No CrossRef data available.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2009
In a previous article we studied the religious and political position of the French Catholics—both of the clergy and of the laity—from the armistice to the end of the summer of 1942. Here we propose to continue this study following the same plan, considering first the questions cm which the clergy and the laity have taken a stand and indicating the nuances which differentiate their positions, and secondly the present problems in which the faithful take part on their own responsibility. French Catholic life, like all life, is in motion. Yet discovering its inspirations and currents can help us to understand the way it will manifest itself in the period of reconstruction.
1 Review of Politics, 5: 194–245 (04, 1943CrossRefGoogle Scholar).
2 Courrier Francais du Temoignage Chrétien, n° 3, p. 5.
3 Courrier… n° 1, p. 5.
4 Courrier… n° 1, p. 4.
5 La Révue Universelle, Dec. 25, 1942.
6 Courrier… n ° 1, p. 4.
7 Courrier… n° 1, p. 4.
8 Consultutions sur quelques cas de conscience posés aux Calholiques de France par occtipation allemandc.
9 ibid.
10 Courrier… n° 4, p. 4.
11 Cahters du Témoignage Chrétien, n° XVII, p. 8Google Scholar.
12 Cahiers… ibid., p. 13.
13 Courrier n° I, p. I.
14 Cahiers… n° XV–XVI, p. 13.
15 Cahiers… ibid., p. 12.
16 Cahiers… ibid., pp. 12–13.
17 Cahiers… ibid., p. 15.
18 Courrier… n° I, p. 2.
19 Courrier… ibid., p. 3.
20 Courrier… n° 5, p. 3.
21 Courrier… n° 6, p. 8.
22 Défense lie la France, n° 35.
23 La Croix. Feb. 8, 1944.
24 Counter… n° 4, p. 7.