Process Catholicism offers an imaginative alternative to the present Catholic ecclesiology that the church in the U.S. currently struggles with, which derives from a one-sided determination of how church relationships should be understood, structured, and carried out. Process thought consists of a dynamic, organic, empirical, aesthetic, and panentheistic worldview that is applied to Jesus' relationships and Vatican II's treatment of the church, utilizing the basic concepts of Alfred North Whitehead's notion of a society. Kinast develops the concept of process Catholicism in terms of an ecclesial environment, a preferential option for novelty, a presumption in favor of new developments and movements within the church, and a process treatment of the major test cases facing the Catholic church, such as the ordination of women, inculturation, and public theological dissent.
Robert L. Kinast is a Catholic priest and is the founder and director of The Center for Theological Reflection, and the publisher of "The Center Report."
chapter 1 Preface chapter 2 Acknowledgments chapter 3 The Church at Present: Confronting Pastoral Heresy chapter 4 Seeking New Ground for the Church: A Process Worldview chapter 5 Elaborating a Process Worldview: Whiteheadian Societies chapter 6 The Origin of the Church: Jesus' Relationships chapter 7 The Conversion of the Church: The Ecclesial Imagination of Vatican II chapter 8 The Future of the Church: Process Catholicism chapter 9 The Hope of the Church: Overcoming Incarnational Cowardice