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Priests - A Calling in Crisis (Paperback, New edition)
Loot Price: R497
Discovery Miles 4 970
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Priests - A Calling in Crisis (Paperback, New edition)
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Loot Price R497
Discovery Miles 4 970
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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For several years now, the Roman Catholic Church and the
institution of the priesthood itself have been at the center of a
firestorm of controversy. While many of the criticisms lodged
against the recent actions of the Church--and a small number of its
priests--are justified, the majority of these criticisms are not.
Hyperbolic and misleading coverage of recent scandals has created a
public image of American priests that bears little relation to
reality, and Andrew Greeley's "Priests" skewers this image with a
systematic inside look at American priests today.
No stranger to controversy himself, Greeley here challenges those
analysts and the media who parrot them in placing the blame for
recent Church scandals on the mandate of celibacy or a clerical
culture that supports homosexuality. Drawing upon reliable national
survey samples of priests, Greeley demolishes current stereotypes
about the percentage of homosexual priests, the level of personal
and professional happiness among priests, the role of celibacy in
their lives, and many other issues. His findings are more than
surprising: they reveal, among other things, that priests report
higher levels of personal and professional satisfaction than
doctors, lawyers, or faculty members; that they would
overwhelmingly choose to become priests again; and that younger
priests are far more conservative than their older brethren.
While the picture Greeley paints should radically reorient the
public perception of priests, he does not hesitate to criticize the
Church's significant shortcomings. Most priests, for example, do
not think the sexual abuse problems are serious, and they do not
think that poor preaching or liturgy is a problem, though the laity
give them very low marks on their ministerial skills. Priests do
not listen to the laity, bishops do not listen to priests, and the
Vatican does not listen to any of them. With Greeley's statistical
evidence and provocative recommendations for change--including a
national "Priest Corps" that would offer young men a limited term
of service in the Church--"Priests" offers a new vision for
American Catholics, one based on real problems and solutions rather
than on images of a depraved, immature, and frustrated priesthood.
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