A Long Way From Rome
Chris McgillionPaperback 2003-02-01
Publisher Description
Despite a new hunger for meaning, values and a sense of community in Australia, it is clear that the established churches have failed to capture the public imagination. This collection casts a critical eye on Catholicism in Australia today, arguing that the richness of the Catholic tradition has become constrained by its own organizational imperatives.;Chris McGillion has gathered some of the most influential and innovative writers on religion in Australia* Morag Fraser, Paul Collins, Michael McGirr, Michael Whelan, Damian Grace and Katharine Massam. They argue that Catholicism has become self-absorbed, unwilling to engage with the world. Looking beyond the statistics, they examine how ordinary Catholics express their faith, and why so many of them don't care what the Pope says. They also explore ways in which the Church could reconnect with the community.;This provocative analysis should appeal to readers concerned about the state of the Catholic Church, and may also be used as a student text.
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Publisher Description
Despite a new hunger for meaning, values and a sense of community in Australia, it is clear that the established churches have failed to capture the public imagination. This collection casts a critical eye on Catholicism in Australia today, arguing that the richness of the Catholic tradition has become constrained by its own organizational imperatives.;Chris McGillion has gathered some of the most influential and innovative writers on religion in Australia* Morag Fraser, Paul Collins, Michael McGirr, Michael Whelan, Damian Grace and Katharine Massam. They argue that Catholicism has become self-absorbed, unwilling to engage with the world. Looking beyond the statistics, they examine how ordinary Catholics express their faith, and why so many of them don't care what the Pope says. They also explore ways in which the Church could reconnect with the community.;This provocative analysis should appeal to readers concerned about the state of the Catholic Church, and may also be used as a student text.