Roman Catholicism and American Politics during the Cold War

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  • Опубліковано 3 лис 2021
  • Roman Catholicism entered the mainstream of American national life the morning following the November 8, 1960 election when John F. Kennedy won and became the president. While it may seem strange to people who did not grow up in the era, but Protestant voters were wary of a Roman Catholic potentially serving as president of the United States. Yet the Vatican may have been even more wary of “Americanism.” While it did not necessarily inhibit Catholics from being Catholic it also was a form of exceptionalism that potentially risked the expansion of Christendom as understood by Catholics.
    In this episode, D. G. Hart explains the historical reasons why the relationship between Roman Catholicism and Americanism changed in the 1960s and how it continued to develop in subsequent decades.
    Darryl G. Hart is Distinguished Associate Professor of History at Hillsdale College in Hillsdale, Michigan.
    This is Christ the Center episode 723 (www.reformedforum.org/ctc723)

КОМЕНТАРІ • 6

  • @audiobooksproject4829
    @audiobooksproject4829 2 роки тому +2

    Everyone should read, or listen to the audiobook of The Death of the West by Pat Buchanan

  • @CraigSmitham
    @CraigSmitham 2 роки тому +1

    Podcast links?

  • @sexyeur
    @sexyeur 2 роки тому

    Shared... Thank you.

  • @redwine65
    @redwine65 2 роки тому +2

    like machen agreed with fundamentalists on a lot of things (definitely not all), more than liberals.
    I agree with conservative roman catholics on a lot of things (definitely not all), more than liberals.
    seems to be a trend there.

  • @michaelbea2525
    @michaelbea2525 2 роки тому

    Different groups are interested in different things so they set up different things