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Jesuit at Large: Essays and Reviews by Paul Mankowski, S.J. Kindle Edition
Father Paul Mankowski, S.J. (1953–2020), was one of the most brilliant and scintillating Catholic writers of our time. His essays and reviews, collected here for the first time, display a unique wit, a singular breadth of learning, and a penetrating insight into the challenges of Catholic life in the postmodern world.
Whether explicating Catholic doctrines like the Immaculate Conception, dissecting contemporary academic life, deploring clerical malfeasance, or celebrating great authors, Father Mankowski''s keen intelligence is always on display, and his energetic prose keeps the pages turning.
Whatever his topic, however, Paul Mankowski''s intense Catholic faith shines through his writing, as it did through his life. Jesuit at Large invites its readers to meet a man of great gifts who suffered for his convictions but never lost hope in the renewal of Catholicism, a man whose confidence in the truth of what the Church proposed to the world was never shaken by the failures of the people of the Church.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherIgnatius Press
- Publication dateAugust 17, 2021
- File size1.5 MB
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About the Author
George Weigel is a Distinguished Senior Fellow of Washington''s Ethics and Public Policy Center. He is the New York Times bestselling author of more than two dozen books, including the two volumes of his internationally acclaimed biography of Saint John Paul II, Witness to Hope and The End and the Beginning. Other works by Weigel include The Fragility of Order, The Next Pope, Evangelical Catholicism, and Not Forgotten.
Product details
- ASIN : B09DMCY6C7
- Publisher : Ignatius Press
- Accessibility : Learn more
- Publication date : August 17, 2021
- Language : English
- File size : 1.5 MB
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 281 pages
- ISBN-13 : 978-1642291841
- Page Flip : Enabled
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,058,787 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #143 in Religious Essays
- #2,167 in Catholicism (Books)
- #3,790 in Catholicism (Kindle Store)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

George Weigel, Distinguished Senior Fellow of the Ethics and Public Policy Center, is a Catholic theologian and one of America’s leading public intellectuals. He holds the William E. Simon Chair in Catholic Studies at the Ethics and Public Policy Center in Washington, DC.
From 1989 through June 1996, Mr. Weigel was president of the Ethics and Public Policy Center, where he led a wide-ranging, ecumenical and inter-religious program of research and publication on foreign and domestic policy issues.
Mr. Weigel is perhaps best known for his widely translated and internationally acclaimed two-volume biography of Pope St. John Paul II: the New York Times bestseller, Witness to Hope (1999), and its sequel, The End and the Beginning (2010). In 2017, Weigel published a memoir of the experiences that led to his work as a papal biographer: Lessons in Hope — My Unexpected Life with St. John Paul II.
George Weigel is the author or editor of more than thirty other books, many of which have been translated into other languages. Among the most recent are The Cube and the Cathedral: Europe, America, and Politics Without God (2005); Evangelical Catholicism: Deep Reform in the 21st-Century Church (2013); Roman Pilgrimage: The Station Churches (2013); Letters to a Young Catholic (2015); The Fragility of Order: Catholic Reflections on Turbulent Times (2018); The Next Pope: The Office of Peter and a Church in Mission (2020); and Not Forgotten: Elegies for, and Reminiscences of, a Diverse Cast of Characters, Most of Them Admirable (2021). His essays, op-ed columns, and reviews appear regularly in major opinion journals and newspapers across the United States. A frequent guest on television and radio, he is also Senior Vatican Analyst for NBC News. His weekly column, “The Catholic Difference,” is syndicated to eighty-five newspapers and magazines in seven countries.
Mr. Weigel received a B.A. from St. Mary’s Seminary and University in Baltimore and an M.A. from the University of St. Michael’s College, Toronto. He is the recipient of nineteen honorary doctorates in fields including divinity, philosophy, law, and social science, and has been awarded the Papal Cross Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice, Poland’s Gloria Artis Gold Medal, and Lithuania’s Diplomacy Star.
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Customers find the book intellectually stimulating, with one review describing it as an excellent overview. They consider it a great read.
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Customers appreciate the intellectual stimulation provided by the book, with one customer noting it as an excellent overview and another describing it as a selection of very good essays.
"...It's also a gift to its readers, since Father Mankowski was an engaging writer and clear thinker, as you'll see...." Read more
"...He was one of the great minds of our age, helping to support the image of a Jesuit as someone both scholarly and practical, able to dissect events..." Read more
"...this book and have now witnessed a life of courage combined with a brilliant mind." Read more
"...The selection of essays is very good also." Read more
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- Reviewed in the United States on October 6, 2021As a Catholic educator, I've met more than a few Jesuits. They are, with few exceptions, much like Father Mankowski, a man you'll get to know rather well in this book, edited by the indispensable George Weigel. The two men were friends, so this collection is a labor of love by Mr. Weigel. It's also a gift to its readers, since Father Mankowski was an engaging writer and clear thinker, as you'll see. He was also a man of courage, as the book's appendix makes clear
The book description above doesn't list its contents, so here's what you'll find:
[Essays1990 to 2019]
Why the Immaculate Conception
In Praise of Conformity; Why Priests Should Stop Fooling Around with the Liturgy
Of Rome and Runnymede
Voices of Wrath: When Words Become Weapons
The Prayer of Lady Macbeth: How the Contraceptive Mentality Has Neutered Religious Life
"Tames" in Clerical Life
What Went Wrong?
