This remarkable history of a beloved Upper West Side church is in many respects a microcosm of the history of the Catholic Church in New York City. Here is a captivating study of a distinctive Catholic community on the Upper West Side of Manhattan, an area long noted for its liberal Catholic sympathies in contrast to the generally conservative attitude that has pervaded the archdiocese of New York. The author traces this liberal Catholic dimension of Upper West Side Catholics to a long if slender line of progressive priests that stretches back to the Civil War era, casting renewed light on their legacy: liturgical reform, concern for social justice, and a preferential option for the poor long before this phrase found its way into official church documents. In recent years this progressivism has demonstrated itself in a willingness to extend a warm welcome to LGBT Catholics, most notably at the Church of the Ascension on West 107th Street. Ascension was one of the first diocesan parishes in the archdiocese to offer a spiritual home to LGBT Catholics and continues to sponsor the Ascension Gay Fellowship Group. Exploring the dynamic history of the Catholic Church of the Ascension, this engaging and accessible book illustrates the unusual characteristics that have defined Catholicism on the Upper West Side for the better part of the last century and sheds light on similar congregations within the greater metropolis. In many respects, the history of Ascension parish exemplifies the history of Catholicism in New York City over the past two centuries because of the powerful presence of two defining characteristics: immigration and neighborhood change. The Church of the Ascension, in fact, is a showcase of the success of urban ethnic Catholicism. It was founded as a small German parish, developed into a large Irish parish, suffered a precipitous decline during the crime wave that devastated the Upper West Side from the 1960s to the 1980s, and was rescued from near-extinction by the influx of Puerto Rican and Dominican Catholics. It has emerged during the last several decades as a flourishing multi-ethnic, bilingual parish that is now experiencing the restored prosperity and prominence of the Upper West Side as one of Manhattan’s most integrated and popular residential neighborhoods.
The new altar was consecrated by Auxiliary Bishop Stephen J. Donahue in a two - and - a - half - hour ceremony on the morning of March 15 , 1937.40 Now that he had a newly refurbished sanctuary to show off , Hickey decided to celebrate ...
Francis , 175 Dukakis , Governor Michael , 197 Dunne , Governor Edward F. , 127 Dunne , Finley Peter , go Dunne , John Gregory , 179 , 186 Dynamite campaign , 163 Dahl , Robert , 118 Dail , the , 166 , 168 Daley , Richard J. , 173–74 ...
SAINT JOAN OF NEW YORK is a novel about a math prodigy who becomes obsessed with discovering the Theory of Everything.
Catholic Workers made an appeal for the United States to accept those who were trying to escape what was daily ... Forest wrote : Opposition to Hitler led the New York Catholic Worker community to the docks on the Upper West Side in ...
A Guide to Manhattan's Houses of Worship David W. Dunlap. and helped me understand the origins and ... Dr. Byron E. Shafer, Tim Stone, Judith Stonehill, Edgar Tafel, Scott Trotter, Daniel J. Wakin, Maxine West, and Craig R. Whitney.
They're not anything like the Upper West Side or Park Slope in Brooklyn , where most reporters live . There was a really good example of that on the front page of the New York Times , in which the reporter expresses real surprise that ...
eye on the president (i.e., Ronald Reagan), Roman Catholic political conservatives set their papacy. ... As strategic as Rome appeared in relation to either the mainline Protestants' headquarters on the Upper West Side or the ...
The Catholic architect Joseph Murphy, the artist Emil Frei Jr., and Bertrand Abell, CP, the pastor of St. Ann's parish in Normandy, Missouri, arrived with some trepidation to visit the newly installed archbishop of St. Louis, ...
This volume brings together some of the very best commentary on a wide range of recent events and controversies by some of the very best Catholic writers in the English language: Ralph McInerny, Michael Novak, Fr. James V. Schall, Hadley ...
Walter Stuhr, Lawrence Witmer. The Edge of the Ghetto: A Study of Church involvement in Community Organization (New York: Seabury Press, 1966), 23; Saul Aiinsky, “The Urban łmmigrant,'' presented at Notre Dame conference on “Roman ...