No Closure: Catholic Practice and Boston's Parish Shutdowns

No Closure: Catholic Practice and Boston's Parish Shutdowns

by John C. Seitz
No Closure: Catholic Practice and Boston's Parish Shutdowns

No Closure: Catholic Practice and Boston's Parish Shutdowns

by John C. Seitz

eBook

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Overview

In 2004 the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston announced plans to close or merge more than eighty parish churches. Scores of Catholics—28,000, by the archdiocese’s count—would be asked to leave their parishes. The closures came just two years after the first major revelations of clergy sexual abuse and its cover up. Wounds from this profound betrayal of trust had not healed.

In the months that followed, distraught parishioners occupied several churches in opposition to the closure decrees. Why did these accidental activists resist the parish closures, and what do their actions and reactions tell us about modern American Catholicism? Drawing on extensive fieldwork and with careful attention to Boston’s Catholic history, Seitz tells the stories of resisting Catholics in their own words, and illuminates how they were drawn to reconsider the past and its meanings. We hear them reflect on their parishes and the sacred objects and memories they hold, on the way their personal histories connect with the history of their neighborhood churches, and on the structures of authority in Catholicism.

Resisters describe how they took their parishes and religious lives into their own hands, and how they struggled with everyday theological questions of respect and memory; with relationships among religion, community, place, and comfort; and with the meaning of the local church. No Closure is a story of local drama and pathos, but also a path of inquiry into broader questions of tradition and change as they shape Catholics’ ability to make sense of their lives in a secular world.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674975248
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 06/07/2011
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 322
File size: 641 KB

About the Author

John C. Seitz is Assistant Professor of Theology and Associate Director for Lincoln Center of the Francis and Ann Curran Center for American Catholic Studies at Fordham University.

Table of Contents

Contents Introduction: Closings 1. The Pasts Living in People 2. Divergent Histories: Change and the Making of Resistors, 1950–2004 3. “What do we have?” Locales and Objects in the Hands of the People of God 4. “This is unrest territory”: Orthodoxy and Opposition in Resistors’ Practice of the Parish 5. Openings Epilogue Notes Acknowledgments Index

What People are Saying About This

Amy Koehlinger

A compelling ethnography. Seitz is present, but never overwhelms the voices and perspectives of the Catholics at the center of the story. A fine history of Boston's parishes and neighborhoods and a nuanced portrait of the complex legacy of the Second Vatican Council in modern Catholic life.
Amy Koehlinger, Florida State University

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