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Jeffrey Burns, PhD

Assistant Professor of U.S. Church History, Director of the Academy of American Franciscan History

 

Biography

Name: Jeffrey Burns, PhD
Specialization: U.S. Catholic History
Email:  acadafh@fst.edu
Phone: 510-484-3561

 

“Real history is an essential tool for the Church. We cannot live in a make-believe past or approach the future with an inadequate historical understanding. We must honestly confront our past. I hope that my courses and scholarship provide this necessary tool.“

Jeff Burns is widely published in local church history and in the history of the immigrant Church. He is a professional archivist for the Archdiocese of San Francisco and a popular youth group moderator at a local school and parish. In addition, he serves as an ordained Deacon for the Diocese of Oakland.

 

Degrees

  • Ph.D. University of Notre Dame
  • MA University of Notre Dame
  • B.A. UC Riverside

Courses

History of the Immigrant Church in the U.S.

This course explores the development and interaction of the many cultures which have made up the Catholic Church in the United States–Native American, Spanish, Irish, French, German, Polish, Italian, African-American, Latino, Filipino, Vietnamese, and other Asian groups. Non-ethnic cultures will also be explored, including pre-conciliar Catholic and conservative, liberal, and radical Catholic cultures. The course will examine the many conflicts the diversity of cultures engendered.

Modern Social Justice Prophets

This course examines the history of Christian (especially Catholic) social justice movements in the U.S. in the 20th century by focusing on representative leaders such as Dorothy Day, Peter Maurin, Pat, and Patty Crowley, Mother Jones, Thomas Merton, the Berrigan brothers, Cesar Chavez, Catherine de Hueck, Janet Kalven, Jane Addams, Walter Rauschenbusch, Martin Luther King, Jr., A.J. Muste, and others.

History of Evangelization and Mission Since 1492

This course explores the Catholic Church’s attempts at mission and evangelization since the 15th century in Latin America, the United States, Canada, the Philippines, China, Japan, Vietnam, and Africa and modern efforts from the U.S. (i.e., Maryknoll). The methods, definitions of success, controversies engendered, and the conflict of cultures are examined.

Books

Disturbing the Peace: A History of the Christian Family Movement, 1949-1974 (Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press)

Keeping Faith: European and Asian Immigrants; part of the American Catholic Identities: A Documentary History Project (with Joseph White and Ellen Skerrett), (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books) 2002

We Are the Church: A History of the Diocese of Oakland, 1797-2002 (Strasbourg, France: Editions du Signe)

Select Publications

“Mexican Americans and the Catholic Church in California, 1910–1965,” Gilbert Hinojosa, ed., History of Hispanic Catholics in the United States (Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press)

“Que es esto? The Transformation of St. Peter’s Parish in the Mission, San Francisco, 1913-1990″, James Wind and James Lewis, eds., American Congregations (Chicago: University of Chicago Press)

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