Catholic universities in the United States have developed complexity reflective of the larger development of modern universities and “multiversities.” This complexity, together with the decline in the numbers of sponsoring religious orders and diocesan priests, presents new challenges for the sustaining of a theologically rooted, ecclesially oriented mission. This essay draws from the writings of John Henry Newman as a resource for considering the challenges of integration of knowledge, and goes on to examine the documents of the Second Vatican Council as foundations for discussing a contemporary ecclesiology of Catholic university mission, its proyecto social, amidst the complexities of university life
The Catholic university can make a natural home for experimenting with the foundations of knowledge ...
Responding to challenges questioning the possibility of distinctively Catholic higher education, thi...
The US Catholic Bishops spent the decade of the 1990\u27s discussing how Ex Corde Ecclesiae should a...
Catholic universities face many challenges today. Increasing secularization, faculty salaries, exter...
<p>The Second Vatican Council showed the importance of discerning the “signs of the times” to define...
This article builds on an essay the author published twenty years ago in Current Issues in Cath...
How can the Catholic university reconstruct itself to bring the resources of Catholic tradition to b...
How can the Catholic university reconstruct itself to bring the resources of Catholic tradition to b...
Catholic colleges and universities in the United States started experiencing major identity crisis i...
The signs of the times, that we are living in the midst of, are dramatic, suggesting perhaps radical...
This research assessed Ex Corde Ecclesiae within American Catholic higher education from the perspec...
Arguing that the current challenge in Catholic higher education to implement the norms of Ex Corde E...
The remarkable development of the Catholic university in the United States has raised issues about i...
John Paul II’s 1990 Apostolic exhortation Ex Corde Ecclesiae and subsequent legislation require thos...
Dialogue about Catholic identity has been taking place at American Catholic colleges and universitie...
The Catholic university can make a natural home for experimenting with the foundations of knowledge ...
Responding to challenges questioning the possibility of distinctively Catholic higher education, thi...
The US Catholic Bishops spent the decade of the 1990\u27s discussing how Ex Corde Ecclesiae should a...
Catholic universities face many challenges today. Increasing secularization, faculty salaries, exter...
<p>The Second Vatican Council showed the importance of discerning the “signs of the times” to define...
This article builds on an essay the author published twenty years ago in Current Issues in Cath...
How can the Catholic university reconstruct itself to bring the resources of Catholic tradition to b...
How can the Catholic university reconstruct itself to bring the resources of Catholic tradition to b...
Catholic colleges and universities in the United States started experiencing major identity crisis i...
The signs of the times, that we are living in the midst of, are dramatic, suggesting perhaps radical...
This research assessed Ex Corde Ecclesiae within American Catholic higher education from the perspec...
Arguing that the current challenge in Catholic higher education to implement the norms of Ex Corde E...
The remarkable development of the Catholic university in the United States has raised issues about i...
John Paul II’s 1990 Apostolic exhortation Ex Corde Ecclesiae and subsequent legislation require thos...
Dialogue about Catholic identity has been taking place at American Catholic colleges and universitie...
The Catholic university can make a natural home for experimenting with the foundations of knowledge ...
Responding to challenges questioning the possibility of distinctively Catholic higher education, thi...
The US Catholic Bishops spent the decade of the 1990\u27s discussing how Ex Corde Ecclesiae should a...