Field Hospital: The Church's Engagement with a Wounded World
Stock No: WW872975
Field Hospital: The Church's Engagement with a Wounded World  -     By: William T. Cavanaugh

Field Hospital: The Church's Engagement with a Wounded World

Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. / 2016 / Paperback

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Stock No: WW872975

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Product Description

In 2013, Pope Francis compared the church to a field hospital. In William Cavanaugh's book, Field Hospital, he uses Pope Francis's metaphor to show how the church can help heal both the spiritual and the material wounds of the world. Emphasizing that the church cannot condemn the evils of the world from a position of superiority but must admit its own guilt, he offers guidelines for churches that are willing to bind up wounds and heal them.

Product Information

Title: Field Hospital: The Church's Engagement with a Wounded World
By: William T. Cavanaugh
Format: Paperback
Number of Pages: 264
Vendor: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co.
Publication Date: 2016
Dimensions: 9.00 X 6.00 (inches)
Weight: 14 ounces
ISBN: 0802872972
ISBN-13: 9780802872975
Stock No: WW872975

Publisher's Description

Compelling social perspectives from a prominent Catholic scholar

Pope Francis in a 2013 interview famously likened the church to a field hospital. In this book William Cavanaugh adopts Pope Francis’s metaphor to show how the church can help heal both the spiritual and the material wounds of the world.
 
As he examines the intersection of theology with themes of religious freedom, economic injustice, religious violence, and other pressing topics, Cavanaugh emphasizes that the church cannot condemn the evils of the world from a position of superiority. Rather, he says, its practices of solidarity with humanity must be based on a profound recognition that the church shares in the guilt of human sin.
 
Cavanaugh’s Field Hospital provides guideposts for a church that is willing to go outside of itself onto today’s battlefields — both metaphorical and literal — not to inflict wounds but to bind them up and heal them.

Author Bio

William T. Cavanaugh is director of the Center for World Catholicism and Intercultural Theology and professor of Catholic studies at DePaul University. His other books include Being Consumed: Economics and Christian Desire and The Myth of Religious Violence: Secular Ideology and the Roots of Modern Conflict.

Editorial Reviews

William A. Barbieri
— Catholic University of America
"William Cavanaugh’s adoption of Pope Francis’s stirring metaphor of the church as field hospital is apt for his own theological work, which he continues here in a vein reminiscent of the doctors in M*A*S*H — unblinking, subversive, mordantly witty, and always deeply humane. He clearly diagnoses the pathologies of consumerism and violence that afflict our culture and takes his scalpel to the myths and idolatries that undergird them. . . . In this book’s interconnected interventions Cavanaugh once again displays the insight, acuity, and compassion that make him one of the leading theologians of these times."
 
Emmanuel Katongole
— Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies, University of Notre Dame
"Political theology at its best. Field Hospital confirms Cavanaugh as one of the most lucid, innovative, and interesting theological voices of our time. He has that rare ability to take complicated philosophical arguments and ideas and present them in simple and clear ways for both an academic and a general audience."
 
Matthew Levering
— Mundelein Seminary
"Richly instructive. . . . Bill Cavanaugh intrepidly goes where few theologians dare to go, and his questions and answers remain resolutely theological against the strongest temptations to bow to the accepted discourses of our age. Those seeking to understand the perspectives that inspire Caritas in Veritate and Evangelii Gaudium need search no further: this is the book to read."
 
Joseph L. Mangina
— Wycliffe College, University of Toronto
"Field Hospital sets forth an utterly unsentimental vision of the church as imperfect and vulnerable, her ’power made perfect in weakness.’ Cavanaugh shows again why he is one of contemporary Catholicism’s most important thinkers."
 

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