gay men's lives such as coping with HIV and practicing safer sex, "
Gay Catholics Down Under" seeks to raise awareness about spiritual
issues for gay men. Each story told provides a unique perspective
of what it means to be of Catholic background in Australasia and
attracted to men. Several of those interviewed spoke of having no
role models and of the isolation growing up not knowing of other
gay people. A final chapter reviews the psychosexual implications
of the study, including a model of integration of sexual and
religious identification, and implications for the gay community
and the Church.
The polarization in the Church today can be traced back to a more
fundamental crisis in theology, one which has failed to connect our
mundane experiences and the mysteries of the Christian faith with
the person of Jesus Christ. Ecclesial discourse on the so-called
'hot- button issues' of the day too often take place without
considering the foundation and goal of the Church. And this is
unfortunately due to a similar tendency in the academic theology
that informs that ecclesial discourse. In short, much of
post-conciliar Catholic theology is adrift, floating aimlessly away
from the center of the Christian faith, who is Christ. The Center
is Jesus Christ Himself is a collection of essays which anchor
theological reflection in Jesus Christ. These diverse essays share
a unified focal point, but engage with a variety of theological
subdisciplines (e.g., dogmatic, moral, Biblical, etc.), areas
(e.g., Christology, Pneumatology, missiology, etc.), and periods
(e.g., patristic, medieval, and modern). Given the different
combinations of sub-disciplines, areas, and periods, theology is
susceptible to fragmentation when it is not held together by some
principle of unity. A theology in which the person of Jesus Christ
serves as that principle of unity is a Christocentric theology.
Together, the essays illustrate not only what Christocentric
theology looks like, but also what the consequences are when Christ
is dislodged from the center, whether by a conspicuous silence on,
or by a relativization of, his unique salvific mission. The volume
is published in honor of Emeritus Professor of Systematic Theology
at Boston College, Rev. Dr. Robert P. Imbelli, who dedicated his
teaching and writing to bringing Christ back to the center of
Catholic theological discourse.
This transnational comparative history of Catholic everyday
religion in Germany and Austria-Hungary during the Great War
transforms our understanding of the war's cultural legacy.
Challenging master narratives of secularization and modernism,
Houlihan reveals that Catholics from the losing powers had personal
and collective religious experiences that revise the
decline-and-fall stories of church and state during wartime.
Focusing on private theologies and lived religion, Houlihan
explores how believers adjusted to industrial warfare. Giving voice
to previously marginalized historical actors, including soldiers as
well as women and children on the home front, he creates a family
history of Catholic religion, supplementing studies of the clergy
and bishops. His findings shed new light on the diversity of faith
in this period and how specifically Catholic forms of belief and
practice enabled people from the losing powers to cope with the war
much more successfully than previous cultural histories have led us
to believe.
Very Short Introductions: Brilliant, Sharp, Inspiring The Second
Vatican Council (1962-1965), or Vatican II, is arguably the most
significant event in the life of the Catholic Church since the
Reformation. The Council initiated, intentionally or not, profound
changes not simply within Catholic theology, but in the religious,
social, and moral lives of the world's billion Catholics. It also
reconfigured, intellectually and practically, the Church's
engagements with those outside of it - most obviously with regard
to other religions. The sixteen documents formally issued by
Vatican II constitute some of the most influential writings of the
whole twentieth century. Debates over their correct interpretation
and authority are constant, but they remain an indispensable
point-of-reference for all areas of Catholic life, from liturgy and
sacraments, to the Church's vast network of charitable and
educational endeavours the world over. In this Very Short
Introduction, Shaun Blanchard and Stephen Bullivant present the
backstory to this event. Vatican II is explored in light of the
wider history of the Catholic Church and placed in the tumultuous
context of the 1960s. It distils the research on Vatican II,
employing the first-hand accounts of participants and observers,
and the official proceedings of the Council to paint a rich picture
of one of the most important events of the last century. ABOUT THE
SERIES: The Very Short Introductions series from Oxford University
Press contains hundreds of titles in almost every subject area.
These pocket-sized books are the perfect way to get ahead in a new
subject quickly. Our expert authors combine facts, analysis,
perspective, new ideas, and enthusiasm to make interesting and
challenging topics highly readable.
Barnett traces the Christian critique of the Church and its history
in Protestant (English) and Catholic (Italian) thought from the
Reformation to the Enlightenment. More than 150 years of bitter
polemic between the two great confessions and their religious
dissidents produced an unprecedented, comparative historical and
sociological anticlericalism. In the last decades of the 17th
century, English dissenting thought was pregnant with a critique of
the Church, which came to be termed the "Deist" view of Church
history: by 1700 the cornerstone of high "Enlightenment
anticlerical thought" was in ascent. This work is intended for
departments of history (courses in early modern European history,
intellectual history), religious studies and philosophy.
Which events created the mindset and prepared the policy of the
later-to-be Pope Pius XII? This study takes into account the
recently declassified documents in the Vatican Archives dealing
with the Catholic Church's policy regarding Germany in the 1920s
and 1930s, strongly defined by Nuncio in Germany and, then,
Cardinal State Secretary Eugenio Pacelli (later to become Pope Pius
XII). It broadens its view to cover also the Vatican's stance
towards other European dictatorships of that time, such as Fascist
Italy, Franquist Spain, Salazar's Portugal, and the Dollfuss regime
in Austria.
The Catholic Church through the Ages, now in its second edition, is
a one-volume survey of the history of the Catholic Church from its
beginning until (and including) the pontificate of Pope Francis.
