This is a daring analysis of the attempt of the Second Vatican Council to bring forth a true way of being Christian in the modern world. McCarthy (emer., philosophy, Vassar College) has studied modernity and the Catholic Church’s responses to it. The book analyzes the Catholic Church’s own self-understanding and then applies this to the situation of the world today, speculating on what ways a Christian can adapt to the “signs of the times” while still being faithful to the true identity of the Catholic Church, what the subtitle refers to as “critical belonging.” McCarthy has studied this subject deeply for his entire career, and this seems his final analysis of the situation. That being so, it will likely prove most useful to scholars, researchers, and philosophers interested in the situation of the postmodern West. Those interested in a comprehensive primer on the subject of living authentically in the postmodern West might begin with Charles Taylor’s The Ethics of Authenticity (1992). A more explicitly Christian-centered interpretation that asks similar questions is Julián Carrón Peréz’s Disarming Beauty (2017).
Summing Up: Highly recommended. Graduate students, researchers, faculty, professionals.
CHOICE
An indefatigable participant in Catholic intellectual life, Michael McCarthy brings his informed sensitivity to bear on following Francis as a mature person of faith in a world gone awry. Abetted by two papacies which effectively sidelined Vatican II, we are now recalled to the teaching and practice of a church council obscured by controversy, and a gospel often compromised by the same. What a joy for us to celebrate with such clarity and focus.
- David B. Burrell, University of Notre Dame,
The underlying conviction, concern, and hope that Michael H. McCarthy clearly expresses throughout this book is that the world of the 21st century needs the teachings of Christ. While this may sound ‘offensive’ to non-believers and non-Christians, McCarthy is not ‘preaching.’ Rather, he is questioning, exploring, and offering possibilities of ways of thinking that shed light on the significant challenges facing us all, and especially the young, in our current and future world.
I believe the major contribution of the book is McCarthy’s insightful reflections where he draws on extensive and impressive sources, raises critical questions, and reveals an impressive scholarship. In a civilization that Julia Kristeva describes as having ‘abandoned the meaning of the Absolute of Meaning,’ McCarthy presents another possibility, a possibility of hope, not naïve but critically reflective, in an enduring Meaning. McCarthy manages to face squarely the challenges of modernity (and of post modernity) and continues to hope. In the end, this is what he believes is the importance of the Christian message.
- Christine Jamieson, Concordia University,
Michael Halpin McCarthy’s Toward a catholic Christianity offers a compelling account of how one might deftly combine intellectual seriousness and ethical sensitivity with creative fidelity to the Catholic Church. McCarthy’s vision of Christian discipleship continues to extend the path blazed by his illustrious predecessors John Henry Newman, Bernard Lonergan, S.J., and Charles Taylor. Few scholars would be able to produce a work that reflects such historical learning, philosophical depth, and religious wisdom. McCarthy’s description of ‘critical belonging’ captures beautifully what it means for one to love the church today—not naïvely, but as an adult. If the church drives you crazy, you ought to read this book; if the church does not drive you crazy, you ought to read this book.
- Stephen J. Pope, Boston College,