Lexington Books
Pages: 368
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-7391-0340-1 • Hardback • April 2002 • $157.00 • (£121.00)
Subjects: Religion / Christianity / Catholic,
Religion / Christian Education / General,
Religion / Christian Living / General,
Religion / Christian Church / Administration,
Religion / Christianity / History,
Religion / Institutions & Organizations,
Religion / Comparative Religion,
Religion / Christian Living / Stewardship & Giving,
Religion / Christian Theology / General,
Religion / Christianity / General,
Religion / Leadership,
Religion / Christian Ministry / Pastoral Resources,
Religion / Faith
Romanus Cessario, O.P. is Professor of Systematic Theology at St. John's Seminary in Brighton, Massachusetts. Mary Ann Glendon is the Learned Hand Professor of Law at Harvard Law School.
Part 1 Gatherer of People
Part 2 Advocate of the Common Good
Chapter 3 Religion in Our Civil Life: At Governor Ashcroft's Prayer Breakfast
Chapter 4 On Compassion: Homily at Harvard's Memorial Church
Chapter 5 Statement on Political Responsibility: (With the Bishops of Massachusetts)
Chapter 6 Violence Begets Violence: On the Murder of Dr. Gunn in Pensacola, Florida
Chapter 7 Racial Discrimination is a Sin: Remembering Mississippi's Hazel Brannon Smith
Chapter 8 The Way is Development: On the UN's Cairo Conference on Population and Development
Chapter 9 Overcome Evil with Good: Two Weeks in January 1995
Chapter 10 A Brilliant Synthesis: On John Paul II's The Gospel of Life
Chapter 11 Very Much a Family Event: On Independence Day
Chapter 12 He Transformed a Racetrack into a Cathedral: On Pope John Paul II's 1995 Visit to the United States
Chapter 13 Marriage not Just Another "Life-style" On a Domestic Partnership Bill
Chapter 14 A Step Closer to Barbarism: A Letter to President Clinton after his Veto of the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act
Chapter 15 On Women, Celibacy, and Marriage: Viewpoint The Boston Sunday Globe
Chapter 16 The Risk of Solidarity: The 29th Pope John XXIII Lecture at Catholic University of America Law School
Chapter 17 Remembering Mother Teresa of Calcutta
Chapter 18 Mission over Business: On the Sale of Jesuit St. Louis University Hospital
Chapter 19 A Sad Time for Massachusetts: On the Passage of Legislation to Restore Capital Punishment
Chapter 20 Evangelizing the Dominant Culture: Floyd L. Begin Law Lecture at John Carroll University, Cleveland, Ohio
Chapter 21 In a Room so Full of Love: On the 25th Anniversary of Roe v. Wade and of Pregnancy Help
Chapter 22 Irish Boston Changed the Face of City and Nation: On Wreath Laying at the Irish Famine Memorial
Chapter 23 We Thought it the Name of an African Cardinal: On the Occasion of Pope John Paul II's 20th Anniversary
Chapter 24 Advancing the Culture of Life in the United States: Address to the Pontifical Council of the Family
Chapter 25 God is Sovereign, The Catholic Vision of Life and Death
Chapter 26 We Speak as Concerned Citizens: Statement at a Hearing on the Death Penalty
Chapter 27 In a Valley of Darkness: On the Littleton, Colorado High School Shootings
Chapter 28 Statement on the Deaths of John F. Kennedy, Jr., Carolyn Bessette Kennedy, and Lauren Bessette
Chapter 29 Forgiving Debts to the Poor: Op-Ed, Within the Beltway, The Washington Post
Part 30 A Moral Voice in the Modern World
Chapter 31 One Can Witness through a Way of Life: To Carmelite Nuns in Poland
Chapter 32 Racism is a Sin: On the Rodney King Case
Chapter 33 An Appeal on Behalf of Haitan Refugees: Letter to President George Bush
Chapter 34 Winter Rescue: An Interfaith Appeal on behalf of Balkan Refugees
Chapter 35 Election of a New President in 1992: Words to William Jefferson Clinton
Chapter 36 Compassion Fatigue as a Form of Violence: Conference on Urban Violence, Southwest Missouri State University, Springfield, Missouri
Chapter 38 A Delicate Plant: On the IRA's Declaration of Intent to Renounce Violence
Chapter 38 "Peace cannot be Achieved without Justice" On Violence in Burundi, Bosnia, and Northern Ireland
Chapter 39 "Reclaiming our Children's Future" To the "Ten-Point Coalition" of Christians, Jews, and Muslims
Chapter 40 Cowardly Terrorism: On Reports of Church Burnings in the South
Chapter 41 "Compassion Fatigue as a Form of Violence" Conference on Urban Violence at Southwest Missouri State University
Chapter 42 "Make the Talks Truly Inclusive" A Plea for Northern Ireland
Chapter 43 "Faith Illumines what Human Reason Knows" Celebrating 25 Years of the Pope John XXIII Center
Chapter 45 "No Moral Justification for the Embargo on Cuba" Delivered at the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Harvard University
Chapter 46 "God, Giver of all Good Gifts" Thanksgiving Day Reflections
Chapter 46 "We Can Forget that Tragedy has a Human Face" On the "Peace Agreement for Northern Ireland"
Chapter 47 "Los Ojos de la Fe" Reflexion Teologica previa al Congresso Eucaristico
Chapter 47 "Where the Story is Told, People Respond" Plea for Victims of Caribbean Hurricanes
Chapter 48 "According to History and Law" Statement about the Crisis in Kosovo
Chapter 50 "Chilling Parallels with Nazi Germany" On Human Life and Biotechnology
Chapter 51 "At Our Best, We Affirm Self-Evident Truths" To the Missouri Catholic Conference at the State Capitol
Chapter 51 "The Simplicity of the Case is Overwhelming" On What to do with Elian Gonzalez?
