Saturday, 21 December 2024

Novena The Power of Prayer - Barbara Calamari and Sandra DiPasqua

Novena: The Power of Prayer
Barbara Calamari
Penguin Studio
ISBN 9780670884445
ASIN B010OAKCZS

Novena The Power of Prayer - Barbara Calamari and Sandra DiPasqua

I stumbled upon another volume by this writing team and have since reading that first one tracked down all but 1 in digital format. Because of a dual form of dyslexia I greatly prefer eBooks. The first volume I read was all about Holy Cards, and it was a fascinating read. This is the fifth volume I have read by this writing duo and I can easily state they have all been great. In fact I only have 2 to go and wish that They had more in the works. But back to this specific volume, the description of this book states:

“Today's spirituality movement stresses the holistic value and the power of prayer. But one special, long-established form of intention and affirmation has been overlooked: the novena. Perennially popular in the Catholic Church, a novena is a nine-day period of prayer for a particular grace or intention, often offered as a supplication to a saint with expertise in a particular area. Novena, a volume that will enchant the eye and touch the soul, traces its history and brings together thirty-six of the best-known novenas. Each is accompanied by a luminous image of its affiliated saint--fiercely beautiful and intensely human--adapted, with a contemporary air, from a traditional prayer card; by a brief discussion of the saint's life and particular specialty; and by instructions on when, and why, to use the novena. Novena is divided into four sections: novenas to the saints, the angels, the madonna (each revealing a different aspect of her personality), and the Divinity. An appendix cross-references specific concerns with appropriate novenas: We learn how the saints themselves transcended such problems as a turbulent youth, a difficult marriage, or abuse. The ideal gift for Easter and Mother's Day, this jewel of a book has year-round bestselling potential.”

The chapters and sections in this volume are:

Preface
INTROduction
The Power of Prayer

THE SAINTS
     Saint Thomas Aquinas
     Saint Agatha
     Saint Patrick
     Saint Joseph
     Saint Caatherine of Siena
     Saint Peregrine
     Saint Dymphna
     Saint Rita of Cascia
     Saint Anthony of Padua
     Saint Paul the Apostle
     Saint Maria Goretti
     Saints Ann and Joachim
     Saint Alphonsus Liguori
     Saint Therese of Lisieux
     Saint Francis of Assisi
     Saint Gerard Majella
     Saint Jude
     Saint Martin de Porres
     Saint Frances Xavier Cabrini
     Saint Francis Xavier
     Saint Barbara
     Saint Lucy
     All Saints

THE ANGELS
     Saint Raphael, Archangel
     Saint Michael, Archangel
     Saint Gabriel, Archangel
     The Guardian Angels

THE MADONNA
     Our Lady of Fatima
     Our Lady of Perpetual Help
     Our Lady of Mount Carmel
     The Mother of Sorrows
     Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal
     Our Lady of Guadalupe

THE DIVINITY
     The Infant of Prague
     The Sacred Heart of Jesus
     The Holy Spirit

Additional Prayers
Topic Index

It should be noted that The Holy Spirit Novena has the 9 Specific days with 2 prayers each of the 9 days and specific prayers and intentions each day as a third prayer. When I worked through this volume I slowed down and prayer a few of these Novenas I also added some into my calendar so I will end on the specific saints feast day. 

A sample chapter is:

Saint Patrick 
389 – 461
His Feast Day is March 17
Saint Patrick is Patron Saint of Ireland, Fear of Snakes, Faith

Though not usually considered a novena saint, Saint Patrick is called upon by many for faith in the most trying of circumstances. Since he himself was forced to submit to living in a country not of his own choosing, he assists in accepting difficult situations where there is little hope of change. The patron saint of Ireland, he is credited with single—handedly changing the beliefs of the entire Irish nation through the purity and intensity of his faith. Saint Patrick’s following has spread to wherever the Irish have settled, especially in North America and Australia. He could never have imagined the astounding impact that his work in Ireland would have on the world.

Saint Patrick was born on the west coast of Great Britain of Roman—British parents. Though his father was a deacon, and his grandfather a priest, early on, Patrick showed no interest at all in God or religion. At the age of sixteen he was abducted by pirates and taken to Ireland, where he was sold into slavery. For six years he was forced to live under the direst of conditions, subject to the elements and hardship, herding sheep. When he began to pray for deliverance, he dreamed of a ship docked two hundred miles away. By following the dream’s directions, he was able to escape from captivity, find the ship, and prevail upon the sailors to take him with them. He eventually returned to his family, and in gratitude for God’s help he became a priest. In A.D. 432 he again had a dream that changed the course of his life. In it, he was instructed to return to Ireland and to convert as many people as possible to Christianity. Though he would have preferred to perfect his studies and remain in Britain, he surrendered to the guidance of the dream and put all his faith in God by returning to Ireland. Living there at a time when the Druid religion was in decline, he nonetheless had to compete with the “wizardry” of the Druid priests. There are many fantastic tales of his magical powers. It was said that Saint Patrick could turn people into deer and that he could turn day into night. He is still invoked today by those afraid of snakes, because he was said to have obtained a promise from God that no poisonous reptiles would be allowed to live on that island. Saint Patrick expelling snakes is a common image. Another one of his symbols is the shamrock, or three—leaf clover. This symbolizes how he explained the Holy Trinity in his preaching.

Saint Patrick built his main church in Northern Ireland. Realizing that the landowners chose the religion of their serfs for them, he set upon converting the major families first. His life as a former slave and fugitive taught him to trust God completely, and those living in similarly miserable circumstances have always been able to identify with him. He died in 461 in the monastery of Saul, and his remains are buried with those of Saint Brigid in Ulster.

Novena to Saint Patrick
O great apostle of Ireland, glorious Saint Patrick, to whom under God so many are indebted for the most precious of all treasures, the great gift of faith, receive our fervent thanks for the zeal and charity that have been to thousands the blessings so invaluable. We ask your intervention in receiving (Mention your request here). Ask for all who dwell in this land and the land of thy labors the precious light of Faith, and beg for us on whom its glorious rays have long since beamed, the grace to regulate our lives by its sacred maxims. Amen

Say this novena nine times in a row for nine days in a row.”

