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The Handbook of Religion and Society is the most comprehensive and
up-to-date treatment of a vital force in the world today. It is an
indispensable resource for scholars, students, policy makers, and
other professionals seeking to understand the role of religion in
society. This includes both the social forces that shape religion
and the social consequences of religion. This handbook captures the
breadth and depth of contemporary work in the field, and shows
readers important future directions for scholarship. Among the
emerging topics covered in the handbook are biological functioning,
organizational innovation, digital religion, spirituality, atheism,
and transnationalism. The relationship of religion to other
significant social institutions like work and entrepreneurship,
science, and sport is also analyzed. Specific attention is paid,
where appropriate, to international issues as well as to race,
class, sexuality, and gender differences. This handbook includes 27
chapters by a distinguished, diverse, and international collection
of experts, organized into 6 major sections: religion and social
institutions; religious organization; family, life course, and
individual change; difference and inequality; political and legal
processes; and globalization and transnationalism.
The Handbook of Religion and Society is the most comprehensive and
up-to-date treatment of a vital force in the world today. It is an
indispensable resource for scholars, students, policy makers, and
other professionals seeking to understand the role of religion in
society. This includes both the social forces that shape religion
and the social consequences of religion. This handbook captures the
breadth and depth of contemporary work in the field, and shows
readers important future directions for scholarship. Among the
emerging topics covered in the handbook are biological functioning,
organizational innovation, digital religion, spirituality, atheism,
and transnationalism. The relationship of religion to other
significant social institutions like work and entrepreneurship,
science, and sport is also analyzed. Specific attention is paid,
where appropriate, to international issues as well as to race,
class, sexuality, and gender differences. This handbook includes 27
chapters by a distinguished, diverse, and international collection
of experts, organized into 6 major sections: religion and social
institutions; religious organization; family, life course, and
individual change; difference and inequality; political and legal
processes; and globalization and transnationalism.
In the last half-century, the number of Catholic priests has
plummeted by 40% while the number of Catholics has skyrocketed, up
65%. The specter of a faith defined by full pews and empty altars
hangs heavy over the church.
The root cause of this priest shortage is the church's insistence
on mandatory celibacy. Given the potential recruitment advantages
of abandoning the celibacy requirement, why, Richard A. Schoenherr
asks, is the conservative Catholic coalition--headed by the
pope--so adamantly opposed to a married clergy? The answer, he
argues, is that accepting married priests would be but the first
step toward ordaining women and thus forever altering the
demographics of a resolutely male religious order.
Yet Schoenherr believes that such change is not only necessary but
unavoidable if the church is to thrive. The church's current
stop-gap approach of enlisting laypeople to perform all but the
central element of the mass only further serves to undermine the
power of the celibate priesthood. Perhaps most importantly,
doctrinal changes, a growing pluralism in the church, and the
feminist movement among nuns and laywomen are exerting a growing
influence on Catholicism.
Concluding that the collapse of celibate exclusivity is all but
inevitable, Goodbye Father presents an urgent and compelling
portrait of the future of organized Catholicism.
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