Liberal Jesuits and the Late Pope
Thou Art a Priest Forever
Feminist Pilgrims
What I Saw at the American Academy of Religion
Academic Religion: Playground of the Vandals
The Skimpole Syndrome: Childhood Unlimited
[Book and film reviews]
Why Universities Went Secular
Assassins of a Lesser God
Mailer's False Messiah
Pontifex Minimus
Waugh on the Merits
The Gospel according to David Bentley
Historical-Critical Qur'an
His Excellency
The last part of the book is a surprise. In a long Appendix, Father Mankowski documents
the political rise to power of Father Robert Drinan, a Jesuit who became the first Catholic priest
to serve in the US House of Representatives. Father Drinan was also, sadly, an abortion apologist
who justified with twisted logic the sacrifice of the unborn, giving cover to generations of "pro choice"
Catholic politicians. An elaborate subterfuge was necessary to get such a man into
a position of power. By happenstance, Father Mankowski discovered the
plot, then sought to alert his fellow Jesuits. For his efforts, he eventually was silenced by his superiors.
The story, long hidden, is told in full. This last section is slow going, but read it anyway. It will tell you in sad detail much about the Catholic church in 21st Century America. Still, there's reason for optimism: though Paul Mankowski is gone to glory, there are many more like him, men and women, at work in the vineyard.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 19, 2023I have to note that I knew Paul and he was a friend. He was one of the great minds of our age, helping to support the image of a Jesuit as someone both scholarly and practical, able to dissect events of the day and apply his skills and experience to “unpack” events, and to see them in the light of a greater morality, and always with a Catholic perspective.
But he was also able to write so that a casual reader could easily follow the train of his arguments and analysis. In this book – one of several he wrote – he deals with a number of contemporary issues both inside and outside of the Church and politics and although I am/was familiar with his work, this was a wonderful reminder of just how clear his thought was and how well he could communicate.
I heartily recommend this book for serious reading and great intellectual stimulation.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 6, 2025Reading of Mankowski and how he braved what has become of the Jesuits is inspiring for those who strive to remain Catholic in these heady times. He comes across as simultaneously brilliant, self-effacing, and surprisingly humorous. And his review of Elaine Pagels is the most devastating evisceration of a darling of Academe I've seen since Housman's own diatribe against lesser scholars. Great read!
- Reviewed in the United States on September 9, 2023As a life long pro life advocate, you’d think I’d have known about Fr. Paul and his work as pro life Jesuit, I did not. Thanks goodness I discovered this book and have now witnessed a life of courage combined with a brilliant mind.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 17, 2021George Weigel wrote an excellent biographical sketch of Fr. Mankowski’s life and struggles with the Jesuit New England Province. The selection of essays is very good also.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 4, 2022Jesus told a parable about a man who asked his two sons to work in his vineyard. The first son said yes, but didn't go. The second son said no, but did go. In an age in which many are like the first son, Fr. Paul Mankowski is the second son.
George Weigel edited this volume of about 200 pages of essays, and also provides an introduction. I'd read a few of his books, including "The Cube and the Cathedral" and met him once. Essays are my favorite reading, so I ordered this book. But while reading an essay,I had a feeling of deja vu, as if I'd already read it in some past life when I was a dinosaur. Checking the source showed why: it was reprinted from "First Things" to which I had been subscribing.
C.S. Lewis said there are two opposite errors the human race can fall into as regards the devils: either to show an unhealthy interest in them, as do Satanists, or to disbelieve in them altogether, as does the current head of the Jesuits. No wonder the author, treading the middle ground, as do most people, became a Jesuit at large.
Fr. Mankowski reminds me of another brilliant essayist, Ronald Knox. Both were natural linguists, belonging to that segment of the population which can learn many languages easily; Both classicists, fluent in and exulting in the classical languages of Latin and Greek, as well as Hebrew, which are also the Biblical languages. It would only be natural they would read and translate the Bible, in Knox's case, making an entirely new English translation (the Knox Bible).
Many of these essays concern the priesthood, to which Father Mankowski was as dedicated as St. John Vianney. But before dismissing this author as simply talking shop, of little interest to those outside the profession, or, on the other hand, too high in the ether of theology to have any relevance to the common person, come and meet, instead, the working class priest who boxed at Oxford.
In these essays, he is sparring still. He didn't throw the first punch. That was thrown by the undefeated bully who for seventy years has been pommelling hapless, faithful Catholic contenders. As they fell, they reached out a limp arm to tag Father Mankowski. Here's what happened when he entered the ring.