America's Church

America's Church
Title America's Church PDF eBook
Author Thomas A. Tweed
Publisher Oxford University Press
Total Pages 448
Release 2011-08-01
Genre Architecture
ISBN 0199783012

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The National Shrine in Washington, DC has been deeply loved, blithely ignored, and passionately criticized. It has been praised as a "dazzling jewel" and dismissed as a "towering Byzantine beach ball." In this intriguing and inventive book, Thomas Tweed shows that the Shrine is also an illuminating site from which to tell the story of twentieth-century Catholicism. He organizes his narrative around six themes that characterize U.S. Catholicism, and he ties these themes to the Shrine's material culture--to images, artifacts, or devotional spaces. Thus he begins with the Basilica's foundation stone, weaving it into a discussion of "brick and mortar" Catholicism, the drive to build institutions. To highlight the Church's inclination to appeal to women, he looks at fund-raising for the Mary Memorial Altar, and he focuses on the Filipino oratory to Our Lady of Antipolo to illustrate the Church's outreach to immigrants. Throughout, he employs painstaking detective work to shine a light on the many facets of American Catholicism reflected in the shrine.

America's Church

America's Church
Title America's Church PDF eBook
Author Gregory W. Tucker
Publisher Our Sunday Visitor
Total Pages 287
Release 2000-01-01
Genre Religion
ISBN 9780879737009

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Marvel at the artistic splendor of the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in this first ever, pictorial tour.

The Negro Church in America/The Black Church Since Frazier

The Negro Church in America/The Black Church Since Frazier
Title The Negro Church in America/The Black Church Since Frazier PDF eBook
Author E. Franklin Frazier
Publisher Schocken
Total Pages 226
Release 1974-01-13
Genre Religion
ISBN 0805203877

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Frazier's study of the black church and an essay by Lincoln arguing that the civil rights movement saw the splintering of the traditional black church and the creation of new roles for religion.

The Battle for the American Church

The Battle for the American Church
Title The Battle for the American Church PDF eBook
Author George Anthony Kelly
Publisher Image
Total Pages 536
Release 1981
Genre Religion
ISBN

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American Catholic

American Catholic
Title American Catholic PDF eBook
Author Charles Morris
Publisher Vintage
Total Pages 529
Release 2011-08-24
Genre Religion
ISBN 0307797910

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"A cracking good story with a wonderful cast of rogues, ruffians and some remarkably holy and sensible people." --Los Angeles Times Book Review Before the potato famine ravaged Ireland in the 1840s, the Roman Catholic Church was barely a thread in the American cloth. Twenty years later, New York City was home to more Irish Catholics than Dublin. Today, the United States boasts some sixty million members of the Catholic Church, which has become one of this country's most influential cultural forces. In American Catholic: The Saints and Sinners Who Built America's Most Powerful Church, Charles R. Morris recounts the rich story of the rise of the Catholic Church in America, bringing to life the personalities that transformed an urban Irish subculture into a dominant presence nationwide. Here are the stories of rogues and ruffians, heroes and martyrs--from Dorothy Day, a convert from Greenwich Village Marxism who opened shelters for thousands, to Cardinal William O'Connell, who ran the Church in Boston from a Renaissance palazzo, complete with golf course. Morris also reveals the Church's continuing struggle to come to terms with secular, pluralist America and the theological, sexual, authority, and gender issues that keep tearing it apart. As comprehensive as it is provocative, American Catholic is a tour de force, a fascinating cultural history that will engage and inform both Catholics and non-Catholics alike. "The best one-volume history of the last hundred years of American Catholicism that it has ever been my pleasure to read. What's appealing in this remarkable book is its delicate sense of balance and its soundly grounded judgments." --Andrew Greeley

Church and State in America

Church and State in America
Title Church and State in America PDF eBook
Author James H. Hutson
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Total Pages
Release 2007-11-12
Genre History
ISBN 1139467905

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This is an account of the ideas about and public policies relating to the relationship between government and religion from the settlement of Virginia in 1607 to the presidency of Andrew Jackson, 1829–37. This book describes the impact and the relationship of various events, legislative, and judicial actions, including the English Toleration Act of 1689, the First and Second Great Awakenings, the Constitution of the United States, the Bill of Rights, and Jefferson's Letter to the Danbury Baptists. Four principles were paramount in the American approach to government's relation to religion: the importance of religion to public welfare; the resulting desirability of government support of religion (within the limitations of political culture); liberty of conscience and voluntaryism; the requirement that religion be supported by free will offerings, not taxation. Hutson analyzes and describes the development and interplay of these principles, and considers the relevance of the concept of the separation of church and state during this period.

Latino Catholicism

Latino Catholicism
Title Latino Catholicism PDF eBook
Author Timothy Matovina
Publisher Princeton University Press
Total Pages 328
Release 2014-10-26
Genre Religion
ISBN 069116357X

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Discusses the growing population of Hispanic-Americans worshipping in the Catholic Church in the United States.