Lexington Books
Pages: 230
Trim: 6⅜ x 9¼
978-0-7391-8732-6 • Hardback • May 2014 • $128.00 • (£98.00)
978-0-7391-9432-4 • Paperback • April 2016 • $54.99 • (£42.00)
978-0-7391-8733-3 • eBook • May 2014 • $52.00 • (£40.00)
James Gerard McEvoy is senior lecturer in the Faculty of Theology and Philosophy at Australian Catholic University.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Resolving Present Difficulties
Part I: Church and World Today
Chapter 1: Religion in a Secular Age: From the Sixteenth to the Eighteenth Century
Chapter 2: Religion in a Secular Age: The Explosion into the Present
Chapter 3: The Turn to Dialogue at Vatican II
Part II: Dialogue and its Challenges
Chapter 4: Dialogue, Language, and the Other
Chapter 5: God’s Dialogue with Humanity: Word and Spirit in History and Narrative
Chapter 6: A Different Voice: Joseph Ratzinger and the Corruptions of Modernity
Chapter 7: The Church’s Dialogue with the World
Bibliography
Index
About the Author
James McEvoy presents a timely and interesting look at the stance of the contemporary Roman Catholic Church towards the modern world. . . .The work could appeal to a wide audience: Catholics and other laypeople disenchanted with the unhelpful dead-end of the modern liberal-conservative dichotomy (which McEvoy criticizes); Christian clergy interested in the ecclesiological ebb-and-flow of Christianity’s largest body; and those interested in the discussions around the work of Charles Taylor. . . .Leaving Christendom for Good is a helpful work that engages several important currents of thought and their representative thinkers, and ends with a reasonable diagnosis for a way forward that could appeal to wide sections of the modern Catholic Church and many sympathetic onlookers, Christian and secular. . . .[O]ne of McEvoy’s chief strengths is a deft ability to summarize and synthesize vast amounts of scholarship, while threading through his commentary and expounding a clear thesis. . . .[the book's] prescient reflections on modernity, evangelization, and the courage of belief today has many key pieces in place for later expansion by himself or others of what a dialogical model could mean for Catholicism in the twenty-first century.
— Dialogue: A Journal Of Theology
McEvoy started working on his book during the academic year 2009–2010, that is, at a time in the life of the Catholic Church when the book’s subject was unpopular: the relationship between the church and the modern world in terms of dialogue and the role of the constitution Gaudium et Spes of Vatican II (1965) in this theological debate. Now that the book is published in a Catholic environment quite different from that of 2009–2010, thanks to the election of Pope Francis, McEvoy’s book has even more to say.
— Journal of Church and State
Leaving Christendom for Good will give vital and urgently needed service to the Church’s work of evangelization in contemporary liberal culture. With great insight and careful analysis, it develops and advocates a dialogical understanding of the Church–world relationship. McEvoy transcends the superficial polarities of liberal versus conservative and highlights the rich potential of Vatican II’s Gaudium et spes to give the Catholic tradition new life in a changed world.
— Robert Gascoigne, Australian Catholic University
Leaving Christendom for Good exemplifies first-rate scholarship: it is comprehensive in its research and analysis; it is accessible in its expression; it is generous in its assessments of contrary opinions; and it is thought-provoking in its proposals. In promoting a commitment to “dialogue” as the means by which the church might engage constructively with the contemporary world, James McEvoy develops an argument that is insightful, nuanced, and hope-filled. This is a book that will enrich its readers.
— Richard Lennan, Boston College
McEvoy helps lay bare the core divisions in the post-conciliar church that continue to plague Catholicism to this day. His incisive study engages not only theological and historical perspectives, but also social analysis, with the work of philosopher Charles Taylor featuring prominently throughout. Leaving Christendom for Good charts the emergence of a new paradigm for church-world relations and commends the dialogical vision of Gaudium et spes as encapsulating the heart of the faith itself and continuing to offer a way forward for the church-world dynamic in our times and beyond. It is a creative, intelligent, and thought-provoking study that will inform discussions in the university, church, and wider society alike.
— Gerard Mannion, Georgetown University