The Salt of the Earth

Author:   Carol Jackson Robinson ,  Rodger Phillips
Publisher:   Arouca Press
Volume:   6
ISBN:  

9781990685903


Pages:   194
Publication Date:   16 February 2024
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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The Salt of the Earth


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Overview

This book comprises all of the known articles Carol Robinson wrote for The Lone Star Catholic which was the official newspaper for the Diocese of Austin, Texas. The founding editor was Dale Francis (1917-1992), a former Methodist pastor and convert to the Catholic Faith, who had a distinguished career in journalism. He was a good friend of Carol Robinson and she was invited to write a column which she did for a year from April 1958 to April 1959.

Full Product Details

Author:   Carol Jackson Robinson ,  Rodger Phillips
Publisher:   Arouca Press
Imprint:   Arouca Press
Volume:   6
Dimensions:   Width: 14.00cm , Height: 1.40cm , Length: 21.60cm
Weight:   0.395kg
ISBN:  

9781990685903


ISBN 10:   1990685900
Pages:   194
Publication Date:   16 February 2024
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

"Our institutions appear to simultaneously work and not work. Institutional dysfunction is everywhere, and we know it. Yet even those who do not comprehend its cause can at least feel its effect; Western governments keen on social experiments, colleges charging fortunes to plunder our children, decades of economic doctrine-whether from the Capitalist or the Socialist-has proven unfit for humans, and then there is the ""synodal Church"" which rests on the embers of a progressive spirituality quickly running out of gas. Of course, the purpose of the Incarnation was not to fix our institutions. Christ came to free man from death, to convert our hearts, and historically the fire of his love and the hope of eternal beatitude kept the faithful going under the most oppressive circumstances. But in the post-Christian society we've inhabited, our convictions have waned and often led men and women to willingly adopt the very errors and social vices we also complain about. In these essays from 1958 to 1959, Carol Robinson holds up a light to reveal the concessions and daily choices Catholics make to appease the City of Man-seeds of Modernism, Moral Therapeutic Deism, or neo-paganism-while pointing to virtue, cooperation with supernatural grace, and fidelity to Christ and his Church as the antidote for building the City of God. Robinson feared the sin of not addressing the former would inevitably lead to the decay of the latter. She was right. As this modest volume goes to press, thousands of synod small groups will have gathered worldwide to talk about the future of the Catholic Church. Would that they read Carol Robinson instead. -Richard Aleman, editor-in-chief, The Distributist Review In this latest volume of her Collected Works, Carol Robinson provides us with a vivid portrait of Catholic life in America on the eve of the Second Vatican Council. These essays give us brief but clear-eyed glimpses into a bygone historical era, but the situations they address are of ongoing interest, focusing as they do on the perennial problem of how spiritually serious lay Catholics should live out their faith while navigating the promises and pitfalls of a secular world. Robinson's analyses, and even more so her wise and practical advice, remain as fresh and insightful for the current reader as the day when they were first published. -Gregorio Montejo, Ph.D., Historical Theology"


"Our institutions appear to simultaneously work and not work. Institutional dysfunction is everywhere, and we know it. Yet even those who do not comprehend its cause can at least feel its effect; Western governments keen on social experiments, colleges charging fortunes to plunder our children, decades of economic doctrine-whether from the Capitalist or the Socialist-has proven unfit for humans, and then there is the ""synodal Church"" which rests on the embers of a progressive spirituality quickly running out of gas. Of course, the purpose of the Incarnation was not to fix our institutions. Christ came to free man from death, to convert our hearts, and historically the fire of his love and the hope of eternal beatitude kept the faithful going under the most oppressive circumstances. But in the post-Christian society we've inhabited, our convictions have waned and often led men and women to willingly adopt the very errors and social vices we also complain about. In these essays from 1958 to 1959, Carol Robinson holds up a light to reveal the concessions and daily choices Catholics make to appease the City of Man-seeds of Modernism, Moral Therapeutic Deism, or neo-paganism-while pointing to virtue, cooperation with supernatural grace, and fidelity to Christ and his Church as the antidote for building the City of God. Robinson feared the sin of not addressing the former would inevitably lead to the decay of the latter. She was right. As this modest volume goes to press, thousands of synod small groups will have gathered worldwide to talk about the future of the Catholic Church. Would that they read Carol Robinson instead. -Richard Aleman, editor-in-chief, The Distributist Review In this latest volume of her Collected Works, Carol Robinson provides us with a vivid portrait of Catholic life in America on the eve of the Second Vatican Council. These essays give us brief but clear-eyed glimpses into a bygone historical era, but the situations they address are of ongoing interest, focusing as they do on the perennial problem of how spiritually serious lay Catholics should live out their faith while navigating the promises and pitfalls of a secular world. Robinson's analyses, and even more so her wise and practical advice, remain as fresh and insightful for the current reader as the day when they were first published. -Gregorio Montejo, Ph.D., Historical Theology"


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