Novena The Power of Prayer - Barbara Calamari and Sandra DiPasqua - Saint Patrick Image

I highlighted a number of passages while reading this volume. Some of them are:

“Catholics consider the very first novena to have been created by Jesus Christ himself. Before Christ rose into heaven he instructed his apostles to spend nine days praying for divine guidance as they awaited the arrival of the Holy Spirit. After the apostles spent this allotted time in prayer, the Holy Spirit appeared to them in the form of tongues of fire coming from the sky. These tongues rested on each apostle, giving them the gift of many languages and the burning desire to spread the story of Jesus Christ. It is thought that the nine—day tradition of prayer comes from this first novena. The novena of the Holy Spirit was written in the Middle Ages to commemorate this event, and so it is presented as the last and most important novena in this book.”

“In seventeenth—century Spain the Christmas novena was instituted. For nine days preceding Christmas Day, each symbolizing a month the infant Jesus spent in the womb, a special novena was said. Many towns in France and southern Italy began doing nine—day novenas in preparation for their local saint's feast day. It became customary to invoke the saint for a requested favor that would be granted in this time of celebration.”

“Fearing that novenas would be used in superstition, the Church began to recognize them only in the mid—1800s. Of the many novenas, only thirty—two are officially recommended, mainly in honor of a feast day. Personal novenas for individualized intentions continue to be a very private form of prayer.”

“The saints all have differing fields of expertise based on the earthly lives they led. Novenas are said to certain saints to help us deal with problems similar to those they suffered.”

“There are at least eleven official novenas to the Virgin Mary, and we have included six of them in our collection. In all of those included she takes on the role of the universal mother.”

“Bear in mind that the only prayer that can be guaranteed to be answered is "Thy Will Be Done". In praying we participate in God's unfolding will for the world and ourselves.”

“Why do novenas work? Is it the willingness to open to the miraculous? Or is it simply setting aside time to address a problem that is crucial? Perhaps by repeating a request for a solution over and over, we are taking the fear out of a problem. Or is it that we open to grace? Prayer brings grace, and grace lightens the spirit and makes the day go easier.”

“Novenas are not magic. They are just another form of prayer. Yet the discipline required in this form of devotion assures us of spending time with a higher level of being, bringing divine blessing and grace into the world.”

“O God, we humbly beseech you through your servant Saint Dymphna, who sealed with her blood the love she bore you, to grant relief to those who suffer from mental afflictions and nervous disorders, especially Name the afflicted person Saint Dymphna, helper of the mentally afflicted, pray for us. Saint Dymphna, comforter of the despondent, pray for us. Saint Dymphna, renowned for many miracles, please hear my plea. Amen”

“O holy Saint Anthony, gentlest of saints, your love for God and charity for his creatures made you worthy, when on earth, to possess miraculous powers. Miracles waited on your word, which were ever ready to speak for those in trouble or anxiety. Encouraged by this thought, I implore of you to obtain for me( mention your request here). The answer to my prayer may require a miracle; even so, you are the saint of miracles. O gentle and loving Saint Anthony, whose heart was ever filled with human sympathy. whisper my petition into the ears of the sweet infant Jesus, who loved to be folded in your arms, and the gratitude of my heart will be ever yours.”

“Crippled by arthritis and ready to die at age seventy—two, Saint Alphonsus Liguori went on to live another nineteen years, publishing over sixty books and writing poetry and music. His disease made him so conscious of his own mortality that he assumed each day was his last and lived accordingly.”

“Holy little Therese, remember your promise to do good upon the earth and shower down your roses on those who invoke you. Obtain for me from God the graces I hope for from his infinite goodness. Let me feel the powers of your prayers in every need. Give me consolation in all the bitterness of this life, and especially at the hour of death, that I may be worthy to share eternal happiness with you in heaven. Amen.”

This is a wonderful volume. It ties in well with the books the due have written on Holy Cards, Mary, and Saints. This is a stunning volume, both the physical book and the eBook edition. Each Novena has a 4 page spread. 2 pages about the saint, 1 for the novena and 1 with a picture of a prayer card of the saint with a quote. The only issues is this full page photo and quote splits up the text, and in the eBook it does so as well. It is an amazing volume. I absolutely loved working through it and plan on rereading it again. It is an excellent book I can easily recommend for home, school, or church library!

Note: This book is part of a series of reviews: 2024 Catholic Reading Plan

Novena The Power of Prayer - Barbara Calamari and Sandra DiPasqua - Sample 1

Novena The Power of Prayer - Barbara Calamari and Sandra DiPasqua - Sample 2

Novena The Power of Prayer - Barbara Calamari and Sandra DiPasqua - Sample 3

Novena The Power of Prayer - Barbara Calamari and Sandra DiPasqua - Sample 1

Books by Barbara Calamari and Sandra DiPasqua:
Our Lady of Guadalupe in a Box: A Novena Prayer Kit (2002)
Holy Cards (2004)
Patron Saints: A Feast of Holy Cards (2007)
Holy Places: Sacred Sites in Catholicism (2015)
...

Books by Barbara Calamari:
The Bible Companion: The Complete Illustrated Handbook to the Holy Scriptures

Patron Saints - Barbara Calamari and Sandra DiPasqua

Visions of Mary - Barbara Calamari and Sandra DiPasqua

Holy Cards - Barbara Calamari and Sandra DiPasqua

Saints Ancient & Modern - Barbara Calamari and Sandra DiPasqua Alternate Cover


Friday, 20 December 2024

Holy Souls In Purgatory A Journey of Mercy, 30 Days Novena for Relief, with Prayers, Devotion, Promises for Dying Holy Souls in Purgatory - Susan Tassone

Holy Souls In Purgatory: 
A Journey of Mercy, 30 Days Novena for Relief, with Prayers, Devotion, Promises for Dying Holy Souls in Purgatory
Tassone D Susan
ISBN ‎9798865739982
ASIN B0CM1JCX7Z

Holy Souls In Purgatory A Journey of Mercy, 30 Days Novena for Relief, with Prayers, Devotion, Promises for Dying Holy Souls in Purgatory - Susan Tassone

I picked this up to read over the month of November because someone had shared an image of it on social media. I already had some other read planned for that November but this caught my attention and reading a work by Tassone has been on my ‘to do list’ for a while now.

