Synopses & Reviews
<font face=Dax-Medium size=7><br/><p align=left></font><font face=Dax-Light color=#231f20 size=1>Try to define a layperson without using the word </font><b><font face=Dax-Bold color=#231f20 size=1>not</b></font><font face=Dax-Light color=#231f20 size=1>: </font><i><font face=Dax-LightItalic color=#231f20 size=1>cannot </i></font><font face=Dax-Light color=#231f20 size=1>preach or say mass, is </font><i><font face=Dax-LightItalic color=#231f20 size=1>not </i></font><font face=Dax-Light color=#231f20 size=1>a priest, is </font><i><font face=Dax-LightItalic color=#231f20 size=1>not </i></font><font face=Dax-Light color=#231f20 size=1>in a position of leadership in the church. This generally negative or passive understanding of the laity was epitomized in a statement of Pope Pius X: "The one duty of the multitude [i.e., the laity] is to allow themselves to be led and, like a docile fl ock, to follow the Pastors." The Second Vatican Council, with its emphasis on the priesthood of all believers rooted in baptism, changed all that. Yet, writes Paul Lakeland, "many of our bishops and not a few of the lay members of the church are attracted to a dangerously incomplete vision of Catholicism...one that sidesteps the major themes and key insights of Vatican II." In </font><i><font face=Dax-LightItalic color=#231f20 size=1>Catholicism at the Crossroads, </i></font><font face=Dax-Light color=#231f20 size=1>he teases out themes fi rst developed in a much more formal way in his prize-winning </font><i><font face=Dax-LightItalic color=#231f20 size=1>The Liberation of the Laity. </i></font><font face=Dax-Light color=#231f20 size=1>In his new book he is "talking to ordinary Catholics in language that requires no special expertise in theology and does not necessitate constant reference to a dictionary."</p><br/><p align=left>Baptism, says Lakeland, not priestly ordination, is the basis for all mission and ministry, and the mission of those baptized into Christ is to be the sacrament of God's love in a world rife with violence and brutal inequity. The specifi c mission of the laity is to the world, whereas the mission of the clergy is to the household of the faith. Yet lay people can't leave "church business" exclusively to the clergy, and the clergy can't leave the church's "worldly mission" exclusively to the laity. The key to resolving these overlapping responsibilities is by becoming an adult church, an open church in an open society. In pursuing this goal, Lakeland develops "ten steps toward a more adult church."</p></font>>
Synopsis
Try to define a layperson without using the word not cannot preach or say mass, is not a priest, is not in a position of leadership in the church. This generally negative or passive understanding of the laity was epitomized in a statement of Pope Pius X: "The one duty of the multitude i.e., the laity] is to allow themselves to be led and, like a docile fl ock, to follow the Pastors." The Second Vatican Council, with its emphasis on the priesthood of all believers rooted in baptism, changed all that. Yet, writes Paul Lakeland, "many of our bishops and not a few of the lay members of the church are attracted to a dangerously incomplete vision of Catholicism...one that sidesteps the major themes and key insights of Vatican II." In Catholicism at the Crossroads, he teases out themes fi rst developed in a much more formal way in his prize-winning The Liberation of the Laity. In his new book he is "talking to ordinary Catholics in language that requires no special expertise in theology and does not necessitate constant reference to a dictionary."
Baptism, says Lakeland, not priestly ordination, is the basis for all mission and ministry, and the mission of those baptized into Christ is to be the sacrament of God's love in a world rife with violence and brutal inequity. The specifi c mission of the laity is to the world, whereas the mission of the clergy is to the household of the faith. Yet lay people can't leave "church business" exclusively to the clergy, and the clergy can't leave the church's "worldly mission" exclusively to the laity. The key to resolving these overlapping responsibilities is by becoming an adult church, an open church in an open society. In pursuing this goal, Lakeland develops "ten steps toward a more adult church."
Synopsis
<font face=Dax-Medium size=7><br/><p align=left></font><font face=Dax-Light color=#231f20 size=1>Try to define a layperson without using the word </font><b><font face=Dax-Bold color=#231f20 size=1>not</b></font><font face=Dax-Light color=#231f20 size=1>: </font><i><font face=Dax-LightItalic color=#231f20 size=1>cannot </i></font><font face=Dax-Light color=#231f20 size=1>preach or say mass, is </font><i><font face=Dax-LightItalic color=#231f20 size=1>not </i></font><font face=Dax-Light color=#231f20 size=1>a priest, is </font><i><font face=Dax-LightItalic color=#231f20 size=1>not </i></font><font face=Dax-Light color=#231f20 size=1>in a position of leadership in the church. This generally negative or passive understanding of the laity was epitomized in a statement of Pope Pius X: "The one duty of the multitude [i.e., the laity] is to allow themselves to be led and, like a docile fl ock, to follow the Pastors." The Second Vatican Council, with its emphasis on the priesthood of all believers rooted in baptism, changed all that. Yet, writes Paul Lakeland, "many of our bishops and not a few of the lay members of the church are attracted to a dangerously incomplete vision of Catholicism...one that sidesteps the major themes and key insights of Vatican II." In </font><i><font face=Dax-LightItalic color=#231f20 size=1>Catholicism at the Crossroads, </i></font><font face=Dax-Light color=#231f20 size=1>he teases out themes fi rst developed in a much more formal way in his prize-winning </font><i><font face=Dax-LightItalic color=#231f20 size=1>The Liberation of the Laity. </i></font><font face=Dax-Light color=#231f20 size=1>In his new book he is "talking to ordinary Catholics in language that requires no special expertise in theology and does not necessitate constant reference to a dictionary."</p><br/><p align=left>Baptism, says Lakeland, not priestly ordination, is the basis for all mission and ministry, and the mission of those baptized into Christ is to be the sacrament of God's love in a world rife with violence and brutal inequity. The specifi c mission of the laity is to the world, whereas the mission of the clergy is to the household of the faith. Yet lay people can't leave "church business" exclusively to the clergy, and the clergy can't leave the church's "worldly mission" exclusively to the laity. The key to resolving these overlapping responsibilities is by becoming an adult church, an open church in an open society. In pursuing this goal, Lakeland develops "ten steps toward a more adult church."</p></font>>
Table of Contents
Introduction: Stepping Up to the Plate Part 1: The Nature of an Adult Church 1. Prayer, Discernment, and Disagreement 2. The Role of the Laity 3. What Is So Important about Accountbility? 4. Accountability and the Laity 5. Accountability and Sexual Abuse 6. An Open Church in an Open Society 7. Ten Steps toward a More Adult Church Part 2: The Work of an Adult Church 8. The Laity and the Mission of the Church 9. An Adult Church Engages the World: The Question of Globalization 10. An Adult Church Engages the World: The Question of Culture