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What does it mean to be Catholic and American?

 

The question of faith encountering culture is a perennial and universal one played out over two millennia in every corner of the globe where the church has been planted. Perhaps at no time in the history of the church in the United States did it seem so urgent than at the end of the nineteenth century and the beginning of the twentieth. America was changing, spreading out over a continent, transforming itself from a rural, second class power into an urban industrial colossus and a premier player in world politics. The Catholic people of the United States were changing too, matching the nation's progress across the continent step by step, and growing from 8% of the nation's people to 17%. Much of that growth was through immigration: the Germans and the Irish, followed by French Canadians, Italians, Poles, Slovaks, Slovenes and others from southern or eastern Europe. But a new American born Catholic generation, the sons and daughters of Catholic immigrants, was growing to maturity then too, struggling to reconcile their European ancestries with their American birthright. For them the question, "What does it mean to be Catholic and American?," was especially pressing. As the new generation emerged, a new pope, Leo XIII, ascended the throne of Peter, and himself sought to confront the new industrial world emerging all over the west without sacrificing the essentials of the faith.

As the church in America turned toward a new century, then, it confronted the question: what does it mean to be Catholic and American?
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From East to West

A Diverse Church

A New Generation

A New Leader in Rome

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America's Bishops

Issues in the Encounter

Catholic University

Epilogue

 


Department of Archives, Manuscripts, and Museum Collections
and the
Department of Rare Books and Special Collections

Mullen Library, The Catholic University of America
Washington, DC
January 10, 1999 to August 21, 1999

This display 
has been selected and arranged by
Timothy Meagher,
University Archivist and Museum Director, 
using material from 
the collection and donations
from the community. 

Site created by Kevin Gunn,  M.A.,  M.L.I.S

Credits                 Video Presentation


smalogo.jpg (2197 bytes)All contents copyright © 1999-2000, The Catholic University Of America. All rights reserved.