The description of this volume states:

“Embark on a transformative spiritual journey with "HOLY SOULS IN PURGATORY," a powerful guide designed to uplift the souls of our departed loved ones in Purgatory. This devotional offers a profound opportunity to extend mercy and love beyond the earthly realm. Within these pages, you'll find a carefully curated collection of prayers, reflections, and meditations, each tailored to provide solace and support to the souls awaiting their ultimate union with God. As you engage in this sacred practice, you'll strengthen your own faith, deepen your connection to the Divine, and experience the profound impact of intercession. Incorporating both traditional and contemporary prayers, this guide offers a balanced approach to honoring the departed. Each day brings a new focus, guiding you through themes of hope, forgiveness, gratitude, and ultimately, the promise of eternal life. Through these prayers, you'll join a global community of believers, united in a common purpose of offering comfort and relief to souls in their journey towards God's embrace. 

WHAT TO EXPECT:
1. 30 days prayers for holy souls in Purgatory
2. Prayers for Departed Loved Ones
3. Four Mysteries of the Holy Rosary
4. Litany for the Departed
5. Salve Regina: A Prayer of Comfort and Invocation
6. A Prayer for a Peaceful Departure

Call to Action:
Let this book be your companion in a spiritual quest that transcends time and space. Embrace the opportunity to become a beacon of light for those who have passed on, by setting aside a few moments each day to pray for their souls. Share this devotional with your community, inviting them to join you in this noble endeavor. Together, let us offer our prayers, acts of love, and heartfelt intentions for the Holy Souls in Purgatory. Through our collective efforts, may we become instruments of God's mercy, ushering them into the eternal joy and peace that await them in His loving presence.”

The chapters in the volume are:

An Essential Note on Gaining Plenary Indulgence
Introduction
Preliminary Prayers: Opening the Gateway to Divine Grace
Prayer to the Holy Spirit:
A Call for Divine Presence
A Prayer of Compassion for Souls in Purgatory
First Day:
An Invocation of Compassion
2nd Day
Embracing the Reality of Purgatory: A Journey of Atonement
3rd Day
Purgatory: A Divine Revelation
4th Day
Purgatory's Silent Proclamation: A Reasonable Understanding
5th Day
The Purifying Flames: A Divine Crucible
6th Day
Longing for God: The Agony of Deprivation
7th Day
Delving into Remorse and the Urgency of Avoiding Evil
8th Day
Contemplating the Length of Atonement
9th Day
A Glimpse into the Powerlessness of Purgatorial Souls
10th Day
Two Paths Converging in Purgatory: Mortal and Venial Sins
11th Day
Souls Aflame with Love for God
12th Day
A Divine Bond of Compassion
13th Day
Remembering the Abandoned Souls
14th Day
Relief for the Souls in Purgatory: A Call to Charity
15th Day
The Importance of Remembering the Deceased: A Lesson from Lazarus
16th Day
The Glorious Motivation - Bringing Relief to Souls in Purgatory
17th Day
The Profound Love of God for Souls in Purgatory
18th Day
Our Blessed Mother's Tender Compassion for the Souls in Purgatory
19th Day
Gratitude of the Departed: A Reason for Easing Purgatorial Suffering
20th Day
The Power of Simple Prayer for the Souls in Purgatory
21st Day
The Profound Impact of Corporal Charity on Souls in Purgatory
22nd Day
Drawing Closer Through Sacramental Communion
23rd Day
The Healing Grace of the Holy Sacrifice
24th Day
The Healing Power of Voluntary Suffering
25th Day
The Way of the Cross – A Path to Comfort the Souls in Purgatory
26th Day
Indulgences: A Source of Comfort for the Souls in Purgatory
27th Day
A Journey of Compassion and Redemption through Meditation
28th Day
Embracing the Path to Evade Purgatory
29th Day
The Phenomenon of Apparitions: A Glimpse into Divine Wisdom
30th Day
The Sanctity of Last Wills: Honoring the Departed
Concluding with Reverence:
Prayers for Departed Loved Ones
Four Mysteries of the Holy Rosary
Litany for the Departed:
A Prayer of Intercession
Salve Regina:
A Prayer of Comfort and Invocation
A Prayer for a Peaceful Departure

A sample day is:

13th Day
Remembering the Abandoned Souls
Reflection: "The Cry of the Forgotten Souls"
Amid the chorus of prayers and remembrances, consider those souls who languish in Purgatory, abandoned by human memory, yearning for the solace of compassion and the warmth of intercession. These forgotten souls, once dear to someone's heart, now suffer without the consolation of a friend's prayer.

The Silence of Abandonment
In the realm of Purgatory, there exist souls who have been left behind by the tide of time. Their once-beloved friendships have faded into oblivion, replaced by the noise of daily life. The Church, a mother to all her children, prays for them, but the personal prayers that once promised eternal remembrance are nowhere to be found.

The Weight of Forgotten Promises
In the quiet agony of abandonment, these souls address those who vowed eternal love. They beseech friends who once swore never to forget to remember their promises. Those vows, made in moments of intimacy, have crumbled, and the souls now cry out, "Have mercy on us, you who were our friends." They lament the broken bond of affection, the promise of perpetual remembrance that has been replaced by silence.

Human Inconsistency and Divine Justice
The inconsistency of human affections is a stark reminder of the imperfections inherent in our earthly bonds. Promises are made with the utmost sincerity but often fade with the passage of time. The souls in Purgatory, once beloved and cherished, understand this human frailty. Their cries are not merely reproaches; they are a reflection of the fleeting nature of human connections.

A Call to Remember
As we reflect upon these forgotten souls, we are prompted to examine our own lives. Are there promises we have made that have faded away? Have we allowed time to erode our commitment to remember and pray for those who have gone before us? Let us heed the lessons taught by history and make a conscious effort to remember those who have shaped our lives.

A Promise of Eternal Remembrance
As we remember the forgotten, let us also remember that we, too, will one day traverse the path from this world to the next. The souls in Purgatory teach us that in the tapestry of eternity, the threads of remembrance are woven by the living. Our prayers and acts of remembrance can illuminate the path of souls striving for celestial glory.

May our prayers and compassionate remembrances reach across the chasm of death, touching the hearts of those who have been forgotten, and may they find solace in our commitment to fulfill the promises of love and remembrance.

The Abandoned Souls: A Cry for Compassion
Reflection: "The Orphaned Souls"
In the silence of Purgatory, there exists a profound isolation that intensifies the torment of those who suffer. Abandoned by family members, the dear souls are left to languish without the solace of familial bonds or the balm of intercession. These souls cry out not just for deliverance but for the compassion of those who have forgotten them.

Deserted by the Bonds of Family
In the realm of forgotten souls, there are those who were abandoned not just by friends but also by family. Death has not only separated them from the living but also cut the threads of familial connection. The love that once bound parent to child, sibling to sibling, has been obscured by the shroud of time, leaving these souls to bear their suffering alone.

