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Peter Phan

  • Directory On Popular Piety And The Liturgy

    $24.95

    After suffering an eclipse during the post-Vatican II liturgical reform, popular piety has regained its vital role in the spiritual life of Catholics. In response to its re-emergence, the Congregation for divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments issued the Directory on Popular Piety and the Liturgy on December 17, 2001. The Directory was written for bishops and their collaborators as a pastoral guide addressing the relationship between liturgy and popular piety. Directory on Popular Piety and the Liturgy: Principles and Guidelines, A Commentary by Peter C. Phan provides a chapter-by-chapter commentary on the Directory, summarizing its contents, highlighting its strengths and weaknesses, and offering suggestions on how devotional practices can be implemented in the United States. For liturgists, religious educators and students, pastoral leaders, and other interested Christians, this volume is helpful toward promoting a vigorous and authentic devotional life in the community, while respecting the preeminence of liturgical worship.

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  • Being Religious Interreligiously

    $40.00

    SKU (ISBN): 9781570755651ISBN10: 1570755655Peter PhanBinding: Trade PaperPublished: October 2004Publisher: Orbis Books Print On Demand Product

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  • Many Faces One Church

    $34.00

    Preface
    Mark Stelzer
    Introduction: The New Faces Of The American Catholic Church
    Peter C. Phan
    A New Ecclesial Reality And A New Way Of Doing Theology: Heralding A Pentecost
    Mark Stelzer
    Thinking About The Church: The Gift Of Cultural Diversity To Theology
    Kevin F. Burke
    Black Catholics In The United States: A Subversive Memory
    Diana Hayes
    Reflecting On America As A Single Entity: Catholicism And U.S. Latinos
    Roberto S. Goizueta
    Devotion To Our Lady Of Guadalupe Among Mexican Americans
    Jeanette Rodriguez
    “Presence And Prominence In The Lord’s House”: Asians And Pacific People In The American Catholic Church
    Peter C. Phan
    Understanding Church And Theology In The Caribbean Today
    Gerald Boodoo
    Bibliography

    About The Contributors

    Additional Info
    Many Faces, One Church: Cultural Diversity and the American Catholic Experience both captures and facilitates a seismic shift in the who, what, where, when, why, and how of Catholic theology today. Along with a diverse group of theologians who represent the many faces of the church, editors Peter C. Phan and Diana Hayes recast the story of the church in America by including immigrant groups either forgotten or ignored and, in light of these new and not-so-new voices, retooling the theological framework of Catholicism itself.

    That the American Catholic Church is an “immigrant church” is not news. What is news, however, is how diverse the immigrant church really is and how much work there is to be done to include their voices in theological discourse and training. Beyond the German and Irish immigrants, what of other European immigrant groups such as the Italians, Poles, Lithuanians, Czechs, Slovaks, and Eastern-rite Catholics? Where are the stories of the older presence of native Mexican, Native American, and African-American Catholics in this country? And more recently, of Asian-American Catholics, especially the Chinese, the Japanese, and the Filipinos, of the nineteenth and early twentieth century? And more recently still, Catholic immigrants have come from El Salvador, Guatemala, Vietnam, Cambodia, Korea, India, and the Pacific Islands. What impact are these immigrants having on American society and religious groups?

    Many Faces, One Church is a profound attempt to address these key questions and their implications for the Catholic way of being church, worshipping, and practicing theology. The result of three years of conferences sponsored by Elms College exploring the “new faces” of the American Catholic Church, this thoughtful collection highlights opportunities and challenges lying ahead as the American Church tries to respond to the continuing presence of new immigrants in its midst. Many Faces, One Church is a beginning of a long but exciting journey in which the strangers welcomed today into the bosom of the American Catholic Church will be themselves the hosts to welcome, with equal warmth and generosity, the new strangers into their midst so that hosts and guests are truly one.

