A hundred years ago Catholic believers young and old, rich and
poor, would fill churches on holy days, drawn together in prayer
and in the conviction that they, the laypeople, needed the clergy
and patron saints to mediate between them and their God. Today a
Catholic believer in America is as likely as not to find God for
herself.
This book traces dramatic changes in the practice of faith among
American Catholics through evolving ideas about prayer. Where so
many have seen the movement of American Catholics away from
traditional devotional practices as a symptom of encroaching
secularism, author James P. McCartin shows how the changing
practice of prayer itself was the primary catalyst behind
Catholics' growing sense of spiritual independence.
"Prayers of the Faithful" reveals how, over the decades,
Catholics' ways of praying underwent a significant shift alongside
the larger transformations of American society and culture. The
book documents the novel ways of praying that transcended the
formal rites of earlier generations. Whether "praying in tongues"
or working on behalf of social justice or participating in public
protests as outpourings of prayer, lay Catholics consistently
expanded their notions of praying. And in doing so, McCartin
suggests, they reshaped and redefined American Catholicism. By
examining the spiritual life of prayer over the twentieth century,
this book thus opens up new ways of understanding Catholics, their
church, and their place in American life.
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