A Cry for Recognition
These abandoned souls were once sons and daughters, brothers and sisters. Their existence is a testament to the love that once flourished within the walls of family homes. Yet, now they are like broken vases, cast aside and forgotten. The pain of their abandonment is palpable, and they cry out for someone to remember them, to acknowledge their existence and their need for salvation.

A Parallel to Christ's Abandonment
In their isolation, these souls find resonance with Christ's experience in the garden of Gethsemane. The Savior, abandoned by His disciples in His hour of need, felt the weight of solitude as He faced His impending sacrifice. Similarly, the abandoned souls feel the desolation of being forgotten by those they held dear, left to grapple with their purification without the comfort of human presence.

Answering the Cry of Abandonment
As we reflect upon these forgotten souls, we are called to be their companions in their suffering. We can become their spiritual family, offering the solace of prayer and remembrance. In doing so, we not only alleviate their suffering but also embody the teachings of Christ, who instructed us to love one another as He has loved us.

Reversing the Abandonment
In a poignant example, we are reminded that even in the face of such abandonment, our prayers and compassionate efforts can provide solace. Just as in the story of the woman drowning in the muddy pond, these souls stretch out their arms, hoping for a helping hand. It is up to us to respond to their cry and reverse the cycle of abandonment.

A Promise of Mutual Help
The souls in Purgatory, once helped by us, can become our intercessors in Heaven. The bonds we form in this life, through our prayers and compassion, transcend the boundaries of life and death. As we reach out to them, they, in turn, reach out to us, becoming companions on our journey towards eternal glory.

Prayer
May our hearts be attuned to the cries of the abandoned souls, and may we, as their spiritual family, embrace the responsibility of compassion and remembrance, bringing solace to those who suffer in silence.

CONCLUDE with the following PRAYERS.
Go to PAGE 262
 ● Prayers for Departed Loved Ones
 ● Four Mysteries of the Holy Rosary
 ● Litany for the Departed
 ● Salve Regina: A Prayer of Comfort and Invocation
 ● A Prayer for a Peaceful Departure”

Of note this volume is only listed as 149 pages. It looks like this month is an extract of a larger work. But there is no information about that in the volume. This book sis also published under the name Tassone D Susan, and Most books by known publishers are under the name Susan Tassone. I believe this might be an unauthorized edition of Thirty-Day Devotions for the Holy Souls from Our Sunday Visitor, Or an extract of a longer work. But those are speculations when I went to write this review. I cannot find this edition on the authors site but find a series of books under this variation of Susan Tassone’s name.

That being said this was a great volume to work through. I enjoyed the mix of reflections and extracts from the saints. Each day has a reflection and also a teaching section. Followed by the concluding prayers. I enjoyed reading this volume and am trying to track down Susan Tassone through a priest I know to find out about this volume and the others published under this variation of the authors name. A good book I can recommend, especially for reading in November. 

Note: This book is part of a series of reviews: 2024 Catholic Reading Plan

Books by Susan Tassone:
New Friends: Now and Forever
Praying with Jesus and Faustina during Lent and in Times of Suffering
Jesus Speaks to Faustina and You
Day By Day with Saint Faustina
St. Faustina Prayer Book for Adoration
St. Faustina Prayer Book for the Conversion of Sinners
St. Faustina Prayer Book for the Holy Souls
Day By Day for the Holy Souls in Purgatory
Prayers, Promises, and Devotions for the Holy Souls in Purgatory
Praying With the Saints for the Holy Souls in Purgatory
The Way of the Cross for the Holy Souls in Purgatory
Prayers of Intercession for the Holy Souls
Thirty-Day Devotions for the Holy Souls
The Rosary for the Holy Souls in Purgatory

Related Posts about Purgatory:
Prayers:
Prayer of the Day Prayer for All The Faithful Departed
...

Books:


Thursday, 19 December 2024

The Prayer of Jesus - Juan LĂłpez Vergara - CTS Notes on Prayer Book 3

The Prayer of Jesus
CTS Notes on Prayer Book 3
Juan LĂłpez Vergara
Pope Francis (Preface)
ISBN 9781784698270

The Prayer of Jesus - Cardinal Gianfranco Ravasi - CTS Notes on Prayer Book 3

This is volume 3 of a new 8 volume set released for the Jubilee 2025, and the sixth I have read. All 8 volumes have the same preface from Pope Francis. Each volume is by a different author. The books were originally released in Italian, and have since been released in Europe by the CTS, and there are forthcoming edition by Our Sunday Visitor for North American Release. The original series and the CTS editions are marked as ‘Notes on Prayer’, the OSV editions the series is called ‘Exploring Prayer’. Some of the titles are different between the two editions and one even has an Americanized name for the author. My recommendation is to get the CTS editions, they are excellent. But back to this sixth read which is of the third volume.

The description of this volume states:

“Juan LĂłpez Vergara offers a meditation on how Jesus always prayed, calling God Abba (Dad), and teaching his followers to do the same. Vergara presents a model for our own prayer and invites us to deepen our relationship with God, our loving Father.

“Prayer is the breath of faith; it is its most proper expression. Like a silent cry that issues from the hearts of those who believe and entrust themselves to God.” – Pope Francis

In this third of eight booklets on prayer, Juan LĂłpez Vergara offers a meditation on how Jesus always prayed, calling God Abba (Dad), and teaching his followers to do the same. Taking many instances where Jesus addresses his father with this familiarity and love, Vergara presents a model for our own prayer and invites us to deepen our relationship with God, our loving Father.”

The chapters in this volume are:

Preface by Pope Francis 
Abba, your goodness has clouded my eyes, and from the depths of my heart T bless you 
Abba, your Word is a torch for my footsteps 
Abba, today I confirmed that I am dreaming your own dreams 
Abba, my mother hastened the beginnings of the 
Abba, your providential love embraces everything 
Abba, I ask you to give courage and enthusiasm to those who decide to follow me 
Abba, I taught them that learning to pray is learning to hope, and therefore learning to live 
Abba. I bless you, you have entrusted and transmitted everything to me 
Abba, today I encouraged them to come to me
Abba, Peter's words stirred my soul 
Abba, I proclaimed that unless a grain of wheat dies, it remains just a grain of wheat 
Abba, today I revealed that whoever decides to come after me, after suffering, will see the light 
Abba, I bless you for confirming my primary mission 
Abba, the mission entrusted to me is brought to life through prayer
Abba, I shared your wonderful joy 
Why, Abba, why? 
Abba, take this cup from me, but not what I will, but what you will 
Abba, I now understand with my life what I have revealed 
Abba, I promised the repentant criminal that today he would be with me in paradise 
Thank you, Abba, for listening to me 

I only highlighted a few passages while reading this volume, some of them are:

“After thirty years spent in the silence and remoteness of an obscure village in Galilee, Jesus enters the desert and listens to the Baptist, a witness to the truth. John never refers to himself, but to someone greater than himself. The Nazarene comes to John as if he were the last of sinners, and bowing his head in humility he is baptised in the Jordan.”

