George Weigel is distinguished senior fellow of Washington's Ethics and Public Policy Center and one of America's leading public intellectuals. The first volume of his biography of Pope John Paul II, Witness to Hope, was a New York Times bestseller, and his writing appears regularly in a variety of publications, including the Wall Street Journal. He lives in North Bethesda, Maryland.
"Weigel has an eye for a good story. Whether discussing the affairs
of popes and princes, of conclaves and concordats, he seems always
to come up with a telling anecdote or witty utterance to brighten
the historical account. For a lively and informative overview from
the 18th century to the present, The Irony of Modern
Catholic History is the book to read."--Robert Louis Wilken,
William R. Kenan Jr. Professor Emeritus of the History of
Christianity at the University of Virginia
"This deeply learned and crisply written book reaffirms George
Weigel's status as the preeminent American Catholic intellectual of
our time. Weigel recasts recent history to show how we owe much of
what is best and most noble in modernity to Catholicism and why,
even in this season of ecclesial despair, Catholics have sound
reasons to be hopeful."--Sohrab Ahmari, author of From Fire, By
Water: My Journey to the Catholic Faith
"George Weigel is deeply learned and passionately engaged -- one of
the important intellectual assets of the 21st century Catholic
Church. His book is fascinating and visionary."--Lance
Morrow
"George Weigel's sweeping account of 150 years of Catholic history
challenges the long-held assumption made by traditionalists,
progressives, many historians, and mainstream media that secular
modernity has always been the prime mover, forcing the Church to
either resist or accommodate it. In reframing the narrative with
the church as the creative protagonist in this drama, Weigel
describes how the encounter with modernity led to the renewal of
the church's gospel-centered mission in its third millennium, and
suggests that the church might redirect -- indeed, redeem--the
modern project itself."--Kathleen Sprows Cummings, Director of
the Cushwa Center for the Study of American Catholicism, University
of Notre Dame
"The Irony of Modern Catholic History advances a bold new
interpretation of the Church and modernity with characteristic
authority, deep erudition, and literary panache. It is the latest
reminder among many that George Weigel is unrivaled not only as a
Catholic intellectual, but as an intellectual, period."--Mary
Eberstadt, senior research fellow, Faith and Reason Institute,
and author of Primal Screams: How the Sexual Revolution Created
Identity Politics
"A fascinating look at the Catholic Church's encounter with
modernity...Weigel is at once highly intellectual and thoroughly
accessible as a writer as well as balanced and opinionated...A
must-read book for Catholics and devotees of religious
history."--Kirkus (starred review)
"Weigel advances a bold but credible interpretation of almost 200
years of ecclesiastical history, tracing the Church's engagement
with modernity from the 19th century through today.... Weigel's
ideas are certainly worth serious examination. Highly
recommended."--National Catholic Register
"As with all Weigel's writing, this story is well told-richly
illustrated with lively anecdotes, cogent summaries of complex
ideas, and revealing quotations."--National Review
"[An] important new work...St. Teresa of Avila had it right when
she said that 'God writes straight with crooked lines.' George
Weigel's The Irony of Modern Catholic History traces those
crooked lines in modern church history."--Washington Times
"Weigel ranks among the leading Christian public intellectuals of
the past four decades. Stylistically, The Irony of Modern
Catholic History is a pleasure to read. But the easy style
disguises the fact that it's also an exercise in superb historical
scholarship, from the reactionary Pope Gregory XVI in the mid-19th
century, through the Modernist crisis and Vatican II, to the
present."--Catholic Philly
"George Weigel is the most interesting and authoritative American
scholar and analyst of the Roman Catholic Church...[His] book is
intended to refute the common notion that Catholicism has resisted
modernity consistently and mostly ineffectively and has suffered as
a consequence of its stubborn refusal to 'change with the times.'
The truth, Weigel shows, is much more complicated than that."--New
York Journal of Books
"A comprehensive interpretation of the history of the Catholic
Church's encounter with modernity...This story is well
told."--First Things
"Compelling...Weigel has a great eye for facts that raise eyebrows
and provoke reflection...[He] is also a high-calibre
phrasemaker."--Catholic Herald (UK)
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