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American Catholicism at the Crossroads: To Rome or Managua?
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14589 |
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BOOK WORLD
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5 / 1988 |
2,719 Words |
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Gary Bullert Gary Bullert is professor of political science at Troy State
University and is the author of The Politics of John Dewey. |
THE CATHOLIC MOMENT
Richard John Neuhaus
New York: Harper & Row, 1987
292 pp., $19.95
Richard John Neuhaus engagingly diagnoses the condition of American Catholicism in his most recent book, The Catholic Moment, in which he claims that a unique historical opportunity has emerged for the Catholic Church. According to Neuhaus, "this can and should be the moment in which the Roman Catholic Church in the United States assumes its rightful role in the culture-forming task of constructing a religiously informed public philosophy for the American experiment in ordered liberty." Catholics could assume the leadership in channeling the burgeoning religious revival in America toward the twin goals of political responsibility and ecumenical dialogue. The resurgence of fundamentalist-evangelical religion converges with orthodox Catholicism on several moral issues: sexual mores, family life, abortion, and educational choice. Neuhaus extends the ecumenical invitation to the fundamentalist community as well. For the Catholic intellectual elite, this proposed cooperative relationship represents the political-moral equivalent of "the last days."
A veritable class struggle has fermented within the American Catholic Church. The dominant institutionalized organs of modernist opinion, led by the bishops in league with the academic-journalistic opinion makers, are poised against Pope John Paul II and the practicing laity. The spirit of the new clericalism was epitomized by Richard McBrien's book, Catholicism. Neuhaus refers to it as "catechism for the theological professoriat," and "a catalogue of uncertainties
... (1998 of 18645 Characters)
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