“Mary, listener of the Word, a woman fil led with gratitude, who had brought grace to John the Baptist, was changed after her meeting with Jesus in the Temple. Neither she nor her beloved husband understood this. The nature of her son's response made her return to Nazareth transformed, with a heart felt deep understanding, for Mary kept al l these things in her heart.

She knew that her son's life sprang from the living and eternal Word of God; and day by day he was nourished by it.”

“The wine is finished, and the flavour of a true feast is greatly missing' At the news, Mary's heart was startled, and, without saying more, she intervened, convinced that she was going to be cared for. Her son would provide the ultimate and best wine. And so, it was. He was the wine of the feast, symbol of a superior and transcendent event:”

“She, with that serenity so much hers, Abba, impregnated with tenderness, which springs from her clean and humble heart, took no notice, and ordered the servants to do as I told them.”

“Abba, my most holy mother, intervened with that smile of hers, and, giving life to her prophetic words, she hastened the beginning of the Gospel.”

“Among the houses, the squares, the crowded streets, Jesus was thinking how his existence had become interwoven with the threads of attachments and detachments. He withdrew in search of solitude. A deep and constant desire inhabited him, it was essential for him to be with his Abba. His prayer was incessant and tireless!”

“I believe, Abba, in your love. And with greater depth grows in me the consciousness of absolute dependence on you, which frees me toward wider horizons.

I exhorted them to learn to look beyond themselves, Abba, to grow with confidence in the goodness of life, to not worry about the future anymore than the birds.”

“Jesus's actions in his Galilean homeland were characterised by his continuous travels through cities and villages, announcing the reign of God. He was accompanied by his inner circle of disciples and a significant group of women. The impression caused by his encounters with God, whom he invoked as his Abba, was enormous.”

“He used to remain in prayer from midnight until dawn, convinced that he who knows how to pray well knows how to live well. His message was inseparable from his person. He revealed God's being with his own ways of acting.”

“Later, when I was with my friends, Abba, they asked me why they had not been able to expel the spirit as I had. I explained to them that trust in you is the key, and it grows with every encounter with you. I begin and end the day with my eyes turned toward you. I need to be with you to receive your peace, to see things from your light.”

“Prayer is the door, Abba, but it is not improvised, it is prepared, it leads to the surrender of what has been undertaken. That is why I answered them that this kind cannot be delivered with anything but prayer.”

I hope those quotes give you a feel for this volume. There were many things in this volume that caught my attention. But I have mixed feelings about this offering. It in many ways reads like a diary or prayer journal of Jesus’s thoughts and reflections around different times he prayed during his ministry. My concern is it so humanized Jesus it appears to strip some of his divinity, for example a section states he needed to grow in ‘grace and perfection’ p.81 and also the question of will anyone be in Hell or even Judas being restored p.77. There was much that caused me to slow down and take note in this work but also much that caused me concern. I really liked the concept but feel it lacked on execution. The other 5 volumes I have reviewed in the series all have 5/5 stars this one was a 4 but would have given 3.5 if I could. 

I jumped around and was not reading these books in order my first time through, but already have plans to reread them again, but am uncertain if I would read this one a second time. I had planned to reread them in order.

The description of the series on the CTS site states:

“The “Notes on Prayer” series is an inspiring collection of eight booklets from the Vatican, designed to deepen and enrich the prayer lives of Catholics as they journey through the Year of Jubilee 2025, themed “Pilgrims of Hope.”

Each booklet in this series is a powerful resource, offering spiritual guidance, reflections, and wisdom from Church teachings, Sacred Scripture, and the lives of the saints. Whether you’re seeking personal renewal or walking the path of forgiveness and reconciliation, this series will help you grow in intimacy with God during this special time of grace.”

The first five books in this series I have great to read, this one was not as good but interesting, and I only have 2 to go; across the 8 volumes we have over 700 pages of instruction on prayer. It is an excellent collection; these books would be good for any school, home, or church library. I can recommend this book and the series as a whole is great. I encourage you to give them a read!

Note: This book is part of a series of reviews: 2024 Catholic Reading Plan! For other reviews of books from the Catholic Truth Society click here.

Notes on Prayer Series:
1. Prayer Today: A Challenge to Overcome - Cardinal Angelo Comastri
2. Praying with the Psalms - Cardinal Gianfranco Ravasi
3. The Prayer of Jesus – Juan Lopez Vergara
4. Praying with Saints and Sinners - Fr Paul Brendan Murray, OP
5. The Parables of Prayer – Msgr Antonio Pitta
6. The Church in Prayer - Carthusian Monks
7. The Prayer of Mary and the Saints Who Met Her - Sr Catherine Aubin, OP


Notes on Prayer Books Jubilee 2025 Italian Editions
Original Italian Editions

Notes on Prayer Books Jubilee 2025 English CTS Editions
CTS Editions English

Notes on Prayer Books Jubilee 2025 OSV English Editions
OSV English Editions

Wednesday, 18 December 2024

Screwtape Proposes a Toast and Other Pieces - C.S. Lewis - The Ransom Cycle Book 4

The Screwtape Letters
and Other Pieces 
The Ransom Cycle Book 4
ISBN 9780008192532
eISBN 9780008228545
ASIN B01MA511VT

Screwtape Proposes A Toast - C.S. Lewis

This book hit very differently reading it this time. I believe that is for a few reasons. Some of which are: One I now believe this is part of the Ransom cycle, more on that below. Two looking back on my life from my mid 50’s I can see thinks, I hope, a little better. As a father of three teenagers, and a child in her late 20’s growing up in this day and age I am even more concerned about the trials and temptations they face. I know I read this volume a number of times in University, but that was before I started keeping a list of everything I have read, which I started in October of 1995. At the time of writing this review according to Goodreads there are over 800 editions of The Screwtape Letters available. Interestingly enough some editions contain this work at the end; there are some notes on that in this edition:

