Friday, 13 December 2024

The Legend of Saint Rocco and His Dog - Dessi Jackson and Martina Parnelli

The Legend of Saint Rocco and His Dog 
Dessi Jackson
Martina Parnelli (Illustrator)
Silver Fire Publishing
ISBN 9781734992984

The Legend of Saint Rocco and His Dog - Dessi Jackson and Martina Parnelli

This was the second volume I have read by this author and illustrator team. The first was Saint Clare and Her Cat, which we really enjoyed. After reading that first one I had planned to find more works by both the author and illustrator but because my own children are well beyond the age of picture books, it got dropped. That was a mistake on my part. But back to the volume at hand. The description of this volume states:

“A saint story you don't want to miss!

After praying for a child for many years, a wealthy couple is finally blessed with a beautiful baby boy. To their surprise, they discover a cross-shaped birthmark on his chest, but they have no idea what extraordinary graces God will bestow on him.

As a young man, Rocco renounces his fortune and enters the Franciscan Third Order, choosing the life of a poor traveling pilgrim. He stops in towns to care for the sick, especially plague victims. His prayers and labors result in many miracles. Then one day, he catches the plague too, and the townsfolk force him to go away. With no one to care for him in his dire need, he staggers to a hut outside town and entrusts himself to God. And God does not disappoint him!

This beautifully illustrated children’s book follows the legends of Saint Rocco, including ones that explain how he became the patron saint of dogs!”

I started this book a couple of times and something came up, then one Sunday after church with a mug of tea I picked it up again and finally made it through. I am not sure I have encountered the story of Saint Rocco before. I did a quick search through all the reviews I have written and do not find a ‘Rocco’ there, so I believe this is my first encounter with Saint Rocco. You would think a Cross shaped birthmark on the chest and a long friendship and time of service with a dog would stick in your mind. And it will after reading this wonderful little picture book.

About the author we are informed:

“Dessi Jackson is the author of popular picture books about saints, including Saint Clare and Her cat, Roses in the Snow: A Tale of Saint Elizabeth of Hungary, Saint Felix and the Spider, The Saint and His Bees, Nikola and the Monk. Her faith-filled children's stories come from the depths of her motherly heart. A writer for Seton Magazine and a Byzantine Catholic, she lives in Croatia, where she is always thinking up new stories.”

And about the illustrator:

“Martina Parnelli is an author, poet, and illustrator of plays, children's books, and short stories. She uses a mixed media for her art, including colored pencils, acrylics, and inks. Every "work" is an uniquely inspired creative project, a fruit brought to maturity from seeds sown earlier in life. She lives in Western Michigan, where she enjoys bird watching, container gardening, and reading historical accounts and Shakespeare.”

I believe this is the second collaboration between the two and from how good these two are I hope it is not the last. This is one of those stories children will latch onto, it will be read over and over again. Rocco’s kindness, charity, and example will inspire and challenge readers young and old alike. And his friendship with the dog who nursed him back to health and long companionship thereafter is one kids will love. 

The story is written in an engaging and entraining manner. The illustrations are done in a pencil crayon style. The colours are bright and vibrant. And the full page illustrations on every page provide a lot of details to examine again and again. It is an entertaining read. 

It is a great Catholic picture book, fun for the whole family. And excellent addition to any home, church, or school library. I can easily recommend this book.

The Legend of Saint Rocco and His Dog - Dessi Jackson and Martina Parnelli  Sample 1

The Legend of Saint Rocco and His Dog - Dessi Jackson and Martina Parnelli  Sample 2

The Legend of Saint Rocco and His Dog - Dessi Jackson and Martina Parnelli  Sample 3

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

Books by Dessi Jackson:
Saint Clare and Her Cat
The Saint and His Bees
Saint Felix and the Spider
Nikola and the Monk
Roses in the Snow: A Tale of Saint Elizabeth of Hungary
The Legend of Saint Rocco and His Dog


Books by Martina Parnelli:
Fat John, His Little Lamb, and the Two Wise Owls
Who Shall Wear the Wedding Veil?
Little Runty, the Luckiest Donkey
Little Runty, On the Road
Little Runty Goes Home
Love’s Labour Started


Books illustrated by Martina Parnelli:
Animals of God (Volume 1) by Susan Peek
Animals of God (Volume 2) by Susan Peek
Small for the Glory of God: Saint John the Dwarf by Susan Peek
The Man God Kept Surprising: Saint William of Bourges by Susan Peek
The Forgotten Christmas Saint: Saint Anastasia by Susan Peek


