Butler's Saints of the Third Millennium: Butler's Lives of the Saints: Supplementary Volume
By (Author) Paul Burns
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Burns & Oates Ltd
15th June 2005
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Theology
Spirituality and religious experience
Roman Catholicism, Roman Catholic Church
270.0922
Paperback
320
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
454g
Pope John Paul II has proclaimed an unprecedented number of new saints and blesseds in the 25 years of his pontificate and shows few signs of slowing the process, despite the criticism from at least one cardinal that the altars are getting 'a little crowded'. The proclamations have been made in a large number of countries, from which the new saints and blesseds have come. This reflects a deliberate policy of strengthening the faith of local churches against the threats from totalitarianism, secularism, Pentecostalism, etc. (the Vatican tends to see most of the 'outside' world as a threat). There has also been a deliberate policy to seek more examples of holiness from outside the ranks of clergy and religious. The twentieth century has been seen as the century of martyrs, largely those of Nazism and Communism, and they feature prominently: those of nominally Catholic military regimes are less favoured. This volume covers a four-year period in Butler's style. Blesseds appearing in the 1995-2000 volumes who have since been canonized have their entries updated and expanded as necessary; new blesseds are featured with as much information as is available on them. The 80+ entries range from 200 to 3,000 words in length.
'Burns is factual, sensible, workmanlike, detached' -- Francis Phillips * Catholic Herald *
'Burns is factual, sensible, workmanlike, detached' -- Francis Phillips * Catholic Herald *
Paul Burns is the editor of Butler's Lives of the Saints and author of New Concise Butler. He is a publisher and editor by profession.