“C. S. Lewis had finished putting this book together shortly before his death on 22nd November 1963. It is devoted almost entirely to religion and the pieces are derived from various sources. Some of them have appeared in They Asked for a Paper (Geoffrey Bles, London 1962, 21s.), a collection whose subjects included literature, ethics and theology. ‘Screwtape Proposes a Toast’ was initially published in Great Britain as part of a hard-covered book called The Screwtape Letters and Screwtape Proposes a Toast (Geoffrey Bles, London 1961, 12s. 6d.). This consisted of the original ‘The Screwtape Letters’, together with the ‘Toast’, and also a new preface by Lewis. Meantime, ‘Screwtape Proposes a Toast’ had already appeared in the United States, first as an article in The Saturday Evening Post and then during 1960 in a hard-covered collection, The World’s Last Night (Harcourt Brace and World, New York)”

The preface ends with:

“At the end of his preface to They Asked for a Paper, Lewis wrote: ‘Since these papers were composed at various times during the last twenty years, passages in them which some readers may find reminiscent of my later work are in fact anticipatory or embryonic. I have allowed myself to be persuaded that such overlaps were not a fatal objection to their republication.’ We are delighted that he allowed himself to be persuaded in the same way over this paperback collection of pieces on religious themes.”

Lewis himself in the new preface included in this volume states:

“I was often asked or advised to add to the original “Screwtape Letters”, but for many years I felt not the least inclination to do it. Though I had never written anything more easily, I never wrote with less enjoyment. The ease came, no doubt, from the fact that the device of diabolical letters, once you have thought of it, exploits itself spontaneously, like Swift’s big and little men, or the medical and ethical philosophy of “Erewhon”, as Anstey’s Garuda Stone. It would run away with you for a thousand pages if you gave it its head. But though it was easy to twist one’s mind into the diabolical attitude, it was not fun, or not for long. The strain produced a sort of spiritual cramp. The world into which I had to project myself while I spoke through Screwtape was all dust, grit, thirst and itch. Every trace of beauty, freshness and geniality had to be excluded. It almost smothered me before I was done. It would have smothered my readers if I had prolonged it.”

And over the years there have been numerous attempts to update or modernize Screwtape including:

Flambeau@Darkcorp.com - Don Hawkings
The Snakebite Letters - Peter J. Kreeft
The Gargoyle Code - Dwight Longenecker
Lord Foulgrin's Letters - Randy Alcorn
As One Devil to Another - Richard Platt
The Gravedigger File - Os Guinness 
     (Now published as The Last Christian on Earth)

And those are just the ones that come to mind and that I have encountered. I have read half of that list but before I started writing reviews. And from what I recall those I have read paled in comparison to this volume. As can be seen from this list and even Lewis’s own preface Screwtape has often been imitated but never replicated. Even Lewis did not attempt that. The work sin this volume are:

Preface and Acknowledgements
Screwtape Proposes a Toast: An Address
The Inner Ring: An Oration
Is Theology Poetry?: A Paper
On Obstinacy in Belief: A Paper
Transposition: A Sermon
The Weight of Glory: A Sermon
Good Work and Good Works: A Paper
A Slip of the Tongue: A Sermon
Footnotes
About the Author
Other Books By C.S. Lewis

A note before I continue:
Recent scholarship published found a handwritten preface to manuscript edition of The Screwtape Letters in the C.S. Lewis Archive in Wheaton, IL. This note indicates the letters were found and translated by Dr. Ransom. And that they were written in Old Solar. Thus linking the 3 Ransom novels, the 2 Screwtape pieces and the partial fourth Ransom novel into one series. As such this reading of this volume is in the order of it being volume 3 of 6 in that reading order.

I could have read the edition of this piece that was at the end of the letters, but historically I have always read an edition that is separate and I decided to do so again. It is also fitting that the remaining pieces in this collection are derived from sermons, talks, or articles by Leis on the topic of religion, faith and life. 

This volume is powerful. But in a very different way the the letters. The first piece is of course my primary concern when reading it as part of the Ransom cycle, but the other pieces fit in well especially as I am now well into That Hideous Strength, as I write this review. I cannot help but feel the other pieces in this serve so well as a counter to N.I.C.E. and what they are trying to achieve. The description of this edition of this work states:

“The only official sequel, penned by Lewis himself, to the ever-popular ‘Screwtape Letters’ – published alongside other short essays.

One of the most popular books ever to come from the pen of C.S. Lewis was written in the name of Screwtape, a senior devil, experienced in the art of luring his ‘patients’ on earth to their own damnation in service of ‘our father below’ – and training others to do the same.

Screwtape’s correspondence with his nephew, an apprentice devil, came into Lewis’s hands, he said, by a route he would not disclose, and many a reader has finished the collection longing for more of the insights they gained from its wisdom.

Much to Lewis’s resistance, this after-dinner speech, given by Screwtape to a graduating class of demons at a college in hell, came to light a few years after the publication of the original letters. Now 75 years later, the speech is reproduced in full once more, along with a short collection of Lewis’s other lesser-known, but perennial works.

Many people will have forgotten about the only official ‘sequel’ that exists to Screwtape; the 75th anniversary of Screwtape’s publication is the perfect opportunity to bring this back.”

I highlighted a few passages while reading this work, some of them are:

“The strain produced a sort of spiritual cramp. The world into which I had to project myself while I spoke through Screwtape was all dust, grit, thirst and itch. Every trace of beauty, freshness and geniality had to be excluded. It almost smothered me before I was done. It would have smothered my readers if I had prolonged it.”

“The sort of souls on whose despair and ruin we have—well, I won’t say feasted, but at any rate subsisted—to-night are increasing in numbers and will continue to increase. Our advices from Lower Command assure us that this is so; our directives warn us to orient all our tactics in view of this situation.”

“As for the poor who benefited by this, they were behaving in a most disappointing fashion. Instead of using their new liberties—as we reasonably hoped and expected—for massacre, rape, and looting, or even for perpetual intoxication, they were perversely engaged in becoming cleaner, more orderly, more thrifty, better educated, and even more virtuous. Believe me, gentledevils, the threat of something like a really healthy state of society seemed then perfectly serious.”

“The first and most obvious advantage is that you thus induce him to enthrone at the centre of his life a good, solid resounding lie.”

