Lexington Books
Pages: 200
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-1-4985-0252-8 • Hardback • January 2015 • $114.00 • (£88.00)
978-1-4985-0253-5 • eBook • January 2015 • $108.00 • (£83.00)
David Carroll Cochran is professor of politics at Loras College and author of Catholic Realism and the Abolition of War.
John C. Waldmeir is professor of religious studies and theology at Loras College and author of Cathedrals of Bone: The Role of the Body in Contemporary Catholic Literature.
Part I: The Current Status and Future Directions of Irish Catholicism
Chapter 1: “Faith of our Fathers”: A Lost Legacy?, Eamon Maher
Chapter 2: In Periculo Mortis: Can Irish Catholicism be Redeemed?, John Littleton
Chapter 3: Holy Unpredictable: A Response to Maher and Littleton, James Silas Rogers
Part II: A Closer Look at Specific Dimensions
Chapter 4: Secularization, Generational Change, and Ireland’s Post-Secular Opportunity, Michele Dillon
Chapter 5: Clerical Burnout and Political Engagement: A Study of Catholic Priests in Ireland, Elizabeth A. Oldmixon and Brian R. Calfano
Chapter 6: God May Not Need a Passport, but Priests Do: Exploring the Migration Experience of Polish Catholic Priests in Ireland, Agata Piękosz
Chapter 7: Theology and History at the 2012 Eucharistic Congress, Dublin, John C. Waldmeir
Chapter 8: Lost in Translation: William Donohue and the Recent Controversies of the Catholic Church in Ireland, Matthew J. O'Brien
Chapter 9: Irish Missionaries in Literature and Life: From Evangelists of Irish Catholicism to Catalysts of its Transformation, Andrew J. Auge
Chapter 10: Contemplative Strands in Irish Identity, Bernadette Flanagan
Appendix 1: Church, State, and Society in Ireland
Appendix 2: Contemplative Movements in Ireland
Appendix 3: Buddhist Centres in Ireland
[The Catholic Church in Ireland Today] showcased both a broad range of perspectives and a lively exchange of ideas designed to reach various audiences, from teachers and students to pastors and parish workers. . . .Throughout the essays, the writers agree the potential is great for an Irish Catholicism that otherwise stands liberated from long relationships to political power and social privilege. Using various approaches, the contributors assert that this is a time of tremendous opportunity for Catholicism, a time when it can discover both a more authentic and prophetic voice in Irish belief and practice.
— Irish Times
The volume is of great value to anyone desiring an understanding of the Irish Church today. It addresses the situation in a nonpolemical way and suggests that there is a way forward that requires recognizing the changes in Irish society. Highly recommended for college, university, and seminary libraries, and larger parish libraries, especially those which have large Irish-American populations.
— Catholic Library World
This collection is a clarion call. Intelligent and wide-ranging, it clearly demonstrates that the Irish Catholic Church needs a new kind of leadership and thinking.
— Colum Kenny, Dublin City University