Racial Justice and the Catholic Church;  Bryan 
	N. Massingale; Maryknoll, N.Y., Orbis Books, 2010; 224 pp.  paper 
	$26.00
	
	 
	
	             Racism is alive and well in the 
	United States.  Racism lingers on in the Catholic Church.  The Catholic 
	Church has precious little to say about racial justice.  The responsibility 
	of the African-American Catholic theologian is “passionate participation in 
	reasoned inquiry on behalf of God’s oppressed and despised people.” (p. 160. 
	quoted from M. Shawn Copeland)  While these statements are not a summary of 
	Bryan Massingale’s important study, they are salient points he develops.  
	Obviously, the information and insights in this book will help when we 
	preach on the sin of racism; however, they are equally valuable as part of 
	our general store of information and insight that nourishes all our 
	preaching, as well as our other work and relationships.
	
	             Bryan Massingale, the 2009-2010 
	President of the Catholic Theological Society of America, writes from his 
	experience as an African-American Catholic, as well as from his extensive 
	experience as Catholic theologian, author of more than sixty books, book 
	chapters, articles and book reviews.  He writes tightly reasoned argument in 
	wonderfully readable prose.  He is not afraid to include song and poetry in 
	his argument; in fact, he insists on the need to understand emotion and 
	passion in order to understand the African-American experience.
	
	             Massnigale delves deep when he 
	defines terms.  Racism, for example, has little to do with one person’s 
	actions against another; “racism is a cultural phenomenon. . . .”  (p15. 
	emphasis in original)  And culture is more than the symbols that identify a 
	group.  Culture is “a people’s soul, a set of meanings and values that is an 
	individual’s and a social group’s identity.”  (p.18)  The soul of 
	African-American experience is struggle; the soul of white experience is a 
	“worldview that. . .sees itself as the measure of what is real, standard, 
	normative and/or normal.” (p 22)  The results of this worldview are economic 
	advantage and political power. These are hard words for us white, privileged 
	persons to accept.  Yet, as I read this meticulously reasoned, documented 
	argument, I had to agree.  
	
	             After tracing the history of the U.S. 
	bishops’ statements on racism, and acknowledging the particular significance 
	of Brothers and Sisters to Us, Massingale brilliantly critiques this 
	document.  He points out, for example, its dearth of social analysis, its 
	lack of theological or ethical reflection on racism, and the bishops’ 
	failure to provide directions for implementation of the teachings and 
	exhortations of the document.  Massingale’s most scathing criticism of 
	Catholic teaching on race in the U.S., 
	
	I think, is that it “has neglected or slighted an 
	essential step in social reflection, namely, listening to the voices of the 
	victims and examining the situation from their perspective.” (p.75)
	
	             In the chapter “Toward a More 
	Adequate Catholic Engagement,” Massengale addresses the issue of 
	reconciliation.  “Our racial divides,” he posits, “stem from a history of 
	abuse, neglect, and abandonment; from the legacies of exploitation and the 
	realities of humiliation; in short, from an absence or miscarriage of 
	justice.  Overcoming them requires social transformation.” (p.96)  Social 
	transformation, in turn, requires truth-telling and affirmative redress.  
	Massingale describes various forms of affirmative redress, and assesses 
	their relative effectiveness or non-effectiveness.  As contexts for 
	initiating a process of truth-telling in the U.S. cites the South African 
	Truth and Reconciliation process, as well as Pope John Paul II’s call for “a 
	purification of memory.” 
	
	             Massingale’s moving description of, 
	and challenge to, African-American Catholic theologians is a voice of 
	prophecy.  In addition to telling some of his own story, he lays out a 
	series of “non-exhaustive” questions that call for theological 
	investigation.  Finally, he insists that the African-American Catholic 
	theologian is “not a hybrid,” part-time African-American and part-time 
	theologian.  Rather, “Our vocation is shaped by the reality of simultaneous 
	truths and multiple identities, being indivisibly members of the theological 
	academy, the black ‘community-in-struggle,’ and the Catholic faith 
	communion.” (p.160)
	
	 
	
	Patricia Chaffee, OP
	
	Racine, Wisconsin
 
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