“Now this useful phenomenon is in itself by no means new. Under the name of Envy it has been known to the humans for thousands of years. But hitherto they always regarded it as the most odious, and also the most comical, of vices.”

“Under the influence of this incantation those who are in any or every way inferior can labour more wholeheartedly and successfully than ever before to pull down everyone else to their own level.”

“All is summed up in the prayer which a young female human is said to have uttered recently: “Oh God, make me a normal twentieth-century girl!” Thanks to our labours, this will mean increasingly, “Make me a minx, a moron, and a parasite.””

“The basic principle of the new education is to be that dunces and idlers must not be made to feel inferior to intelligent and industrious pupils. That would be “undemocratic”.”

“For “democracy” or the “democratic spirit” (diabolical sense) leads to a nation without great men, a nation mainly of subliterates, morally flaccid from lack of discipline in youth, full of the cocksureness which flattery breeds on ignorance, and soft from lifelong pampering.”

“The ultimate value, for us, of any revolution, war, or famine lies in the individual anguish, treachery, hatred, rage, and despair which it may produce. I’m as good as you is a useful means for the destruction of democratic societies. But it has a far deeper value as an end in itself, as a state of mind, which necessarily excluding humility, charity, contentment, and all the pleasures of gratitude or admiration, turns a human being away from almost every road which might finally lead him to Heaven.”

All of those quotes come from the preface of the Toast. This is one of those volumes that people today will often scoff at or deride, both the toast and most of the other pieces as well. Even in many Christian circles. Those who do take its warnings could face opposition from friends, family and other Christians. But it is an important work, both as part of the Ransom cycle and just on its own. It is a work I am going to encourage my youngest two read. 

I have struggled with the works of C.S. Lewis, when I was in university 35ish years ago he was immensely popular in Campus ministry, with evangelicals, and even mainline protestants. I also know many Catholic scholars, teachers and priests who love his works and use them extensively today. There have been debates of weather he would have converted to Catholicism or if he lived a sort of Catholicism. All I know is that I have hardly read any of his books in decades and that was my loss. And after my recent readings I can greatly appreciate why he is loved by both Catholics and evangelicals.

So my recommendation is if you are Catholic, or evangelical or nondenominational that you give this volume a read with an open heart. And see if you are not changed and challenged by the end of the work. And consider reading the Ransom cycle in the order outlined above. By the end of this volume you will see how they all fit so well together and how we are in need of this great wisdom. 

Other Reviews of Lewis's Books.
A Grief Observed
The Four Loves
...


...
The Dark Tower and Other Stories
...

Narnia Publication Order:
Prince Caspian
The Voyage of the Dawn Treader
The Silver Chair
The Horse and His Boy
The Last Battle
...

Narnia Chronological Order:
The Horse and His Boy
Prince Caspian
The Voyage of the Dawn Treader
The Silver Chair
The Last Battle
...

Books about C.S. Lewis:
Planet's In Peril: A critical Study of C.S. Lewis's Ransom Trilogy - David C. Downing
The Man Who Created Narnia - Michael Coren
...


Out of the Silent Planet - C.S. Lewis

Perelandra - C.S. Lewis

The Screwtape Letters - C.S. Lewis

Screwtape Proposes A Toast - C.S. Lewis

The Hideous Strength - C.S. Lewis

The Dark Tower - C.S. Lewis

Tuesday, 17 December 2024

Praying with the Psalms - Cardinal Gianfranco Ravasi - CTS Notes on Prayer Book 2

Praying with the Psalms
CTS Notes on Prayer Book 2
Cardinal Gianfranco Ravasi
Pope Francis (Preface)
ISBN 9781784698263

Praying with the Psalms - Cardinal Gianfranco Ravasi - CTS Notes on Prayer Book 2

This is volume 2 of a new 8 volume set released for the Jubilee 2025, and the fifth I have read. All 8 volumes have the same preface from Pope Francis. Each volume is by a different author. The books were originally released in Italian, and have since been released in Europe by the CTS, and there are forthcoming edition by Our Sunday Visitor for North American Release. The original series and the CTS editions are marked as ‘Notes on Prayer’, the OSV editions the series is called ‘Exploring Prayer’. Some of the titles are different between the two editions and one even has an Americanized name for the author. My recommendation is to get the CTS editions, they are excellent. But back to this third read which is of the fourth volume.

The description of this volume states:

“Cardinal Gianfranco Ravasi invites the reader to re-discover the Psalms, and in them the “immense horizon that spans our entire planet and extends across the centuries”. No matter the reason for prayer, the psalms give it voice, capturing the deepest yearnings of the human heart, and teaching it to sing to God.

“Prayer is the breath of faith; it is its most proper expression. Like a silent cry that issues from the hearts of those who believe and entrust themselves to God.” – Pope Francis

In this second of eight booklets on prayer, Cardinal Gianfranco Ravasi invites the reader to re-discover the Psalms, and in them the “immense horizon that spans our entire planet and extends across the centuries”. No matter the reason for prayer, the psalms give it voice, capturing the deepest yearnings of the human heart, and teaching it to sing to God.”

The chapters in this volume are:

Preface by the Pope Francis 
Introduction 
Prayer, Breath of the Soul 
Praying with the Psalms 
The Psalms, Word of God and of Humanity 
A Psalter in Miniature 
Psalm I: The two ways 
Psalm 2: The Messiah king 
Psalm 6: Heal me, Lord! 
Psalm 8: Lilt le less than a god 
Psalm 16 (15): The path of life beyond death 
Psalm 19 (18): The light of the sun and of the Word 
Psalm 22 (21): My God, why have you forsaken me? 
Psalm 23 (22): The Lord is my shepherd 
Psalm 29 (28): The seven thunders of a storm 
Psalm 39 (38): Man who lives is like a breath 
Psalms 42-43 (41-42): As the doe pants for water
Psalm 49 (48): Riches and death 
Psalm 51 (50): Miserere! 
Psalm 63 (62): My soul thirsts for you 
Psalm 72 (71): The Messiah, king of justice 
Psalm 73 (72): Beyond the crisis of faith 
Psalm 84 (83): The song of the pilgrims 
Psalm 87 (86); No one is a foreigner
Psalm 88 (87): 1he most anguished supplication 
Psalm 90 (89): Our years, like a breath 
Psalm 92 (91): The song of the elder 
Psalm 98 (97): The Lord, king of the earth 
Psalm 103 (102): God, tender as a father 
Psalm 104 (103): Canticle of the creatures 
Psalm 110 (109): The Messiah, king and priest 
Psalm 117 (116): An ejaculatory prayer 
Psalm 119 (118): Imposing song of the divine word 
Psalm 122 (121 ): Jerusalem, city of peace 
Psalm 128 (127): The song of the family 
Psalm 130 (129): De profundis 
Psalm 13 J (130): A child in its mother's arms 
Psalm 137 (136): Ry the rivers of Babylon 
Psalm 139 (138): Lord, you search me and know me 
Psalm 148: The alleluia of creation 
Psalm 150: The final alleluia 
Conclusion 

I highlighted several passages while reading this volume, many are longer passages, some of them are:

“Here, then, is the meaning of the pages of this volume: it is an invitation to enter the Jubilee Year holding in one's hands the Psalter, which is the quintessential book of the Bible meant for prayerful pause and contemplative silence.”