The book explains the Church's progress by using Christopher
Dawson's division of the Church's history into six distinct "ages,"
or 350-400 year periods of time, each cycle beginning with great
enthusiasm and advancement and ending in decline and loss. Writing
with the experience of thirty years of teaching, the author has
fashioned an ideal text that combines substance with readability.
Undergraduates, graduates, and interested lay people have given the
author an idea of what topics should be emphasized. As a result, he
has emphasized such areas monasticism, the Crusades, medieval
theology, the Inquisition, Reformation, French Revolution, the
nineteenth century, and the Church in the United States. And he has
added material on the Oxford Movement, John Henry Newman's
contributions to the Oxford Movement and to the Catholic
intellectual tradition, and the Catholic literary revival that took
place in several countries in the early twentieth century, as well
as on the last three popes. As a supplement to each chapter, the
author has included an updated the recommended readings and
bibliography, as well as the audio-visual materials.
In a time of discouragement, how can the Church renew itself and
its outreach to all people? Bishop Robert Barron, Auxiliary Bishop
of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles, insists that a ""dumbed down""
Catholicism cannot succeed in today's highly educated
society--instead, the Church needs to draw upon its great
theological heritage in order to renew its hope in Christ. With
Renewing Our Hope: Essays for the New Evangelization, Bishop Barron
traces this renewal through four stages. ""Renewing Our Mission""
lays out the challenges that call for Catholics to become more
aware of their own intellectual resources in encountering the
""Nones."" ""Renewing Our Minds"" showcases the importance of
theological reflection as a font of wisdom and sanity in the
Church, touching on Thomas Aquinas, Hans Urs von Balthasar, the
recently canonized John Henry Newman, and Pope Francis. In
""Renewing the Church,"" he proceeds to look at how Scripture, the
family, the seminary, and Catholic college graduates can each
contribute to this renewal. Finally, in ""Renewing Our Culture,""
he returns to the judgments Catholics must make in assessing
contemporary culture, specifically, family life, liberalism,
relativism, and (surprisingly) the beauty of cinema. Bishop Barron,
known as the host of the Catholicism PBS video series, was
previously rector and professor of systematic theology at Mundelein
Seminary outside Chicago, Illinois. He demonstrates again in
Renewing Our Hope his ability to make the fruits of his wide
reading accessible to a broad audience, while still giving his
academic colleagues much to consider.
In 1993, aged twenty, Carmel Mc Mahon left Ireland for New York,
carrying $500, two suitcases and a ton of unseen baggage. It took
years, and a bitter struggle with alcohol addiction, to unpick the
intricate traumas of her past and present. Candid yet lyrical, In
Ordinary Time mines the ways that trauma reverberates through time
and through individual lives, drawing connections to the events and
rhythms of Ireland's long Celtic, early Christian and Catholic
history. From tragically lost siblings to the broader social scars
of the Famine and the Magdalene Laundries, Mc Mahon sketches the
evolution of a consciousness from her conservative 1970s upbringing
to 1990s New York, and back to the much-changed Ireland of today.
'What does it mean to be a human being?' Given this perennial
question, Alasdair MacIntyre, one of America's preeminent
philosophers, presents a compelling argument on the necessity and
importance of philosophy. Because of a need to better understand
Catholic philosophical thought, especially in the context of its
historical development and realizing that philosophers interact
within particular social and cultural situations, MacIntyre offers
this brief history of Catholic philosophy. Tracing the idea of God
through different philosophers' engagement of God and how this
engagement has played out in universities, MacIntyre provides a
valuable, lively, and insightful study of the disintegration of
academic disciplines with knowledge. MacIntyre then demonstrates
the dangerous implications of this happening and how universities
can and ought to renew a shared understanding of knowledge in their
mission. This engaging work will be a benefit and a delight to all
readers.
One of the principal buzzwords of the Second Vatican Council
(1963-65), along with collegiality, co-responsibility, full
participation, and aggiornamento, was dialogue. This is a history
of how the practices of dialogue have actually worked or failed to
work at every level of the church over the past forty years.
Beginning at the most basic level, that of the parish, the book
moves up the ecclesiastical ladder from parish councils, to
diocesan synods, to the (Roman) synod of bishops. The book moves
laterally as well to include ecumenical and interreligious
dialogues. A chapter is devoted to the fractious Call to Action
Conference, initiated by the U.S. bishops in 1976; another to the
new inclusive style of drafting pastoral letters by the U.S.
bishops - "The Challenge of Peace" (1983), "Economic Justice for
All" (1986), and the never approved pastoral on women ("Partners in
the Mystery of Redemption"). A further chapter is devoted to
Cardinal Bernardin's Catholic Common Ground Initiative, which is
still going on, though it was initially publicly attacked by four
U.S. cardinals. Finally, there is a chapter on what was perhaps the
most radical and far-reaching exercise of dialogue of all, namely,
the dialogical and democratic processes by which women religious
revised their constitutions. This is a cautionary tale, filled with
thick description of advances and retreats. In a curious way, the
book is a sequel to the multi-volume "History of the Second Vatican
Council", edited by Giuseppe Alberigo and Joseph Komonchak If those
volumes tell us what transpired at the council, Hinze's volume
tells us what happened when the council fathers went home and all
the good ideas of the council were either put into effect or left
to gather dust in the dead-letter bin. Vatican Council II is an
ongoing experiment, and "Practices of Dialogue" is a series of
reports from the labs.
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