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SrMaryLea | 1 altra recensione | Aug 22, 2023 |
 
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SrMaryLea | 2 altre recensioni | Aug 22, 2023 |
 
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SrMaryLea | Aug 22, 2023 |
This short anthology of biographies with impact analysis is a way to sift through the important events and those who continue to affect us today as we try to navigate the turmoil we bring to ourselves. Selecting a single individual for each century across the last millennium, Neuhaus has compiled a cast of good writers including David Novak, Robert Royal, Edward T. Oaks and George Weigel to present not only these historically important personalities but why their impact has been so profound. The list is impressive and, perhaps, surprising to some. Aquinas, Calvin, Lincoln all could be expected, but there is Dante Alighieri, Pascal and Moses Malmonides also. Neuhaus finishes the 20th century with St. Pope John Paul II and the more I thought about it, the more appropriate that seemed. It is a quick read that doesn't leave one.
 
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hbuchana | 1 altra recensione | Oct 12, 2020 |
Years ago, during Holy Week, Fr. Richard John Neuhaus preached on the seven last words of Christ. He decided to expand the sermons into a book.
Death on a Friday afternoon is one of the most profound meditations on the death and resurrection of Jesus. This book can be read anytime of the year, however, once read, you will find yourself drawn back to it again and again. It is an amazing piece of theological reflection and thought.
 
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Steve_Walker | 5 altre recensioni | Sep 13, 2020 |
Hmm. I was torn about how to rate this book; I guess I'd give it a 3 1/2 if I could. It was the first Neuhaus book I read, and, to be honest, I now think I enjoy his thought as a cultural commentator more than as a theologian.

I was looking forward to reading it during Holy Week, and it truly did contain some wonderful meditations on the Cross, which alone made it well worth reading. However, I felt that Neuhaus veered off his meditative course rather distractingly at times, and I found some of his thoughts on universalism and soteriology troubling. Occasionally he just went on too long.

For someone who worked so closely with evangelicals, he sometimes sounded, to my admittedly ultra-sensitive ears, a bit straw-mannish in his appraisals of Protestant theology. And I just don't really feel like debating what happened on the Cross when I'm reading this book on Good Friday. Still, for all that...an undeniably rich and well-written book by a godly man with a pastoral heart.
 
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LudieGrace | 5 altre recensioni | Aug 10, 2020 |
An absolutely beautiful and punchy meditation on the Seven Last Words of Christ. Neuhaus has a sledgehammer style which is fairly unusual in meditative works, but highly effective when reviewing the Passion of Christ. Excited to read other books by him and to follow up on references he made in this work. Highly recommend.
 
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jeterat | 5 altre recensioni | Apr 10, 2020 |
Read this book for the first time about 10 years ago and have pulled it out most holy week's since to look at it. This year was the first time I re-read it. A lot of insightful stuff here. I think this is Neahaus's best book.
 
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Jamichuk | 5 altre recensioni | May 22, 2017 |
 
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BmoreMetroCouncil | Feb 9, 2017 |
This is a somewhat difficult book to rate, since a lot depends on what the reader is looking for, and their background.

I always feel that I need to spell out my religious alliances, so I will say that I was raised as a Methodist and am now an atheist. I will say that I left Methodism not because it was too conservative, as most of my friends like to think, but because it was too liberal, not so much politically and socially, but theologically.

I have been reading about Catholicism this year, and I wanted to read something positive. I recommend this to Catholic who are middle-of-the road. Like the sundial who records only the sunny hours, Neuhaus is generally very cheerful and comforting, I kept thinking of a warm, relaxing bath. As an example, he tells us that 200,000 people a year convert to the Catholic Church from other religions. He admits that some leave, but since it is hard to determine how many, he ignores that and keeps rejoicing in the converts. One can only felicitate him on his happiness.

I was amused at his repeated assertion that once a Catholic, always a Catholic. A non-practicing friend of mine, one of the liberals that Neuhaus so dreads, has been trying for the last 35 years to convince me that Catholicism is better than Protestantism. As a atheist, I shrug and say, six of one and half-a-dozen of another. Then she told me that one of the great things about Catholicism is that while one can be born a Protestant, one must personally commit to be a Catholic. I laughed and said that Protestants say the exact opposite. I don't think I'll aggravate her by telling her that Neuhaus is on my side.

Some reviewer have suggested that Neuhaus tried to combine some of his articles from First Things into this book, and I could believe that. It is often repetitive, goes off on tangents, and in general could have done with editing. Still, it did spell out one position in Catholicism, and partly fulfilled what I was looking for. He doesn't address the recent scandals in any depth, although that was not entirely necessary for me. The problem is that there are two types of eloquence: one for the choir and one to persuade outsiders. This is definitely the former.

