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The Role of the Catholic Laity in Yorkshire, 1850–1900
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 September 2015
Extract
THE ROLE of the laity in the Church is a topic of great interest today. Since the second Vatican Council the part which the people could, and should, play in the Church has been discussed at length, and the shortage of priests has led to demands for the laity to become more actively involved in spiritual affairs. Some, however, still maintain that spiritual tasks must be left to the ordained, but would like to see the laity take a much more active role, as Catholics, in the secular sphere, representing and defending Catholic values in public life. In the light of the current debate, it is interesting to look at the role of the laity in the Catholic Church in Yorkshire during the last century. At that time, too, there was a shortage of priests, while the role of Catholics in public life did not always fulfil the desires of Church leaders.
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References
Notes
1 Burke's Peerage, Baronetage and Knightage (105th Edition, 1970) p. 1979.
2 Sheffield Daily Telegraph, 18 March 1874.
3 L.D.A., Northern District Pastorals, 1795–1859: pastoral letter, 8 December 1855.
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12 Tablet, 1 May 1897.
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14 Tablet, 12 February 1853.
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