Why Be a Catholic
By (Author) Mark Dooley
Continuum Publishing Corporation
Continuum Publishing Corporation
23rd June 2011
United States
General
Non Fiction
Religious social and pastoral thought and activity
Christian life and practice
248.482
Paperback
136
Width 129mm, Height 198mm
168g
The Catholic Church has never been so deeply immersed in crisis - crisis of authority, priestly scandal, celibacy, hierarchy - stretching right up to the Vatican itself. Most people in authority are keeping quiet or squabbling among themselves. Mark Dooley is a Professor of Philosophy who is also a serious commentator, journalist and broadcaster. He has written a book of hope for those who have none. It is, he argues, only when the sacramental life of the local parishes is revitalised that renewal in the Church can be achieved.
[a] beautifully written book... In the times in which we live, to write as Dooley has done takes courage. As you read this book you may be edified, you may be enraged; one thing you won't be is bored. -- Irish Mail on Sunday
Title mentioned in Irish Daily Mail
[Mark Dooley is] well-qualified to get to the heart of the matters that trouble so many today: why bother with being a Catholic. -- The Irish Catholic
Author interview on The Last Word (Today FM)
Why Be a Catholic courageously confronts what must be done if Catholicism is to survive as a religion of redemption. -- Eoghan Harris, Sunday Independent
Title mentioned in author article in Irish Daily Mail
Author interview on Highland Radio
Author interview on Spirit Radio
Author interview in The Catholic Herald
This is a timely book that seeks to revitalise a faith that it all too apt to flag in this time of crisis. Dooley faces up to the clerical sex-abuse scandals, but shows us a church that still keeps the flame of faith alive... [his] heartfelt plea deserves to be heard. -- The Tablet
Author article in the Catholic Herald.
Mark Dooley has held lectureships at the National University of Ireland, Maynooth, and at University College Dublin where he was John Henry Newman Scholar of Theology. From 2003-2006, he wrote a controversial column on foreign affairs for the Sunday Independent. Since 2006, he has written for the Irish Daily Mail. Dooley is also a regular broadcaster on Irish radio and television, and has served as a political speech writer. He is author of The Politics of Exodus: Kierkegaard's Ethics of Responsibility (2001), The Philosophy of Derrida (2007), and Roger Scruton: The Philosopher on Dover Beach (2009). He is editor of Questioning Ethics (1999), Questioning God (2001), A Passion for the Impossible (2003), and The Roger Scruton Reader (2009).