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Whose À La Carte Menu?

ebook

Whose à la Carte Menu? takes a number of aspects of Catholic teaching and offers an explanation that respects the intelligence of the reader, yet keeps the information free from technical terms and theological jargon. The scope of the topics discussed is broader than just Church teaching (birth control, papal infallibility, female priests), encompassing issues that are important in the wider social context, such as Catholic fundamentalism, translation of the missal and the myth that sexual abuse arose from a liberalism in the Church. The selection of topics is eclectic, and resulted from conversations with people who showed great interest in theological discussion, but felt the lack of their knowledge. Words like canon law, doctrine, dogma, infallibility, etc., are well known in the Catholic vocabulary. Yet many people raised with a Catholic background have difficulty explaining exactly what they are. Why? Simply because they have never been given an accessible explanation of these concepts and terms in plain language. Given that it was restricted to the clergy, a sort of mystique surrounded theological education, as if it was a precious knowledge to be saved from contamination by the masses. Through plain and straightforward language, the author has looked to some of the best scholarship in the Church since the Second Vatican Council and attempted to make it accessible. In this, she is a mere wren on giants' shoulders.


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Publisher: The Columba Press

OverDrive Read

  • ISBN: 9781782182412
  • Release date: February 25, 2015

EPUB ebook

  • ISBN: 9781782182412
  • File size: 864 KB
  • Release date: February 25, 2015

Formats

OverDrive Read
EPUB ebook

Languages

English

Whose à la Carte Menu? takes a number of aspects of Catholic teaching and offers an explanation that respects the intelligence of the reader, yet keeps the information free from technical terms and theological jargon. The scope of the topics discussed is broader than just Church teaching (birth control, papal infallibility, female priests), encompassing issues that are important in the wider social context, such as Catholic fundamentalism, translation of the missal and the myth that sexual abuse arose from a liberalism in the Church. The selection of topics is eclectic, and resulted from conversations with people who showed great interest in theological discussion, but felt the lack of their knowledge. Words like canon law, doctrine, dogma, infallibility, etc., are well known in the Catholic vocabulary. Yet many people raised with a Catholic background have difficulty explaining exactly what they are. Why? Simply because they have never been given an accessible explanation of these concepts and terms in plain language. Given that it was restricted to the clergy, a sort of mystique surrounded theological education, as if it was a precious knowledge to be saved from contamination by the masses. Through plain and straightforward language, the author has looked to some of the best scholarship in the Church since the Second Vatican Council and attempted to make it accessible. In this, she is a mere wren on giants' shoulders.


Expand title description text