“Prayer, singing, the liturgy do not close us off within a sacred oasis amid incense, candles and rituals, but beckon us to go out into the community and history.”

“The ancients rightly said that praying is breathing. Here one sees how foolish it is to want to talk about a 'why.' Why do l breathe? Because otherwise I would die. So it is
with prayer.””

“For believers, however, prayer is much more and is, as we have said, necessary in order to live spiritually and even physically.”

“Prayer is not a magical act, but a choice that echoes throughout all of existence, just as the liturgy must not be restricted to the sacred oasis of Temple ritual amid songs and incense, but must radiate into the square, that is, into everyday life, into social commitments, into the contradictions of life, into decisions between good and evil, right and wrong, true and false.”

“Ours will be, therefore, first and foremost a panoramic look at the general thematic characteristics of the whole collect ion of the Psalms, in order to make possible their recovery and re-actualisation in the prayer and life of the Christian, especially at an intense and powerful time like that of Jubilee.”

“The Psalms, then, throw themselves wide open to human existence, to mourning and celebration, to politics and intimate affect ions; the noise of the streets and cities fades, but it does not disappear as if we had come to a silent hermitage where al l is still and all is forgotten. These texts, which embrace a span of almost a thousand years of Israel 's history, arc a model not only of prayer, but also of life.”

“The itineraries of prayer that the Psalms offer are therefore linked to the human journey, to our times and to those stretches of human history which we must travel and in which we must discover the presence of God-Emmanuel. Let us try, then, to follow their main trails.”

“In prayer, the believer's social experience is also illuminated, while maintaining its autonomy, reality and specific characteristics. The man who encounters God is not a disembodied being, but a creature placed on the earth "to work it and keep it" (Gen 2: 15). He therefore comes to God with his knowledge and intelligence.”

“Biblical Revelation is, in fact, dialogic: the Word of God is interwoven with the human word, and their encounter is placed under the seal of inspiration. It is therefore natural that the Psalms should be a manifestation of this embrace between God and the worshipper, who are the two protagonists. They are bound together by a relationship of love and faithfulness, expressed above all with the Hebrew term hesed, which resonates a hundred times in the Psalter and which generates an intimacy between God and His faithful.”

“To each of the Psalms we will dedicate only a minimal interpretation, a sort of spotlight that will reveal the theme for further discovery and exploration in meditative reading at length. So now it is essential to 1.1ke Bible in hand and open it to the section dedicated To the Psalms, so as to be able read the texts that will be presented in turn (the liturgical numbering of the psalm it indicated in parentheses).”

“Here ends our brief journey into the pages of the Psalter, which has become the book of Christian prayer par excellence, as attested by the Liturgy of the Hours, the responsorial psalms of the Liturgy of the Word and the many antiphons woven from psalmic texts.”

I hope those quotes give you a feel for this volume. There were many things in this volume that caught my attention. This was a more academic presentation than three of the other four volumes I have read in the series so far. There was much that caused me to slow down and take note in this work. It is a volume I will reread again. For a little volume it packs a great deal of excellent information. While working through this volume I used the The Psalms Grail Translation edited by Dom Henry Wansbrough OSB part of the CTS Scriptures series. The next time I read it I will use the ESV English Standard Version that will become the lectionary edition in England, Wales, and Scotland beginning Advent in 2024. 

When I was in university, I was involved with Campus Crusade for Christ, there was a series of booklets by the founder Bill Bright, called Transferable Concepts, and by reading them many times you could almost memorize them and the message so that you could share it. This volume reminds me a lot of those books, but specifically geared for Catholics; and specifically on Prayer for the Jubilee year in 2025. I am planning on jumping around and not reading them in order my first time through, but already have plans to reread them again this year between Christmas and New Years and that time I will read them in order.

The description of the series on the CTS site states:

“The “Notes on Prayer” series is an inspiring collection of eight booklets from the Vatican, designed to deepen and enrich the prayer lives of Catholics as they journey through the Year of Jubilee 2025, themed “Pilgrims of Hope.”

Each booklet in this series is a powerful resource, offering spiritual guidance, reflections, and wisdom from Church teachings, Sacred Scripture, and the lives of the saints. Whether you’re seeking personal renewal or walking the path of forgiveness and reconciliation, this series will help you grow in intimacy with God during this special time of grace.”

The first five books in this series I have great to read, if the other three are as good as those five; we have over 700 pages of instruction on prayer. Being over half way through the series I can state that so far they are great reads. It is an excellent collection; these books would be good for any school, home, or church library. I can easily recommend this book and series and encourage you to give them a read!

Note: This book is part of a series of reviews: 2024 Catholic Reading Plan! For other reviews of books from the Catholic Truth Society click here.

Notes on Prayer Series:
1. Prayer Today: A Challenge to Overcome - Cardinal Angelo Comastri
2. Praying with the Psalms - Cardinal Gianfranco Ravasi
3. The Prayer of Jesus – Juan Lopez Vergara
4. Praying with Saints and Sinners - Fr Paul Brendan Murray, OP
5. The Parables of Prayer – Msgr Antonio Pitta
6. The Church in Prayer - Carthusian Monks
7. The Prayer of Mary and the Saints Who Met Her - Sr Catherine Aubin, OP


Notes on Prayer Books Jubilee 2025 Italian Editions
Original Italian Editions

Notes on Prayer Books Jubilee 2025 English CTS Editions
CTS Editions English

Notes on Prayer Books Jubilee 2025 OSV English Editions
OSV English Editions