83:, Steichen argued extremely forcefully that these views were contrary to revealed doctrine and that the dissenters were actually practicing a completely different religion from that taught by the Church. She contended that these heretical notions had been permitted to gain a foothold in American Catholic institutions by the US hierarchy, which was unwilling or excessively slow to investigate those responsible.
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on the grounds that many of her sources are unreliable, that she misquotes
Christian and pagan feminists, and vastly misinterprets the sources and its authors. More basic inaccuracies are also present throughout the book like how Steichen provides incorrect page numbers and book titles of some of her
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Before becoming known for her writing, Steichen was a classroom teacher and religious educator, and was engaged in the pro-life movement from its inception. From 1980 to 1986, she served as vice-president and president, successively, of the
Minnesota chapter of the Catholic League for Religious
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The book, her first, was a success. It turned
Steichen, who had been writing for a long time in small Catholic journals, into a significant figure in the move to restore orthodoxy within the Church. She became a noted figure on the lecture circuit in North America, England, Ireland,
72:(Of Human Life). In the turmoil following the Second Vatican Council, many were open to new ideas and seeking untraditional ways to live. Among the main sources of such unorthodox ideas were "New Theology", feminism and
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is a Roman
Catholic author and journalist. Born in Wadena, Minnesota to Margaret (Corcoran) and Maurice Merrigan, she lived most of her life in
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women who were brought up Roman
Catholic but gave up their faith, only to return later in their lives.
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In 1950, she married LeRoy
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Donna
Steichen is best known to the general public for her best selling 1991 book
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See
Roberts, Tom, "Feminists say pope's attack was based on `disinformation'" in
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Chosen: How Christ Sent Twenty-Three
Surprised Converts to Replant His Vineyard
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Some, like
Elizabeth Knuth, have criticized Steichen and her book
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Though well received, the book was not as controversial as
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Prodigal Daughters: Catholic Women Come Home to the Church
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