Struck down, not destroyed Keeping the faith as a Vatican reporter

Colleen Dulle

Book - 2025

"For too many Catholics, the darkness of creeping doubt, of drifting out into the spiritual cold of God’s absence, is felt not outside the church but within it. With each of the church’s moral failures—the sexual abuse, systematic mistreatment of women, shady financial management, its cozy relationships with corrupt political power—people lose faith or they wonder if they can, in good conscience, remain part of the church at all. For Catholic journalists who report on the church’s failures in detail, the struggle to keep the faith can feel like an intolerable cognitive dissonance. In Struck Down, Not Destroyed, Vatican reporter for America magazine Colleen Dulle takes readers for the first time into her own experience of repo...rting: how the church has put her own faith into crisis, and how she has managed to stay Catholic by meeting again and again the spiritual reality at the heart of the church—God and the saints. With each chapter, Dulle revisits her reporting on a church crisis, revealing to readers that in every instance of anger, betrayal, and hurt, she was ultimately renewed in hope, courage, and resolve. Recounting efforts to pray honestly and finding herself yelling at God, attending Mass at churches where she was treated like the zwrongy kind of Catholic, or learning that one of her spirital heroes was a sexual abuser, Dulle offers readers the gift of solidarity: they are not alone and there is hope. At the times when the church seemed merely human, just an institution for power and politicking, Dulle found herself spiritually upheld by difficult prayer, other faithful Catholics, fellow reporters, faithful priests, and, ultimately, the Holy Spirit. Dulle holds out this same promise for readers. She provides no easy solutions, nor does she pretend to resolve the feelings of dissonance; instead, she passes on the courage she received with a vivid reminder that the church’s faith is still worth believing in and fighting for."--

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Subjects
Published
New York : Image, an imprint of Random House, a division of Penguin Random House LLC [2025]
Language
English
Main Author
Colleen Dulle (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xxvi, 147 pages ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9780593728420
  • Foreword
  • Introduction: A Hard-won Faith
  • Chapter 1. Human Cries and Divine Silence
  • Chapter 2. Women in Leadership
  • Chapter 3. Schism in the Heart
  • Chapter 4. When Heroes Fall
  • Chapter 5. Making $aints
  • Chapter 6. From "I" to "We"
  • Afterword
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Journalist Dulle, who covers the Vatican for America magazine, debuts with a potent insider's look at some of "the most distressing stories" roiling the Catholic church. Among other issues, she unpacks women's exclusion from key leadership roles in the Vatican, a practice that Pope Francis had begun to reform before his death, and the laborious process of canonizing saints, which can eat up decades and millions of dollars. (There's "a strange tension," Dulle points out, "that exists in the church between holiness, which Jesus made clear is easier for the poor to achieve," and the great sums needed to officially recognize sainthood.) Elsewhere, she reflects on the emotional gauntlet of covering the church's sexual abuse scandals, describing how she vacillates between numbness and anger and has come to the uneasy conclusion that "wrestling with the church's problems a key condition of my being Catholic." Dulle buttresses her account with intriguing up-close details (including the ways in which the male-dominated Vatican culture is showing some preliminary signs of change), and delves deeply into the challenges that arise as the Vatican's intricate traditions and labyrinthine bureaucratic processes come under the microscope of a global media, raising questions about the costs of upholding tradition and the cultural changes needed to reform calcified systems. The result is a revealing and often troubling portrait of a church in flux. (Aug.)

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