American Catholic : the saints and sinners who built America's most powerful church / Charles R. Morris.
Material type:
- 081292049X (alk. paper)
- 282/.73Â 21
- BX1406.2Â .M67 1997

Current library | Call number | Status | Notes | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
MARY IMMACULATE LIBRARY Open Shelf | BX 1406.2 .M67 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 039148 | ||
MARY IMMACULATE LIBRARY Open Shelf | BX1406.2 .M67 1997 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | MIL-82199 | ||
TAMCAS Library | BX1406.2 .M67 1997 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | CAS | A-9532 |
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BX1396.4 .M45 1997 Finding a social voice : | BX 1396.4 .W45 The final revolution : | BX 1406 .2 .A64 1996 American Catholic Traditions; Resources for Renewal | BX1406.2 .M67 1997 American Catholic : | BX 1407.H55 E87 The faith of the people : theological reflections on popular Catholicism / Orlando O. Esp?in. xxii, 186 p. ; 24 cm. | BX 1407.H55 E87 The faith of the people : theological reflections on popular Catholicism / Orlando O. Esp?in. xxii, 186 p. ; 24 cm. | BX1407. H55G65 Caminemos con Jesus |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
1. "We Laugh to Scorn" -- 2. God's Own Providential Instrument -- 3. The Whore of Babylon Learns How to Vote -- 4. The Grand American Catholic Compromise -- 5. An American Church -- 6. A Separate Universe -- 7. God's Bricklayer -- 8. On Top of the World -- 9. Stalin, the Pope, and Joe McCarthy -- 10. The End of the Catholic Culture -- 11. Prelude: In a Dark Valley -- 12. At the End of a Century -- 13. Theological Visions -- 14. The Struggle with Sexuality -- 15. Styles, Themes, Dilemmas -- 16. The Church and America.
The rise of Catholicism from an insignificant sect in the early nineteenth century to America's largest and most influential Church is a story filled with a cast of immensely colorful characters. Some were great and imposing. Others were comic, a few even shocking and sinister. Charles Morris recounts the rich story of the rise of the Catholic Church in America with an acute eye for the telling detail and the crucial turning points.
American Catholic is not only about the saints and sinners who built the Church, but also the story of how it became the country's dominant cultural force. By the 1950s, no other institution could match its impact on unions, movies, or even popular kitsch. Protestant leaders feared the Church would "Catholicize" the entire nation.
But Catholicism was always as much a culture as a religion, and the Church visibly floundered when the big-city-based Catholic culture suddenly broke down, just about the time John Kennedy became the country's first Catholic president.
The last section of the book explores the Church's continuing struggle to come to terms with secular, pluralist America and the theological, sexual, doctrinal authority, and gender issues that keep tearing it apart. But, surprisingly enough, Morris's grassroots tour - from ultraconservative Lincoln, Nebraska, to more open, experimental dioceses in Saginaw and Seattle - finds Catholicism alive and well, even flourishing, at the parish level.
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