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Book cover of Goodbye Father
General & Miscellaneous Christian Theology, Clergy - Roman Catholic, General & Miscellaneous Roman Catholicism, Pastoral Ministry - General & Miscellaneous, Doctrine - Roman Catholic, Religion - General & Miscellaneous

Goodbye Father

by David Yamane
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Overview

In the last half-century, the number of Catholic priests has plummeted by 40% while the number of Catholics has skyrocketed, up 65%. The specter of a faith defined by full pews and empty altars hangs heavy over the church.
The root cause of this priest shortage is the church's insistence on mandatory celibacy. Given the potential recruitment advantages of abandoning the celibacy requirement, why, Richard A. Schoenherr asks, is the conservative Catholic coalition—headed by the pope—so adamantly opposed to a married clergy? The answer, he argues, is that accepting married priests would be but the first step toward ordaining women and thus forever altering the demographics of a resolutely male religious order.
Yet Schoenherr believes that such change is not only necessary but unavoidable if the church is to thrive. The church's current stop-gap approach of enlisting laypeople to perform all but the central element of the mass only further serves to undermine the power of the celibate priesthood. Perhaps most importantly, doctrinal changes, a growing pluralism in the church, and the feminist movement among nuns and laywomen are exerting a growing influence on Catholicism.
Concluding that the collapse of celibate exclusivity is all but inevitable, Goodbye Father presents an urgent and compelling portrait of the future of organized Catholicism.

About the Author, David Yamane

The late Richard A. Schoenherr was a member of the Department of Sociology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. David Yamane is Professor of Sociology at the University of Notre Dame.

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Editorials

Library Journal

In Full Pews and Empty Altars (1993), Schoenherr and Lawrence Young produced the definitive demographic study of the American Catholic priesthood of the late 20th century. Schoenherr planned the present work, written in 1995, as a follow-up study. After his death in 1996, the manuscript was given to his former student Yamane (sociology, Notre Dame Univ.), who made editorial revisions and arranged for its publication. The book's premise is that the decline in the number of priests is the engine driving the social forces creating pressure for structural change in the Catholic Church. Schoenherr argues that the Church needs to lift its ban on ordaining married men-a move he sees as the inevitable result of irreversible historic trends. Such a transformation would serve to strengthen "authentic religion" within Catholicism and would dismantle one of the strongest supports for patriarchy in human society. Though the ideas here will be controversial among Catholics, this is an important study and one of the stronger books to take on this subject in the past year. Recommended for all seminary and academic libraries and for most public libraries.-David I. Fulton, Coll. of St. Elizabeth, Morristown, NJ Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

Book Details

Published
September 1, 2002
Publisher
New York : Oxford University Press, 2002.
Pages
320
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780195082593

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