The Catholic Church A Short History

by
Edition: Reprint
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2003-01-07
Publisher(s): Modern Library
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Summary

In this extraordinary book, the controversial and profoundly influential Hans Kung chronicles the Roman Catholic Church's role as a world power throughout history. Along the way, he examines the great schismsbetween East and West, and Catholic and Protestantas well as the evolving role of the papacy, the stories of the great reforming popes, and the expansion of a global church infrastructure. The book concludes with a searching assessment of how the Catholic faith will confront the immense challenges posed in the new millennium by those seeking reform of traditional strictures.

Author Biography

<b>Hans Küng</b> obtained a doctorate in theology from the Sorbonne in 1957. In 1962 he was named a theological consultant for the Second Vatican Council by Pope John XXIII, and he played a major role in the writing of the documents of Vatican II, which radically modernized key areas of Catholic teaching. The author of many books, he lives and teaches in Tübingen, Germany.

Table of Contents

Chronology xi
Introduction: The Catholic Church in Conflict xvii
I. THE BEGINNINGS OF THE CHURCH 1(14)
Founded by Jesus?
3(2)
The Meaning of ``Church''
5(1)
Was Jesus Catholic?
6(2)
The Earliest Church
8(1)
Peter
9(3)
A Fellowship Made Up of Jews
12(1)
The Break Between Jews and Christians
13(2)
II. THE EARLY CATHOLIC CHURCH 15(18)
Paul
18(1)
The Pauline Churches
19(2)
The Birth of the Catholic Hierarchy
21(2)
A Persecuted Minority Endures
23(10)
III. THE IMPERIAL CATHOLIC CHURCH 33(22)
A Universal Religion for the Universal Empire
35(2)
The State Church
37(3)
The Bishop of Rome Claims Supremacy
40(4)
The Father of Western Theology
44(5)
The Trinity Reinterpreted
49(2)
The City of God
51(4)
IV. THE PAPAL CHURCH 55(22)
The First Real Pope
57(3)
Errant Popes, Papal Forgeries, and Papal Trials
60(2)
Christianity Becomes Germanic
62(2)
Medieval Piety
64(3)
Islam
67(1)
A State for the Pope
68(2)
The Western Equation: Christian = Catholic = Roman
70(2)
Catholic Morality
72(1)
The Legal Basis for Future Romanization
73(4)
V. THE CHURCH IS SPLIT 77(32)
A Revolution ``from Above''
79(5)
A Romanized Catholic Church
84(10)
Heretics and the Inquisition
94(7)
The Great Theological Synthesis
101(3)
The Ongoing Life of Christians
104(5)
VI. REFORM, REFORMATION, OR COUNTER-REFORMATION? 109(30)
The End of Papal Domination
111(3)
Thwarted Reform
114(4)
Renaissance, but Not for the Church
118(2)
Reformation
120(2)
Was the Program of the Reformation Catholic?
122(3)
Responsibility for the Split
125(9)
The Roman Catholic Counter-Reformation
134(5)
VII. THE CATHOLIC CHURCH VERSUS MODERNITY 139(30)
A New Time
141(3)
The Scientific and Philosophical Revolution: Reason
144(2)
The Church and the Copernican Shift
146(1)
The Cultural and Theological Revolution: Progress
147(2)
The Consequences of the Enlightenment for the Church
149(2)
The Political Revolution: Nation
151(1)
The Church and the Revolution
152(4)
The Technological and Industrial Revolution: Industry
156(3)
A Sweeping Condemnation of Modernity---The Council of the Counter-Enlightenment
159(10)
VIII. THE CATHOLIC CHURCH---PRESENT AND FUTURE 169(34)
Silence about the Holocaust
176(5)
The Most Significant Pope of the Twentieth Century
181(6)
Restoration Instead of Renewal
187(3)
Betrayal of the Council
190(6)
New Departures at the Grass Roots
196(4)
A Vatican III with John XXIV
200(3)
Conclusion: Which Church Has a Future? 203(6)
Epilogue: Can the Catholic Church Save Itself? 209(6)
Index 215(14)
Discussion Guide 229

Excerpts

As the author of The Catholic Church: A Short History, I want to say quite openly, right at the beginning, that despite all my experiences of how merciless the Roman system can be, the Catholic Church, this fellowship of believers, has remained my spiritual home to the present day.

That has consequences for this book. Of course, the history of the Catholic Church can also be told in a different way. A neutral description of it can be given by experts in religion or historians who are not personally involved in this history. Or it can be described by a hermeneutical philosopher or theologian, concerned with understanding, for whom to understand everything is also to forgive everything. However, I have written this history as someone who is involved in it. I can understand phenomena like intellectual repression and the Inquisition, the burning of witches, the persecution of Jews, and discrimination against women from the historical context, but that does not mean that I can therefore forgive them in any way. I write as one who takes the side of those who became victims or already in their time recognized and censured particular church practices as being un-Christian.

To be quite specific and quite personal, I write as one who was born into a Catholic family, in the little Swiss Catholic town of Sursee, and who went to school in the Catholic city of Lucerne.

I then lived for seven whole years in Rome in the elite papal Collegium Germanicum et Hungaricum and studied philosophy and theology at the Pontifical Gregorian University. When I was ordained priest I celebrated the Eucharist for the first time in St. Peter's and gave my first sermon to a congregation of Swiss Guards.

After gaining my doctorate in theology at the Institut Catholique in Paris, I worked for two years as a pastor in Lucerne. Then, in 1960, at the age of thirty-two, I became professor of Catholic theology at the University of Tiibingen.

I took part in the Second Vatican Council, between 1962 and 1965, as an expert nominated by John XXIII, taught in Tiibingen for two decades, and founded the Institute for Ecumenical Research, of which I was director.

In 1979 1 then had personal experience of the Inquisition under another pope. My permission to teach was withdrawn by the church, but nevertheless I retained my chair and my institute (which was separated from the Catholic faculty).

For two further decades I remained unswervingly faithful to my church in critical loyalty, and to the present day I have remained professor of ecumenical theology and a Catholic priest in good standing.

I affirm the papacy for the Catholic Church, but at the same time indefatigably call for a radical reform of it in accordance with the criterion of the gospel.

With a history and a Catholic past like this, should I not be capable of writing a history of the Catholic Church which is both committed and objective? Perhaps it could prove even more exciting to hear the story of this church from an insider who has been involved in such a way. Of course, I shall be just as concerned to be objective as any neutral person (if there really are such people in matters of religion). However, I am convinced that personal commitment and matter-of-fact objectivity can as well be combined in a history of the church as they can in the history of a nation.


From the Hardcover edition.

Excerpted from The Catholic Church: A Short History by Hans Kung
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