The book did not entirely fulfill my purposes since Neuhaus routinely put my teeth on edge with his arrogance. I don't know whether to smile, as at a know-it-all child, or scream. After the first 150 pages, I found it very hard to continue. Neuhaus seems completely innocent of the thought that perhaps everyone, at least everyone without horns and a tail, doesn't agree with what is obviously true to him, or doesn't find his logic unassailable. He accordingly can't really speak to outsiders, even though he himself is a convert. I began to appreciate the complaints of an Episcopalian friend who lives in a largely Catholic neighborhood -- she is very tired of her neighbors condescending to her as an ignorant heretic.

I am annoyed by unnuanced discussions of large groups of people; at sixty, my friends are beginning to rail about "young people today," as opposed to our angelic selves in the 1960s and 1970s. I take this as the beginnings of senility. Neuhaus's characterization of Americans is partly true, but ignores that fact that the US is the most religious of the industrialized nations, and many of the conservative Protestants have very stringent views of morality, similar to the Catholic Church. His discussions of Protestantism do not take into account its diversity and variability. For some purposes, it is meaningless to talk about it as a unified group. Had he perhaps discussed the mainline churches as a group, or the Pentecostals, generalizing would be more valid.

The book begins with the funeral of John Paul II, and ends, much to Neuhaus's delight in the election of his preferred candidate, Benedict XVI. I am reading this knowing how this all turned out -- I wonder what Neuhaus would think.

So, it is a somewhat bloated work, great for people with similar views, or people wanting a look at his views, but probably not too endearing to outsiders.

I recommend: The Catholic church : what everyone needs to know by John L. Allen for people wanting to know more. Allen has written a more straight-forward reference book describing the structure of the Church, as well as various views on major issues.
 
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PuddinTame | 1 altra recensione | Apr 13, 2014 |
The marriage of mainline denominations to the Great Society caused the rise of the New Religious Right.
 
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kijabi1 | Jan 6, 2012 |
The current pope is crusading for 'moral truth.' We should welcome his help.
 
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kijabi1 | Jan 2, 2012 |
I've read this book every Lent for three years and I don't intend to stop doing so anytime soon. While my search has been far from exhaustive, I've yet to find a better book than Fr. Richard's deep meditations on the last words of Christ from the Cross.

Each year I find new passages that strike me. It seems that someday the entire book will be highlighted and every page tabbed. His proposal, and reasoning that, in the end, all will be saved is both comforting and challenging. But this is not a "feel good" Christian book. Far from it. And, yet, it's also not a book aiming to pile on the guilt for being the fallen human beings we are.

Fr. Richard tells reminds us that, "the worst that could possibly happen has already happened." But that is not where it ends. The crucifixion of Christ was a glorious event! "We preach Christ crucified," as St. Paul wrote. Surely, in this life, we'll not understand even a fraction of a fraction of the totality of what was done on that Friday afternoon. But there are dimensions of it that can understand, and Fr. Richard helps us to do that better than anyone else that I've read.

There are so many passages worth sharing, but this is my favorite:

"The Christian life is about living to the glory of God. It is not a driven, frenetic, sweated, interminable quest for saving souls. It is doing for his glory what God has given us to do. As with the Olympic runner in the film "Chariots of Fire," it is giving God pleasure in what we do well. Souls are saved by saved souls who live out their salvation by thinking and living differently, with a martyr's resolve, in a world marked by falsehood, baseness, injustice, impurity, ugliness, and mediocrity."
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sergerca | 5 altre recensioni | May 6, 2011 |
Fantastic reality check. It's so easy to get disillusioned with the glitz, shallowness of the church in our world. Here is a call to minister in the Church of Christ which will always struggle in weakness and triumph by suffering love until our Lord returns. I'm glad I read this book before ordination.
 
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frielink | 2 altre recensioni | Aug 29, 2008 |
In Catholic Matters, Father Neuhaus addresses the many controversies that have marked recent decades of American Catholicism. Looking beyond these troubles to “the splendor of truth” that constitutes the Church, he proposes a forward-thinking way of being Catholic in America. Drawing on his personal encounters with the late John Paul II and Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, now Pope Benedict XVI, Neuhaus describes their hope for a springtime of world evangelization, Christian unity, and Catholic renewal. Catholic Matters reveals a vibrant Church, strengthened and unified by hardship and on the cusp of a great revival in spiritual vitality and an even greater contribution to our common life.
 
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StFrancisofAssisi | 1 altra recensione | Aug 3, 2018 |
Systematics 3, Pastoral Theology, Bryan Burton, Fuller, Spring 2008
 
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sjmonson | 2 altre recensioni | Jul 30, 2008 |
 
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semoffat | Jul 27, 2021 |
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