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Grace of the Ghosts

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A profound new volume that reckons with the history of an American Catholic Church embedded in and drawing benefits from White supremacyFor the Church to become a truly anti-racist institution, we ...
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  • 06 May 2025
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A profound new volume that reckons with the history of an American Catholic Church embedded in and drawing benefits from White supremacy

For the Church to become a truly anti-racist institution, we must first understand how today’s racial challenges are embedded in the theo-logic of American Christianity and the cultural production of our Christian educational institutions. As colleges and universities reckon with their involvement in slavery, Grace of the Ghosts asks Christian-affiliated institutions (of congregation, school, and media) to expand this reckoning with attention to the many ways they have been embedded in and drew benefits from American systems of White supremacy.

Too often, White Christian histories render White Christians as the “good guys” in order to make a brutal history plausible and thus erase countless injustices committed against Indigenous, Black, Latinx, and Asian peoples. Author Jeannine Hill Fletcher writes instead a US Catholic history that sheds light on the crimes committed against these ancestors by members of their own faith community. Grace of the Ghosts focuses on specific case studies of Catholic educational and ecclesial institutions, journeying through numerous microhistories to provide an accessible program to work toward the flourishing of a multiracial and multicultural Church. Hill Fletcher digs deeply into the details of Jesuit slaveholding at Georgetown, the expansion of Church networks on the frontiers to the West and South and emer­gent cities to the North, and the extension of the work of religious women from the East Coast to the Midwest. The volume considers the implications of Catholic involvement in Indian Boarding Schools and envisions alternative possibilities in the Catholic activism of the United Farmworkers. Each micro­history elevates the theological insights that emerge from those who withstood the assaults of White Christian supremacy. Hill Fletcher then orients the reader forward by envisioning possibilities of repair. Recognizing that this will require extensive and ongoing work, the book closes with the consideration of spiritual capital (including a reclamation of Ignatius’s Spiritual Exercises) that might sustain us as we write the next chapter in the nation’s long struggle against White supremacy.

Much work must be done for reparation, reconciliation, and repair to unfold fully. Grace of the Ghosts provides a bridge to institutional accountability for past failings and a path toward becoming transformative institutions for the future.

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Price: $105.00
Pages: 336
Publisher: Fordham University Press
Imprint: Fordham University Press
Publication Date: 06 May 2025
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781531509866
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

RELIGION / Institutions & Organizations, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Race & Ethnic Relations, HISTORY / United States / 19th Century

The significance of history for Catholic theology in the United States cannot be overestimated. Too often and too eagerly we accept an uncritical and romantic historical narrative that treats Catholics as ‘recent’ or nineteenth century European immigrants and, as such, had little to do with the cruel dispossession and disruption of the lives of Indigenous peoples or the brutal enslavement and continuing oppression of African-descended peoples. Jeannine Hill Fletcher interrogates our history, unmasks our putative innocence, and encourages us all to reach out to accept the grace-filled solidarity of the dead who continue to care for us and for this land.---M. Shawn Copeland, professor emerita, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA
Jeannine Hill Fletcher is professor of theology at Fordham University. She is the author of The Sin of White Supremacy: Christianity, Racism, and Religious Diversity in America (Orbis, 2017).

Introduction | 1

1 Truth Telling about Institutions | 7

2 Sucky’s Scream: Hearing the Ghosts and Heeding Their Call | 38

3 The Complexity of a Complicit Church: Henrietta and Elizabeth in a Catholic Network | 78

4 Institutional Networks and Nation Building:
Collaborating with the State through Systems of Education | 126

5 Leveraging Capital: Church Institutions for Change in the Twentieth Century | 168

6 Confronting a Culture of White Supremacy: Spiritual Strength for Mobilizing Capital | 211

Acknowledgments | 255

Notes | 257

Bibliography | 297

Index | 315