Chapter 52 "Thousands have been Forced into Slavery" Statement on Conditions in the Sudan
Chapter 53 On the Lay Vocation: An Address to Catholic Lawyers
Chapter 54 "The Church Must Always Be Unambiguously Pro-Life" Funeral Homily for a Friend, John Cardinal O'Connor
Part 56 A Pastor Speaking to the Faithful
Chapter 57 "Church Suffers from Faith Illiteracy" On Faith as a Kind of Knowing
Chapter 57 "Intermediate Agencies can Never Replace the Government" On a Visit to the White House
Chapter 60 "The Legacy of History not Overcome" Homily on St. Patrick's Day
Chapter 60 "The Constant Need for Evangelization" Words Addressed to the Holy Father at the Promulgation of the Catechism of the Catholic Church
Chapter 61 "A Woman of Quiet Strength and Deep Faith" Funeral Homily for Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy in the Church where She had been Baptized
Chapter 61 "You are Ordained for Sacrifice" At the Ordination of Three Dominican Priests
Chapter 63 "What a Wonderful Thing is the Human Body" Reflections from a Hospital Bed
Chapter 64 "The Church Already has 'Common Ground'" On the Catholic Common Ground Project
Chapter 64 The True Witness of a Political Figure: The Catholic Vision of John F. Collins, Former Mayor of Boston
Chapter 67 "The Pain of Separation is Particularly Acute at the Altar of God" In Rome with Orthodox and Catholic Pilgrims
Chapter 68 "Sacrifice is Alien to Rampant Consumerism" To an international Eucharistic Conference in Europe
Chapter 69 "The Church Creates Her Own Culture" Intervention at the Vatican Synod for America
Chapter 70 "We Must Help Others Hear the Call" Vocation Awareness in a Period of Crisis
Chapter 70 "Priesthood is not Something, but a Someone" Ordination of a Priest under the exceptional terms of "Pastoral Provision"
Chapter 71 "Belief in Christ Releases from all Fear" Words of Encouragement at a Home for the Elderly
Chapter 73 Boston is Proud of First African-American Bishop in US: A Salute in an Ecclesial Context to Black History Month
Chapter 74 "Sin Impeded the Spirit's Working in the Hearts of Many" Reconciliation during the Great Jubilee of the Year 2000
Chapter 75 "I Hope to March with Thousands of Young People" On the Jubilee Youth Rally at Fenway Park
Chapter 76 "It Simply is Not an Option that One No Longer Be a Priest" Words of Encouragement to the Priests of Boston
Chapter 76 "For Me, To Live is Christ" Easter Greetings to the Archdiocese
Chapter 77 "To Be a Priest is to Minister in the Person of Christ" At the Cathedral of the Holy Cross on Holy Thursday
Chapter 78 "Every Sin is Profoundly Personal" National Address on Reconciliation
Chapter 80 "Religious Reflect the Universal Call to Holiness" Instruction to a New Religious Community, the Brotherhood of Hope
Chapter 81 "If you Root your Marriage in God's Love, Love will Never Fail in your Wedded Life" Words to a Young Couple on their Wedding Day
Chapter 81 "How Well I Remember the Day of His Death" On Blessed Pope John XXIII
Chapter 82 "It's a Beautiful Document, Dominus Jesus" Clearing Up Certain Ambiguities in Press Accounts
Chapter 84 "Our Buddhist Friends, You are Very Welcome" Christmas Eve with Vietnamese Catholics
Chapter 85 But the souls of the just are in the hands of God
Chapter 85 "Let My Mouth be Filled with Your Praise" Testimony to Dr. Theodore N. Marier, Choir School Master
Chapter 86 "There are No Strangers in the World of a Holy Person" Pastoral Guidance to the Archdiocese
Boston's Cardinal is essential reading for anyone seeking to understand the recent influence of the Catholic Church in America or, for that matter, the profound relationship in our time between faith and culture. Anyone who reads this book will reap the benefit of a lesson in Catholic Church history, and also will meet one of its most distinguished prelates.
— Carl A. Anderson, Supreme Knight, Knights of Columbus
Bernard Francis Law, one of the most influential churchmen of his generation, has important things to say about the Catholic Church, America, ecumenism and inter-religious dialogue, and world politics at the dawn of a new millennium. Through his own words, and thanks to a fine introductory biographical essay, we meet Boston's Cardinal in a way he's not been met before—and we are enriched by the encounter....
— George Weigel
Cardinal Bernard Law is a great leader of the Catholic Church both nationally and internationally. He is a wonderful friend to the Jewish community and as this book makes very clear, he has a profound concern for the needs of every human being.....
— Rabbi Samuel Chiel, Rabbi Emeritus, Temple Emanuel, Newton
Cardinal Bernard Law is a great leader of the Catholic Church both nationally and internationally. He is a wonderfulfriend to the Jewish community and as this book makes very clear, he has a profound concern for the needs ofevery human being.
— Rabbi Samuel Chiel, Rabbi Emeritus, Temple Emanuel, Newton
Bernard Francis Law, one of the most influential churchmen of his generation, has important things to say about the CatholicChurch, America, ecumenism and inter-religious dialogue, and world politics at the dawn of a new millennium. Through his ownwords, and thanks to a fine introductory biographical essay, we meet Boston's Cardinal in a way he's not been met before—andwe are enriched by the encounter.
— George Weigel