Saint Clare and Her Cat - Dessi Jackson and Martina Parnelli
 
The Legend of Saint Rocco and His Dog - Dessi Jackson and Martina Parnelli

Thursday, 12 December 2024

Praying with Saints and Sinners - Fr Paul Brendan Murray, OP - CTS Notes on Prayer Book 4

Praying with Saints and Sinners
CTS Notes on Prayer Book 4
Fr Paul Brendan Murray, OP
Pope Francis (Preface)
ISBN 9781784698287

Praying with Saints and Sinners - Fr Paul Brendan Murray, OP - CTS Notes on Prayer Book 4

This is volume 4 of a new 8 volume set released for the Jubilee 2025, and the third 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:

“Fr Paul Brendan Murray, OP writes of how four great saints learned to pray with the aim “to discover what help the great saints can offer those of us who desire to make progress in the life of prayer, but who find ourselves being constantly deflected from our purpose, our tentative efforts undermined perhaps most of all by human weakness.”

“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 fourth of eight booklets on prayer, Fr Paul Brendan Murray, OP gives an account of how four great saints of the Church learned to pray – St Augustine of Hippo, St Teresa of Avila, St Thomas Aquinas and St Thérèse of Lisieux – with the aim “to discover what help the great saints can offer those of us who desire to make progress in the life of prayer, but who find ourselves being constantly deflected from our purpose, our tentative efforts undermined perhaps most of all by human weakness.”

"The saints, it soon becomes clear, are human beings like us. That’s why they can offer people still struggling with weakness such great compassion and encouragement. However, the remarkable sanctity of their lives remains a stark, unignorable challenge to our mediocrity. In their daring, prayerful, dedicated surrender to God, they have allowed their lives to be transformed by grace, and allowed the radiance, strength, power, and beauty of Christ to shine through their human weakness."”

The chapters in this volume are:

Preface by the Pope Francis 
Introduction 
Augustine of Hippo at Prayer 
Teresa of Avila at Prayer 
Thomas Aquinas at Prayer 
St Therese of Lisieux at Prayer
Conclusion

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

“The saints whose writings on prayer and meditation are explored in this book arc among the most celebrated in the great spiritual tradition. They know, in depth, of the light and fire of which they speak. Page after page of their writings attain to levels of vision and understanding which are remarkable. The principal focus of the present work is not, however, on the higher states and stages of contemplative prayer. The aim is something far more modest - namely, to discover what help the great saints can offer those of us who desire to make progress in the life of prayer, but who find ourselves being constantly deflected from our purpose, our tentative efforts undermined perhaps most of all by human weakness.”

“Lord, whether I want it or not, save me, because dust and ashes that I am, I love sin. But you are God almighty, so stop me yourself. If you have pity on the just, that's not much, or if you save the pure, because they are worthy of your mercy. Show the full splendour of your mercy in me. Reveal in me your love for men and women, because this poor man has no other refuge but you.”

“The four chapters of this small book focus on the work of four saints, two men and two women. Here, in the order in which the work is addressed, are the names and dates of the four saint~ : Augustine of Hippo, 354-430; Teresa of Avila, I 515-82; Thomas Aquinas,, 1225-74; Therese of Lisieux, 1873-1897. All four are highly revered within the tradition; all of them are named and acknowledged as Doctors of the Church. 'Their writings are remarkable for the revelation they contain of an achieved divine intimacy and friends hip with God.”

“In this brief chapter we have been ab le to touch on only one or two themes in Augustine's work. But the voice of the saint, although it comes to us from a world that is long gone, speaks with bold honesty and such weight of experience that it still, today, carries an illumined and eminently practical message for all those attempting to pray and follow the path of the Gospel.”

“Augustine of Hippo is not simply a great author, he is a living witness of what he teaches and preaches. That's why, with a force and eloquence unmatched in the tradition, he can alert both saints and sinners to what Pope Benedict calls the humble, necessary grace of "ongoing conversion".”

“By the force of her character, by the boldness of her activity as a foundress, and by her remarkable ability to speak and to write in depth on the subject of prayer, Teresa astonished her contemporaries.”

“Pope Paul VI included Teresa among the Doctors of the Church. He spoke of her as not only a remarkable teacher of "the secrets of prayer;' but also as a "writer of great genius, a mistress of spiritual life, an incomparable contemplative". If we ask ourselves how it was that Teresa acquired the "secrets" of prayer in such depth, Paul VI gives us the answer in one telling sentence: "She had the privilege and the merit to get to know these secrets through experience''.”

“But Teresa's work - her writings – also reveal another Teresa, a figure so humble, so human, so fallible at times in her early efforts to concentrate at the time of prayer, it is hard to credit they are one and the same person. Here the focus of our attention is on this earlier Teresa.”

