Full-text resources of CEJSH and other databases are now available in the new Library of Science.
Visit https://bibliotekanauki.pl

Refine search results

Results found: 3

first rewind previous Page / 1 next fast forward last

Search results

help Sort By:

help Limit search:
first rewind previous Page / 1 next fast forward last
EN
The Roman Catholic Church in the United States in the XIXth and XXth centuries found itself in specific conditions. On the one hand, there were democratic patterns of the functioning of American state structures and Protestant fellowships. On the other, there was a mass influx of immigrants from many different Catholic European countries. These factors became a source of various conflicts between the faithful and the hierarchy. The faithful, sometime joined by their priests, demanded greater democratization of church life and pastoral care which would agree with the traditions of their country of origin. The hierarchy, supported by the majority of the clergy who attempted to intensify the assimilation processes by favoring pastoral care which tended to accelerate the Americanization of immigrants. Those conflicts led to the establishment of so-called independent parishes whose authors identified themselves totally with the doctrine of the Roman Catholic Church. They opposed it only within the sphere of administrative rules. These parishes were established among various national groups. There was not only a quantitative growth, in the Polish ethnic group, but also a qualitative one. The paper presents particular stages of this progress which started from individual parishes, which after a certain time either returned to their mother Church or were dispersed. Then there were attempts to create a common program and a common ideology. Finally, on the third stage arose three extraparochial centers in Chicago, Ill., in Buffalo, N. Y., and in Scranton, Penn. The centralization of the Movement in the first two centers underwent mainly at the organizational level and it consisted exclusively in concentrating particular parishes around two leaders: bp Kozłowski and bp Kamin´ ski. Thus, these centers were closed almost immediately after the bishops’ death. The center in Scranton, however, thanks to that that it was based on national ideas, was transformed into an actual center of independent parishes movement, out of which grew the Polish National Catholic Church, which has been existing until now. The history of the Polish independent parishes movement in the United States, as it has been presented in the paper, constitutes then an essential contribution to the history of that Church.
EN
The article is an attempt at a possibly objective presentation - on the basis of sources available today - of that period of the life of Franciszek Hodur (the founder and for many years leader of the Polish National Catholic Church), in which he was still a true member of the Roman-Catholic Church. The example of this period shows best how his person became in historiography an object of articles debauched by ideological aims - of attack or defense. Roman- -Catholic authors presented Hodur as a negative hero, whereas his coreligionists - just the opposite - in a very positive tone. It was done both by „adding” certain events unconfirmed by any sources and by concealing other ones, which could impair the ideological aim assumed beforehand. This debauching of Hodur’s biography has been successively shown with respect to his stay in the secondary school and in the Cracow seminary, then to his removal from the seminary and to his work as a Roman-Catholic priest in the USA. In every case the real course of events has been presented objectively as far as possible. In the conclusion a postulate has been put forward to describe the later stages of Franciszek Hodur’s life in the same way, which would constitute a considerable contribution to the ecumenical dialogue between the Roman-Catholic Church and the Polish National Catholic Church.
first rewind previous Page / 1 next fast forward last
JavaScript is turned off in your web browser. Turn it on to take full advantage of this site, then refresh the page.