The Collar

by Jonathan Englert

Hardcover, 2006

Barcode

464

Call number

230 ENG

Status

Available

Call number

230 ENG

Pages

301

Description

The journalist Jonathan Englert goes inside a seminary to follow five men who have left their careers and lives behind in pursuit of the priesthood. There are now a record sixty-four million Catholics in the United States, yet the number of priests is plummeting so fast that hundreds of parishes nationwide are closing down. Against this turbulent backdrop, Englert charts the journey of five men toward the priesthood at a seminary that specializes in "second-career" priests -- men who come to their vocation later than their college years. We meet a divorced father and avid hunter from Wyoming, an ex-salesman and Marine with ADHD, a recently widowed father of four, a blind musician, and others. With wit and sometimes heartbreaking candor, they face the challenges of priestly life -- from the traditional hurdles of obedience and chastity to more modern travails, like the bad press let loose by recent sexual abuse scandals and the skepticism of their friends and families. For each man, these challenges are intensified by their past experiences as they sacrifice familiar comforts to answer their calling. Englert is ideally qualified to write The Collar, both professionally, as a graduate of the Columbia School of Journalism, and spiritually, as a convert to Catholicism who has walked the tortuous path of faith. His empathy with the spiritual journeys of the men he portrays recalls The Cloister Walk. His deft, evenhanded unveiling of a compelling, little-observed culture will resonate with both the faithful and the merely curious.… (more)

Publication

Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (2006), Edition: First Edition, 301 pages

ISBN

0618251464 / 9780618251469

UPC

046442251464

Rating

½ (10 ratings; 3.9)

User reviews

LibraryThing member KarenElissa
This book follows the lives of a number of men studying for the priesthood in the Catholic Church. It offers a very real look at what the process is like, both the ups and the downs. This book did a good job of portraying the positives as well as the more controversial parts of the process. It also
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did a good job of explaining some of the details of the Catholic faith, and remained true to the teachings of the Church.

I really enjoyed it for the inner look at a process I knew little about. I also really enjoyed the very real portrayals of the men involved.
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LibraryThing member Schmerguls
This book is not by a seminarian but by a writer who lived at Sacred Heart Seminary at Hales Corner, Wisconsin, during the school year 2001 to 2002. The seminary is for older men who have been in the world and now want to be priests, Some are divorced, some are widoweres, and the difficulties they
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have are discussed freely and with careful attention to the various problems. I found the book exceptionally fascinating and rejoiced that at least some of the men persevered to ordination, in view of the great need the Chruch has for priests. Some of what is taught at the seminary was surprising to me, who grew up in the pre-Vatican II Church. I suspect there are older Catholics who would be bothered by some of what is discussed in the book
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