“The method of prayer which, in time, Teresa developed to help her distracted mind focus on God involves two things. First, the recitation of a simple vocal prayer such as the Our Father, and, second, the practice of the presence of God. She writes: "This is the method of prayer I then used: since I could not reflect discursively with the intellect, I strove to represent Christ within me, and it did me greater good to represent him in those scenes where I saw him alone".”

“Teresa's journey to God is marked by a series of almost unimaginable wonders, swift flights of rapture, zones of stillness and quiet, visions of sublime beauty, wounds of ecstatic pain and joy.”

“But, here, our most immediate aim is on something more humble, more basic - namely, to discover the practical guidance which Teresa has to offer the disheartened individual who is finding the task of prayer difficult and unrewarding.”

“What made the task so difficult was not simply the challenge of maintaining concentration in prayer but her pained awareness of the persistence of certain sins in her life. How could she presume to appear in the presence of the One whom she felt she was constantly betraying?”

“When Teresa looks back at the many lost opportunities she was given and reflects on the years spent seeking to avoid the presence of the One who was seeking her, what strikes her most forcibly is the reality of God's patience:”

“Those who wish to grow in prayer and contemplation must, as best they can, in Teresa's understanding, convert their lives to the standards of the Gospel. Addressing her fellow contemplatives in The Interior Castle, she writes: "It is necessary that your foundation consist of more than prayer and contemplation. If you do not strive for the virtues and practice them, you will always be dwarfs!"”

“No one, she declares, who has begun to practice prayer should become discouraged, thinking, if I fall back in to sin, it will be better for me not to go on practising prayer. On the contrary, Teresa insists, things will become much worse should prayer be abandoned. If, however, people keep faith with the practice of prayer, they can be confident that, in time, prayer will lead them safely to "the harbour of life" (ch . 19, 4).”

“To you, 0 God, Fountain of Mercy,
I come as a sinner,
that you would deign to wash away my uncleanness.
0 Sun of justice,
give sight to a blind man.
0 Eternal Healer,
cure one who is wounded.
0 Ki ng of Kings,
clothe the destitute.
0 Mediator between God and Man,
restore the guilty.
0 Good Shepherd,
lead back the stray.
Give, 0 God,
mercy to the wretched,
reprieve to the criminal,
life to the dead,
justification to the sinful,
and, to the hard of heart,
the anointing of grace.”

“But what about the other forms of Christian prayer, such as the prayer of quiet, the prayer of praise, and the prayer of thanksgiving? These are all genuine forms of Christian prayer, but they are not so essentially a part of the life of longing and need as is the prayer of petition. All of them, we can say, are rooted and grounded in petition. Thus, even in the prayer of praise, for example, we find an implicit acknowledgement of need, a prayer of need. God, the divine Object of praise is, at the same time, the Subject, the divine Spirit praying within us, interceding for us when we don't know how to pray or how to praise.”

“So, Therese chose not to go in search of Mary at Lourdes - that hallowed place of vision - and instead she searched for Mary, we can say, at Nazareth, and found her there leading a life that was decidedly ordinary: "No raptures, miracles or ecstasies adorned your life . . .. You chose, 0 incomparable Mother, to tread the ordinary way and thus lead little ones to heaven" ("Pourquoi je t'aime, O Marie!" in Oeuvres Completes, 754).”

“Over the years, Therese prayed not only for her own immediate family and community, she prayed also for sinners. Rut her prayer for sinners would assume in time a form that no one could have foreseen.”

“Saints, if looked al only from a distance, can appear remote and intimidating, their journey into God following a path that's either too high and mystical or too fiercely ascetic for the ordinary believer. But, although their lives are indeed heroic and exemplary, the saints are the last people to be harshly judgemental of human struggle and human weakness.”

I hope those quotes give you a feel for this volume. There were several things in this volume that caught my attention. And much that caused me to slow down and take note. It is a volume I will reread again and again. For a little volume it packs a great deal of excellent information. The deep exploration of prayer and the written prayers of the four saints was inspiring and challenging.

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 three books in this series I have read are excellent, if the others are as good as those three; 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 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
8. The Prayer Jesus Taught Us: Our Father - Fr Ugo Vanni


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, 11 December 2024

The Screwtape Letters - C.S. Lewis - The Ransom Cycle Book 3

The Screwtape Letters
The Ransom Cycle Book 3
ISBN 9780060652937
eISBN 9780061949043
ASIN B002BD2V2Y

The Screwtape Letters - 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 in my mid 50’s I can see many of the snares and traps outlined in this volume, and the success they had in my life. As a father of three teenagers growing up in this day and age I am even more concerned about the trials and temptations the 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 this book available. And over the years there have been numerous attempts to update or modernize it 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. A quick note before continuing with this review:

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.

