Decline and Fall of the Catholic Church in America

Decline and Fall of the Catholic Church in America
Author: David Carlin
Publisher: Sophia Institute Press
Total Pages: 423
Release: 2013-06
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1622821696

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Behind the lurid headlines: why the Church in America declined. Forty years ago, three powerful forces capsized the Catholic Church in America. These pages detail those forces, and map the path that you and I - and our priests and bishops - must walk if we are to make the Church in America vigorous again.

The Destruction of the Christian Tradition

The Destruction of the Christian Tradition
Author: Rama P. Coomaraswamy
Publisher: World Wisdom, Inc
Total Pages: 461
Release: 2006
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 0941532984

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Concentrating on the post-Vatican II revisions of its teachings, this book tells the story of the destruction of the Roman Catholic tradition, a defining event of the twentieth century.

Debating God's Economy

Debating God's Economy
Author: Craig R. Prentiss
Publisher: Penn State Press
Total Pages: 281
Release: 2010-11
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 0271047623

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What would a divinely ordained social order look like? Pre&–Vatican II Catholics, from archbishops and theologians to Catholic union workers and laborers on U.S. farms, argued repeatedly about this in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Debating God&’s Economy is a history of American Catholic economic debates taking place during the generation preceding Vatican II. At that time, American society was rife with sociopolitical debates over the relative merits and dangers of Marxism, capitalism, and socialism; labor unions, class consciousness, and economic power were the watchwords of the day. This was a time of immense social change, and, especially in the light of the monumental social and economic upheavals in Russia and Europe in the early twentieth century, Catholics found themselves taking sides. Catholic subcultures across America sought to legitimize&—or, in theological parlance, &“sanctify&”&—diverse economic systems that were, at times, mutually exclusive. While until now the faithful&—both scholars and nonscholars&—have typically spoken of &“the Catholic Social Tradition&” as if it were an established prescription for curing social ills, Prentiss maintains that the tradition is better understood as a debate grounded in a common mythology that provides Catholics with a distinctive vocabulary and touchstone of authority.

The Desolate City

The Desolate City
Author: Anne Roche Muggeridge
Publisher: McClelland & Stewart
Total Pages: 232
Release: 1986
Genre: History
ISBN:

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In the twenty-five years since Vatican II, the Church has undergone a classic revolution, like those that transform the structures of secular societies. Just as we can speak of a "post-Christian era" in the West, so we have a "post-Catholic era" in the Church. The undermining of the Catholic principle of authority has reduced religion to mere sentiment. The devastating effects of the revolution are evinced in the seminaries, the liturgy, in the bishops' committees, and in the controversies over such issues as celibacy, birth control, and the Church's political shift to the left. The Catholic Church has self-destructed. This book is an eloquent, carefully reasoned reflection on the ruin of the once-universal Church. [Book jacket].

Catholics and Contraception

Catholics and Contraception
Author: Leslie Woodcock Tentler
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Total Pages: 352
Release: 2018-09-05
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1501726676

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As Americans rethought sex in the twentieth century, the Catholic Church's teachings on the divisive issue of contraception in marriage were in many ways central. In a fascinating history, Leslie Woodcock Tentler traces changing attitudes: from the late nineteenth century, when religious leaders of every variety were largely united in their opposition to contraception; to the 1920s, when distillations of Freud and the works of family planning reformers like Margaret Sanger began to reach a popular audience; to the Depression years, during which even conservative Protestant denominations quietly dropped prohibitions against marital birth control. Catholics and Contraception carefully examines the intimate dilemmas of pastoral counseling in matters of sexual conduct. Tentler makes it clear that uneasy negotiations were always necessary between clerical and lay authority. As the Catholic Church found itself isolated in its strictures against contraception—and the object of damaging rhetoric in the public debate over legal birth control—support of the Church's teachings on contraception became a mark of Catholic identity, for better and for worse. Tentler draws on evidence from pastoral literature, sermons, lay writings, private correspondence, and interviews with fifty-six priests ordained between 1938 and 1968, concluding, "the recent history of American Catholicism... can only be understood by taking birth control into account."

The Pope and the New Apocalypse

The Pope and the New Apocalypse
Author: Stephen D. Mumford
Publisher: Center for Research
Total Pages: 104
Release: 1986
Genre: Political Science
ISBN:

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"Church and Age Unite!"

Author: R. Scott Appleby
Publisher:
Total Pages: 312
Release: 1992
Genre: History
ISBN:

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This comprehensive study offers the first book-length examination of the influence of modernism on the intellectual life of the American Catholic community at the beginning of the twentieth century. R. Scott Appleby chronicles the story from 1895, when American Catholic priest John Zahm attempted to reconcile post-Darwinian theories of evolution with Catholic theism, to 1910, when former priest and radical Modernist William L. Sullivan published his Letters to His Holiness Pope Pius X, repudiating Roman authority. Appleby focuses on the ways in which certain priests, scientists, and scholars approached the vital topics of the day-human evolution, the salience of democratic principles and institutions for the vitality of Catholicism, the role of the will and intellect in the assent of faith-by appropriating the insights of the European Catholic Modernists. The Americans probed beyond the limits of the dominant Roman neo-scholasticism and retrieved models, images, and concepts from the apostolic and early medieval eras of church history. As the first experiment with a pluralism of methods and sources in American Catholic theology and philosophy, Appleby argues this was also an attempt to construct a viable Catholic apologetics that would speak to the experiences of American citizens. Because this enterprise resembled that of the condemned Europeans, the Americans also fell under a cloud of suspicion and original research was suspended for a generation.

Catholic Republic

Catholic Republic
Author: Timothy Gordon
Publisher:
Total Pages: 240
Release: 2018-03-06
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9789527065389

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The anti-Catholic bias of 18th Century America kept our Protestant forefathers from admitting their reliance upon the intellectual canon of the Roman Catholic Church. In CATHOLIC REPUBLIC, Timothy Gordon argues that America's decline could have been avoided if only the founders had fully incorporated Catholic natural law into the new republic.