Marian Ronan is research professor of Catholic studies at New York Theological Seminary in Manhattan and is the author or co-author of seven books.
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Histories of colonialism give wider context to Indigenous deaths at boarding schools
Book review: When I read the news of the hundreds upon hundreds of unmarked graves discovered at formerly Catholic Indigenous boarding schools in Canada, I was reminded of my recent reading about "settler colonialism."
Book interweaves eucharistic practice with social, economic and ecological realities
Book review: The broken food system and the environmental crisis require us to reembrace the Eucharist as a vital meal fellowship. This includes recognizing ourselves as a community, called together to act against the world's political and social evils.
Ecological theology meets theological response to suffering in Edwards' book
Review: Denis Edwards draws on the insights of five contemporary theologians — Niels Gregersen, Elizabeth Johnson, Celia Deane Drummond, Christopher Southgate and Richard Bauckham — to propose a contemporary theory of deep incarnation in which the cross is the "sacrament of God's redemptive suffering with creatures."
New biography of Thomas Berry reasserts importance of his work
Book review: The authors — Mary Evelyn Tucker, John Grim and Andrew Angyal — show that along with his massive contributions to our comprehension of this cosmic intercommunion, Berry impacted the wider society in other significant ways.
Oil rule America: New book details competing theological visions of US energy capitalists
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