So to begin with in the last week prior to reading this, I have reread both Out of the Silent Planet and Perelandra; and looking at this as a volume transcribed by Ransom and provided to Lewis shines an entirely different light upon the work. In part while reading this there was a deep sense of melancholy, for though I read it when I was younger and some of the other volumes mentioned that imitate it, I can looking back see the many times I have fallen and failed. 

This volume is terribly powerful. Both of you read it as allegory or if you read it as lessons. Lessons in this case lessons to be avoided. Sort of reverse manual on how to spot traps, snares, and outright interference in your life and the lives of those around you. The real turning point in my life was a weeklong deliverance ministry retreat. But how I wish my eyes had been opened earlier, the pain I would have saved myself and others. Forgive me father.

This is one of those volumes that people today will often scoff at or deride. 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. This edition also contains Screwtape Proposes a Toast, but I have another edition called Screwtape Proposes a Toast and Other Pieces, and I plan to read it in that edition.

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.

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. 

Note: Review written in 2024 after a reread but it was read a number of times in the 1990's and early 2000's.

Note 2: Recent scholarship published found a handwritten preface to 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. 

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, 10 December 2024

The Prayer of Mary and the Saints Who Met Her - Sr Catherine Aubin, OP - CTS Notes on Prayer Book 7

The Prayer of Mary and the Saints Who Met Her
CTS Notes on Prayer Book 1
Sr Catherine Aubin, OP
Pope Francis (Preface)
ISBN 9781784698317

The Prayer of Mary and the Saints Who Met Her - Sr Catherine Aubin, OP - CTS Notes on Prayer Book 7

This is volume 7 of a new 8 volume set released for the Jubilee 2025, and the second 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 second read which is of the seventh volume.

The description of this volume states:

“In this seventh of eight booklets on prayer, Sr Catherine Aubin, OP presents a deep meditation on Our Lady and her role as guide and exemplar in our own formation as prayerful Christians.

“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 seventh of eight booklets on prayer, Sr Catherine Aubin, OP presents a deep meditation on Our Lady and her role as guide and exemplar in our own formation as prayerful Christians. “Mary prolongs in each of us today the trust that she lived in throughout her life on earth. Her task is to deliver us from our fear of God our Father, to place us in his hands and inscribe us in his intimate life. She leads us to a personal, adult relationship with God.””

The chapters in this volume are:

Preface by the Pope Francis 
Introduction 
Geographical and Spiritual Locations 
Mary's Words 
Women Saints and Mary 
Conclusion 

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

“When Mary appears, anywhere in the whole world, the places where she appears have points in common with the biblical places where she stayed and lived. In the first chapter we will review these places, asking ourselves what they reveal to us about Mary's identity, and what the inner spaces are that Mary asks us to dwell in today. In the second chapter, we will listen to the very few actual words of Mary given to us in the Gospels, and will look at her gestures, her altitudes, and her eyes, trying to understand their meaning. In other words, to discover where and how she is teaching us to react to people and events. And finally in the third chapter, we will ask two holy women about the unique relationship they each had with Mary. The whole piece will be interspersed with phrases from the traditional Orthodox prayer known as the Akathist Hymn. This will lead us towards a new, deep revelation of Mary's closeness to each of us.”

“To get an inner grasp on Mary's life we will need to pass on from the visible to the invisible, from what is written to what is implied, in order to let ourselves be taught, become more intelligent, read within and beyond the written words.”

“A door is a (normally wooden) object that opens and shuts. That's the first level. A door separates two spaces, it allows or prevents entry, it also means the attitude of being open or shut. That's the second level. When someone speaks of the door of the heart it isn't a material object but one of a different order. This verse throws light on it: "Behold, I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, 1 will come in to him and eat with him, and he with me." (Rev 3:20). This is the third level. And finally, Jesus says of himself that be IS the door: "Truly, truly, I say to you, I am the door of the sheep. [ ... ] I am the door. If anyone enters by me, he will be saved" (Jn l 0:7, 9). This is the fourth level of reading: the revelation of the mystery.”

“There is a link between Mar y's identity and the places where she lived. If the Evangelists underlined these places, it's because they wanted to tell us something. That's why this booklet starts by looking at the regions and towns where Mary lived. By doing this we can get closer to her. Little by little she will reveal to us the various spiritual meanings of these places, and allow us to build a closer, more lively relationship with her.”

