
The Catholic Church Stands At The Forefront Of An Emergent Majority-minority America. Parish And Place Tells The Story Of How America's Largest Religion Is Responding At The Local Level To Unprecedented Cultural, Racial, Linguistic, Ideological, And Political Diversification. Specifically, It Explores Bishops' Use Of Personal Parishes - Parishes Formally Established Not On The Basis Of Territory, But Purpose. Today's Personal Parishes Serve An Array Of Catholics Drawn Together By Shared Identities And Preferences, Rather Than Shared Neighborhoods. They Allow Catholic Leaders To Act Upon The Perceived Need For Named, Specialist Organizations Alongside The More Common Territorial Parish That Serves All In Its Midst. Parish And Place Documents The American Catholic Church's Movement Away From National Parishes And Towards Personal Parishes As A Renewed Organizational Form. Tricia Bruce Uses In-depth Interviews And National Survey Data To Examine The Rise And Rationale Behind New Parishes For The Traditional Latin Mass, For Vietnamese Catholics, For Tourists, And More. Featuring Insights From Bishops, Priests, And Diocesan Leaders Throughout The United States, This Book Offers A Rare View Of Institutional Decision Making From The Top. Parish And Place Demonstrates Structural Responses To Diversity, Exploring Just How Far Fragmentation Can Go Before It Challenges Unity.
How does the American Catholic Church utilize personal parishes to navigate the complexities of an increasingly diverse, multicultural, and ideologically fragmented society? Tricia Colleen Bruce, a sociologist specializing in religion and institutional change, investigates the shift from traditional territorial parishes to specialized organizational forms. By analyzing the administrative rationale behind these decisions, the book argues that the Church is actively restructuring its local presence to accommodate specific identities and preferences rather than geographic proximity.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars of religious sociology identify this work as a significant contribution to the study of institutional adaptation within the Catholic Church. Experts frequently note the clarity of the author's organizational framework and the value of the primary source interviews in understanding modern diocesan governance.
Page Count:
288
Publication Date:
2017-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190270330
ISBN-13:
9780190270339
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!