The beginning of the twenty-first century has provided abundant evidence of the necessity to reexamine the relationship between Catholicism and the modern, global world. This book tries to proceed on this path with a focus on the meaning, legacy, and reception in today’s world of the ecclesiology of Vatican II, starting with
Gaudium et Spes: “This council exhorts Christians, as citizens of two cities, to strive to discharge their earthly duties conscientiously and in response to the Gospel spirit.”
Catholicism and Citizenship is a call for a rediscovery of the moral and political imagination of Vatican II for the Church and the world of our time.
Inhoudsopgave
Contents
List of Abbreviations
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Inter-Ecclesial Relations and the Public Square: Bishops versus Religious Orders between Vatican II and the Post–Vatican II Era
2. Church and World in Pope Francis’s Ecclesiological Shift: Evolution or Crisis of the New Ecclesial Movements?
3. Beyond the Paradigm “Hegemony or Persecution”: The Church Facing Pluralism
4. Prophetic Church and Established Church: Pope Francis and the Legacy of the Constantinian Age
5. An Interrupted Reception of
Gaudium et Spes: The Church and the Modern World in American Catholicism
6. Ecclesiology of Mercy: A Vision for the Church in the Twenty-First Century
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
Over de auteur
Massimo Faggioli is professor of theology and religious studies at Villanova University and a contributing editor for Commonweal. Among his books with Liturgical Press are True Reform: Liturgy and Ecclesiology in Sacrosanctum Concilium (2012); Pope John XXIII: The Medicine of Mercy (2014);and Sorting Out Catholicism: A Brief History of the New Ecclesial Movements (2014).