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North American
II — The Church
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 September 2024
Extract
The figures of course are formidable. And the European enquirer can be mesmerized by the catalogue of Catholic achievement in the United States: a population now of forty-five million, with 55,000 priests, 170,000 religious sisters (of whom nearly 100,000 teach in schools), 267 universities and colleges with more than 300,000 students, 10,000 elementary schools with over four million pupils, 850 hospitals of every sort in which more than fourteen million patients were treated in 1960. In the same year nearly 132,000 converts were received into the Church.
The statistics matter, if only because they are the staring facts that declare the vitality of the Church in the only way it can be externally measured. They indicate something too, of the astounding generosity of American Catholics, who, with no help from public funds, have built up a system of churches and schools unparalleled in the Church’s history. But the Church is not merely a corporation to be surveyed in terms of its efficiency or of the successful image it presents to the world. It is easy for the visitor from an older and more casual society to wonder a little at the signs of a high-powered organization—the discreet hum of the electric typewriters in the carpeted rooms of the chancery offices, the multitude of monsignori bearing their hide brief-cases, the jet black Chryslers—and to see in it all the ecclesiastical equivalent of the sort of business set-up commended by Fortune magazine.
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- Research Article
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- Copyright
- Copyright © 1962 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers
References
1 In The Yale Review, Summer 1959, ‘The Changing Image of Catholicism in America 3?’
2 In his Frontiers in American Catltolicism, The Mac& Company ofNew York, gs, an excellent discussion of this, and many related problems.
3 Quotedin ‘American Catholicism in 1960’, American Benedictine Review, June 1960, by Mgr John Tracy Ellis.
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