"Simon Kim expands the story of the Catholic Church in the United States beyond the more familiar narratives of European and Latin American immigration to show the unique gifts that Asian Catholics bring. More than just history or sociology, Kim narrates the confluence of Vatican II, immigration reform, and the civil rights movement in the 1960s as movements of the Holy Spirit, the fruits of which we are just beginning to appreciate today. This book is a timely and beautiful contribution to unity through diversity in the US Catholic Church."William T. Cavanaugh, DePaul University
"This book is a careful reflection of the courageous theological journey from Vatican II to its impact on Asian immigrant communities in North America. It is truly a development to be celebrated."Wonsuk Ma, Oxford Centre for Mission Studies, Executive Director, David Yonggi Cho Research Tutor of Global Christianity
"This book is small if measured by pages alone; its brevity, however, is no obstacle to its largeness of vision and enthusiasm. The book is a welcome contribution to contemporary ecclesiology."Richard Lennan, <i>Theological Studies</i>
"As he did in his previous book <i>Memory and Honor</i>, in<i> A World Church in Our Backyard</i>, Simon C. Kim has given us a book that we really needed! Kim begins to fill in the problematic gaps in our theological and cultural understanding of contemporary immigration and cultural diversity in the United States, especially in reference to the smaller but more rapidly growing migrations from East Asia and the Pacific. For Kim, Vatican II is a critical transition point not only in the Church's approach to the world (as often assumed and here explored in theological depth) but also in the US Church's approach to immigration and immigrants. He invites us to examine both of these re-orientations not just as watershed moments for Church leadership but as changes in Catholic ecclesiology itself. The book also examines the immigration narratives of Korean, Vietnamese, and Filipino Catholics in the United States, presenting them without surrendering to essentialist generalizations but also engaging them critically in the search for a unity that is not uniformity, that respects our ever-evolving cultural differences."Brett C. Hoover, Assistant Professor of Theological Studies, Loyola Marymount University
Contents
Foreword by Robert Schreiter ix
Preface xiii
Acknowledgments xv
Introduction xvii
Chapter 1
Important Themes of the Second Vatican Council (1962–1965) 1
Foundations for the Local Church 1
Chapter 2
On the Fiftieth Anniversary of Gaudium et Spes 16
The Movement of the Spirit in the Church 16
Chapter 3
Emerging World Church after Vatican II 29
Conciliar Reception in the Korean Catholic Experience 29
Chapter 4
On the Fiftieth Anniversary of the 1965 Immigration Act 38
The Movement of the Spirit in the World 38
The Civil Rights Movement and Equality for All in the United States 44
Chapter 5
Pre–Vatican II Immigration and Post–Vatican II Immigration 49
An Occasion for Re-imaging the US Migrant Church 49
Chapter 6
Toward a Deeper Understanding of Biblical Promise 58
The Vietnamese American Catholic Experience 58
Chapter 7
Toward an Ecclesiology of Resettlement 79
The Filipino American Catholic Experience 79
Chapter 8
Toward the Need for Theological Memory 96
The Korean American Catholic Experience 96
Conclusion 111
Unity through Diversity 111
An Ongoing Pentecost: An Ecclesial Gift 113
Notes 117
Bibliography 123
Index 127