In this Book

The American Jesuits: A History

Book
Raymond A. Schroth
2007
Published by: NYU Press
summary

Choice Outstanding Academic Title for 2008

A broad and compelling look at the impact of the largest Catholic order of men on American culture


With infectious energy and a genuine gift for storytelling, Raymond A. Schroth recounts the history of Jesuits in the United States. The American Jesuits isn’t simply a book for Catholics; it’s for anyone who loves a well-told historical tale. For more than 450 years, Jesuit priests have traveled the globe out of a religious commitment to serve others. Their order, the Society of Jesus, is the largest religious order of men in the Catholic Church, with more than 20,000 members around the world and almost 3,000 in the United States. It is one of the more liberal orders in the Church, taking very public stands in the U.S. on behalf of social justice causes such as the promotion of immigrants’ rights and humanitarian aid, including assistance to Africa’s poor, and against American involvement in “unjust wars.” Jesuits have played an important part in Americanizing the Catholic Church and in preparing Catholic immigrants for inclusion into American society.

Starting off with the first Jesuit to reach the New World—he was promptly murdered on the Florida coast—Schroth focuses on the key periods of the Jesuit experience in the Americas, beginning with the era of European explorers, many of whom were accompanied by Jesuits and some of whom were Jesuits themselves. Suppressed around the time of the American Revolution, the Society experienced resurgence in the nineteenth century, arriving in the U.S. along with waves of Catholic immigrants and establishing a network of high schools and universities. In the mid-twentieth century, the Society transformed itself to serve an urbanizing nation.

Schroth is not blind to the Society’s shortcomings and not all of his story reflects well on the Jesuits. However, as he reminds readers, Jesuits are not gods and they don’t dwell in mountaintop monasteries. Rather, they are imperfect men who work in a messy world to “find God in all things” and to help their fellow men and women do the same.
A quintessential American tale of men willing to take risks — for Indians, blacks, immigrants, and the poor, and to promote a loving picture of God—The American Jesuits offers a broad and compelling look at the impact of this 400-year-old international order on American culture and the culture’s impact on the Jesuits.

Table of Contents

Cover

Contents

pp. vii-viii

Acknowledgments

pp. ix-x

Preface

pp. xi

I In the Beginning

Prologue

pp. 3-14

1 The World Scene

pp. 15-20

2 The Maryland Tradition

pp. 21-27

3 The Pioneers

pp. 28-46

II Suppression and Return

4 Death and Resurrection

pp. 49-57

5 The New America

pp. 58-76

6 A Nation and Faith Divided

pp. 77-85

7 Schoolmasters and Preachers

pp. 86-101

8 The Turning Point

pp. 102-112

III Engaging the World

9 The Social Question

pp. 115-130

10 At War

pp. 131-145

11 The Cold War

pp. 146-169

12 The Golden Age

pp. 170-196

IV The Modern Society Emerges

13 Freedom from Fear

pp. 199-216

14 The Arrupe Era

pp. 217-258

15 Into the 21st Century

pp. 259-284

Notes and Sources

pp. 285-296

Bibliography

pp. 297-306

Index

pp. 307-312

About the Author

pp. 313
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