The quiet revolution of Pope Francis : a synodal Catholic Church in Ireland? / Gerry O'Hanlon.
Publisher: Dublin : Messenger Publications, 2018Description: 167 pages.Content type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9781788120005.Subject(s): Francis, Pope, 1936- | Catholic Church -- Ireland | Catholic Church -- Government | Church renewal -- Catholic ChurchDDC classification: 282.415 Summary: "Pope Francis wants to bring about a quiet revolution within the Catholic Church. He wants a reformed church in which the ‘sense of the faithful’, the instinct of baptised men and women, is given a role in the formation and reception of church teaching and governance. The model is one of Jesus conversing with his male and female disciples in Palestine – a walking together of the People of God, a ‘synodal’ church. Irish Jesuit theologian Gerry O’Hanlon examines this ecclesiological project of Francis and the new roles within it of pope and bishops, theologians, and all the baptised. He considers the Pope’s strategy of a changed ecclesial structure that would out-live his own pontificate. Francis advocates a critical openness to contemporary culture, a culture of consultation and open debate, and communal discernment practised at every level of ‘an entirely synodal church’. O’Hanlon argues that this project offers new hope of a better reading of the ‘signs of the times’ by the Catholic Church, not least in areas of sexuality of gender. The author applies this analysis to our situation in Ireland and suggests that whatever about the desirable spiritual renewal which a papal visit may inspire, it is to be hoped that the more lasting long-term effects might be the realisation of a synodal Irish Catholic Church." -- Messenger Publications site. https://www.messenger.ie/product/the-quiet-revolution-of-pope-francis-a-synodal-catholic-church-in-ireland/Item type | Current library | Class number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Book | House of Lords Library - Palace Dewey | 282.415 OHA (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 016498 |
Browsing House of Lords Library - Palace shelves, Shelving location: Dewey Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
282.41 HAT The catholics : the Church and its people in Britain and Ireland, from the Reformation to the present day / | 282.41 SEW Catholics : | 282.415 MCD Why the Irish church deserves to die / | 282.415 OHA The quiet revolution of Pope Francis : | 282.416 ELL The Catholics of Ulster : | 283 CHA Anglicanism : a very short introduction / | 283 CHU Heritage and renewal / |
"Pope Francis wants to bring about a quiet revolution within the Catholic Church. He wants a reformed church in which the ‘sense of the faithful’, the instinct of baptised men and women, is given a role in the formation and reception of church teaching and governance. The model is one of Jesus conversing with his male and female disciples in Palestine – a walking together of the People of God, a ‘synodal’ church.
Irish Jesuit theologian Gerry O’Hanlon examines this ecclesiological project of Francis and the new roles within it of pope and bishops, theologians, and all the baptised. He considers the Pope’s strategy of a changed ecclesial structure that would out-live his own pontificate.
Francis advocates a critical openness to contemporary culture, a culture of consultation and open debate, and communal discernment practised at every level of ‘an entirely synodal church’. O’Hanlon argues that this project offers new hope of a better reading of the ‘signs of the times’ by the Catholic Church, not least in areas of sexuality of gender.
The author applies this analysis to our situation in Ireland and suggests that whatever about the desirable spiritual renewal which a papal visit may inspire, it is to be hoped that the more lasting long-term effects might be the realisation of a synodal Irish Catholic Church." -- Messenger Publications site.