Rowman & Littlefield Publishers / Sheed & Ward
Pages: 144
Trim: 5½ x 8½
979-8-8818-0260-8 • Hardback • February 2025 • $28.00 • (£19.99)
979-8-8818-0261-5 • eBook • February 2025 • $27.00 • (£19.99) (coming soon)
Paul Collins is a former parish priest, broadcaster, historian, and writer. He is the author of including Absolute Power: How the Pope Became the Most Influential Man in the World (2018), The Birth of the West: Rome, Germany, France, and the Creation of Europe in the Tenth Century (2013), and Judgment Day: The Struggle for life on Earth (2010) and many other books. His articles and essays have appeared in the London Tablet, National Catholic Reporter, and magazines across Australia, Germany, Austria, and Italy. Collins resides in Canberra, Australia.
ONE – The Problem of Clericalism
TWO – Priesthood from the New Testament to the Reformation
THREE – Origins of the Present Model of the Priesthood Part 1: CELIBACY, THE COUNCIL OF TRENT AND PIERRE DE BĖRULLE
FOUR – Origins of the Present Model of the Priesthood, Part 2. JEAN-JACQUES OLIER AND LOUIS TRONSON
FIVE – A New Interpretation of Ministry. John N. Collins on Diakonia
SIX – The Contemporary Priesthood and Ministry
SEVEN – Where to from Here?
EIGHT- Important Conclusions
Notes
Bibliography
Index
About the Author
Using his considerable knowledge as a historian, Paul Collins has produced a challenging study of priesthood in the Catholic Church and the need for renewal within its ranks. He calls the church to an understanding of leadership grounded in Scripture and authentic tradition. Ministry, he argues, is the work of the whole people of God and not that of a privileged and divinized group of celibate males: the church should, therefore, end enforced celibacy and open its doors to encourage women’s full participation in ministry.
— Rev. Dr. Dorothy Lee, Canon of Saint Paul’s Cathedral, author of The Ministry of Women in the New Testament: Reclaiming the Biblical Vision for Church Leadership
Paul Collins has made a compelling case to open the Catholic priesthood to women and married men. Not a new call, but now an urgent one. As the Church grapples for relevancy, Collins calls for a priestly ministry that not only reflects the lives of those it serves but also looks like those lives because it is those lives. The resonance with the challenge of Pope Francis for priests to have the scent of their flock is strong. The potency of Collins comes from his scholarship and authentic pastoral sensitivities. The insight of Collins is that change trumps decay.
— Francis Sullivan, AO, chair of Concerned Catholics
There is nothing else comparable to this one short volume on the need to rethink and restructure the role of the presider in the Church in light of all the other ministries carried on by the baptized.
— Charles E. Curran, PhD, author of Loyal Dissent: Memoir of a Catholic Theologian