The Official Catholic Directory

The Official Catholic Directory PDF

Author: Bowker Editorial Staff

Publisher: R. R. Bowker

Published: 1997-05-01

Total Pages: 1800

ISBN-13: 9780835240024

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THE OFFICIAL CATHOLIC DIRECTORY provides a comprehensive overview of today's church: the hierarchy in Rome & the U.S. parish clergy, chancery officials, colleges & universities, novitiates & provincialates, seminaries, & foreign missions. The only authoritative source of its kind, all information is confirmed & approved by each diocese before publication. A mid-year supplement, THE OFFICIAL CATHOLIC DIRECTORY, PART II--featuring a section devoted to pilgrimage sites, & expanded with demographic charts & more statistical information on the church--is provided at no extra charge. The supplement also provides contact data for every archdiocese in the world.

Official Catholic Directory

Official Catholic Directory PDF

Author: National Register Publishing

Publisher: National Register Publishing

Published: 2009-08

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9780872175525

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Giving status of the Catholic Church as of January 1, 2009.

The Democracy of God

The Democracy of God PDF

Author: Robert Willis

Publisher: iUniverse

Published: 2006

Total Pages: 254

ISBN-13: 0595379222

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Crisis grips the American Catholic community. Church professionals abandon it in record numbers while many who remain grapple with low morale, overwork, and compensatory addictions. Schools either close or laypeople staff them. Parishes consolidate, bereft of pastors and communicants. The people itself lies fragmented, a landscape of polarized groups, a kaleidoscope of political partisans more than gatherings of the faithful. Its future hangs in the balance. Current leaders fixate on two plans. In one they march steadfastly into the past, pursuing the illusion of a remnant group of the righteous armored by uniformity, a sorry substitute for a religious community. In another they resolutely protect the status quo. Before the eyes of an incredulous people they are transforming the church into a museum of religious artifacts, a fitting destination for inquisitive tourists, occasional visitors, and the uninvolved. The author offers a third alternative. Calling upon the democratic attempts of John Carroll and John England, the incisive comments of Tocqueville about religion in a democracy, and the theology of Vatican II, he challenges bishops to forsake their status as minor lords in a medieval monarchy and, instead, to embrace a servant leadership within the People of God.