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  • Many Faces One Church

    $104.00

    Preface
    Mark Stelzer
    Introduction: The New Faces Of The American Catholic Church
    Peter C. Phan
    A New Ecclesial Reality And A New Way Of Doing Theology: Heralding A Pentecost
    Mark Stelzer
    Thinking About The Church: The Gift Of Cultural Diversity To Theology
    Kevin F. Burke
    Black Catholics In The United States: A Subversive Memory
    Diana Hayes
    Reflecting On America As A Single Entity: Catholicism And U.S. Latinos
    Roberto S. Goizueta
    Devotion To Our Lady Of Guadalupe Among Mexican Americans
    Jeanette Rodriguez
    “Presence And Prominence In The Lord’s House”: Asians And Pacific People In The American Catholic Church
    Peter C. Phan
    Understanding Church And Theology In The Caribbean Today
    Gerald Boodoo
    Bibliography

    About The Contributors

    Additional Info
    Many Faces, One Church: Cultural Diversity and the American Catholic Experience both captures and facilitates a seismic shift in the who, what, where, when, why, and how of Catholic theology today. Along with a diverse group of theologians who represent the many faces of the church, editors Peter C. Phan and Diana Hayes recast the story of the church in America by including immigrant groups either forgotten or ignored and, in light of these new and not-so-new voices, retooling the theological framework of Catholicism itself.

    That the American Catholic Church is an “immigrant church” is not news. What is news, however, is how diverse the immigrant church really is and how much work there is to be done to include their voices in theological discourse and training. Beyond the German and Irish immigrants, what of other European immigrant groups such as the Italians, Poles, Lithuanians, Czechs, Slovaks, and Eastern-rite Catholics? Where are the stories of the older presence of native Mexican, Native American, and African-American Catholics in this country? And more recently, of Asian-American Catholics, especially the Chinese, the Japanese, and the Filipinos, of the nineteenth and early twentieth century? And more recently still, Catholic immigrants have come from El Salvador, Guatemala, Vietnam, Cambodia, Korea, India, and the Pacific Islands. What impact are these immigrants having on American society and religious groups?

    Many Faces, One Church is a profound attempt to address these key questions and their implications for the Catholic way of being church, worshipping, and practicing theology. The result of three years of conferences sponsored by Elms College exploring the “new faces” of the American Catholic Church, this thoughtful collection highlights opportunities and challenges lying ahead as the American Church tries to respond to the continuing presence of new immigrants in its midst. Many Faces, One Church is a beginning of a long but exciting journey in which the strangers welcomed today into the bosom of the American Catholic Church will be themselves the hosts to welcome, with equal warmth and generosity, the new strangers into their midst so that hosts and guests are truly one.

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  • Christianity With An Asian Face

    $34.00

    11 Chapters

    Additional Info
    Drawing on the twin themes of liberation and inculturation, Peter Phan explicates a new theology forged in the cauldron of the encounter between two vastly different cultures. He devotes particular attention to the meaning of Christ for Asian Americans and the emergence of new christological titles Jesus as Eldest Son and Ancestor.
    Phan also explores his personal roots to sketch the contours for Vietnamese American theology, an expression of faith caught between the Dragon and the Eagle.

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  • Journeys At The Margin

    $19.95

    How does the experience of being an immigrant, an ethnic minority person on the margins of society, affect one’s way of doing theology? In Journeys at the Margin prominent Asian-American theologians reflect on how being an Asian and a North American has shaped the way they understand the Christian story.

    Asian Americans, having roots in Asia, do not fully belong either to America or Asia. They find themselves straddling two different world cultures, sharing something of both but belonging entirely to neither. Thus, their marginality can best be understood in terms of their experience of living “in-between” two cultures, that of the immigrant and that of the dominant group, and being “in-both” of these cultures-and, ultimately, being “in-beyond” the two cultures altogether.

    Coming from different parts of the Far East and nourished by diverse Christian traditions, the contributors to Journeys at the Margin bring to their work richly divergent perspectives, resources, and methods. More than an anthology of personal stories, this collection of essays develops the emerging theological themes (including the contributors’ visions of a new America) out of their experience. What binds these highly varied essays is their authors’ common journeys at the margin.

    As the United States becomes increasingly multiethnic and multicultural at the threshold of a new millennium, Journeys at the Margin offers useful suggestions on how to meet the challenge of cultural diversity in both Church and society.

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