A People Adrift: The Crisis of the Roman Catholic Church in America by Peter Steinfels

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(Paperback - First Simon & Schuster Paperback Edition)

  • Pub. Date: September 2004
  • 448pp
  • Sales Rank: 436,892
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: September 2004
    • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
    • Format: Paperback, 448pp
    • Sales Rank: 436,892
    • ISBN-13: 9780743261449
    • ISBN: 0743261445
    • Edition Number: 1
    • Edition Description: First Simon & Schuster Paperback Edition

    Synopsis

    In this widely acclaimed book that will long remain an indispensable work on American religion and the Catholic Church, one of its most influential laymen in the United States says that the Roman Catholic Church in America must either reform profoundly or lapse into irreversible decline.

    In addition to providing a spiritual identity for over 60 million Americans, the church is the nation's largest nongovernmental provider of education and social services, as well as the largest not-for-profit provider of health care. But even before the recent revelations about sex abuse by priests, American Catholicism was already heading for a major crisis, with its traditional leadership depleted by the decline in religious vocations and paralyzed by "theological gridlock."

    Catholicism in the United States confronts hard choices among contrasting visions for the future, choices with huge implications for American life. Analyzing these choices in ways that escape all the familiar labels of conservative or liberal, Steinfels points to the directions the church must take to survive.


    The New York Times

    Though Mr. Steinfels sifts issues on a wide range of topics -- the replacing of nuns in Catholic schools with lay teachers in parish catechetical sessions, the identity of Catholic higher education and social services, the need for a more inspired liturgy -- he boldly makes questions of sex and gender the center of his concern. Some like to dismiss these as a minor aspect of church life, inflated in importance only by sensation-seekers, but Mr. Steinfels sees a wave of interrelated changes in society's views of gender, the family and reproduction as one of the great axial shifts in history, of the kind that reorient entire cultures. — Gary Wills

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    Biography

    Peter Steinfels was senior religion correspondent for the New York Times from 1988 to 1997, and writes "Beliefs," a biweekly column for that paper. He received a Ph.D. from Columbia University and has been a visiting professor of history at Georgetown University and of American studies at Notre Dame. He has worked in bioethics, was

    editor of Commonweal, and is the author of The Neoconservatives. He is married to Margaret O'Brien Steinfels, a prominent Catholic writer, editor, and speaker. They were the recipients of the 2003 Laetare Medal, the University of Notre Dame's highest award for service to the church and society.

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