“So Bethlehem was where so ns were born: Benjamin, favourite, and David, beloved; Bethlehem, then, is a place of birth, filiation, descendence. 111e Hebrew name "Bethlehem" is an evocative one. Beth in Hebrew means, among other things, "house". Its initial letter is also the letter that begins the Old Testament. The Hebrew for "In the beginning" (Gen 1: 1) is Bereshit, and the first syllable, be, can mean "beginning'', "house'', "grain'', "wheat" or "son". If we connect Bereshit and Bethlehem, we can conjecture that Jesus's birthplace is the place of the beginning of an origin, of a filiation, and of a descendence. In this house, Beth, the Son is received, and if the Son is received that means there is a Father. Jesus is at once the Son of the Father, the Word and the Bread of Life. Bethlehem literally means "house of bread".”

“Living in Galilee means living in a place of constant coming and going, of mixed blood, of diversity, where nothing lasts permanently. It is a place where difference is experienced simply, accepted, and welcomed. It is the region of fresh starts and new beginnings, where everything is still to be received and built, far from the opinions and judgements of the powerful men in Jerusalem.”

“The town is only named nine times in the Bible. It is not mentioned at all in the Old Testament - Nazareth does not appear in any of the prophecies, or the historical books, or the psalms. It was an unknown place, where nothing happened, and which left no mark. (Very often, apparitions of Our Lady take place in little townships lost in the mountains or the countryside: Fatima, La Salette, Tepeyac, Champion, Igrista, and many more.) Nazareth was an unknown village, hidden and insignificant.”

“Living at Nazareth is necessarily living happy, freed from the fear of other people's eyes and their judgements. Nazareth is the place of intimacy and trust, the place of respect and living together fraternally, the place of simplicity and humility. Mary is waiting for us there for our growth and fruitfulness in God.”

“We hear Mary's voice so little in the Gospels: she only spoke seven phrases. Together with the accompanying actions, they reveal her attitudes and inner dispositions. It is up to us to hear them and take them in with the ears of our heart, storing them up in the depths of our heart as she did herself: "But Mary treasured up all these things, pondering them in her heart." (Luke 2:1 9); or, in another translation, "Mary kept all these things, pondering on them in her heart:'”

“Whereas Mary, with her silences, her adaptability and her words, teaches us how to adopt a completely different attitude: prioritising interiority, trusting our Father God and fin ally, keeping his blessings vividly in mind.”

“She gives her consent, saying yes unreservedly and unconditionally to God's call.”

“As for us, our trust is still full of questioning and sometimes refusal. That realisation is not a tragedy, but rather a call for us to go forward. Mary teaches us to base our life not on our own generosity but on trust.”

“Having accepted the revelation of what was impossible for her, Mary sees strength and freedom coming to birth within her. Mary's consent is the sign of her freedom, her liberation. She is liberated from fear, from the desire for control, from the fear of the unknown. When we cross over the threshold of radical trust, a much greater freedom is offered: that of being able to direct our will to what is essential, that of being able to live out our time with great effectiveness, and being present to ourselves and to other people.”

“All this in an unending search and a certain pain when we can not hold onto what we thought we had found. Mary teaches us to keep trusting even when there is no evidence and no proof. Like her, we have to search without fretting, explore without looking for results, and ask without reproaching.”

“Their meditative withdrawal gives place to a different way of thinking, of forming concepts, and of living. Meditating means in a way joining in with God's Sabbath, and entering into his repose. Entering deeply into his active grace and withdrawing from the world around us. Meditation makes space, and there comes forth from it an act of true love, which is genuine, not an illusion. Striking roots in meditation in this way means making an act of charity and benevolence, withdrawing so that the Other, and other people, may take their full place in our lives.”

“Mary's meditation is practised in the faith that is in continual tension towards the Father; in the hope that is a certainty that these realities are within us, waiting to be gathered, because hope is linked to the presence of the Son in the Father; and in the charity that unifies because it is the work of God's Spirit.”

“Catherine Laboure received and welcomed three apparitions of Mary. They were of decisive importance for the whole Church. The way Mary came to meet Catherine Laboure is a lesson for us. Mary wants to talk to us too, and visit us. Not in the same way as Catherine Laboure, but she wants to show us a path, point out a route to us, teach us not only to pray but to become prayer, and to give meaning to our prayers.”

“This booklet is addressed to all those who, like Ulysses or the prodigal son in the parable, are seeking the path to find, or re-find, their place, their proper location. It is intended for those who wish to experience a home coming and a wedding-feast in their inner life. Tt is from there that they will be able to go out and come back, walk confidently, storing up words and events in their memory and putting them together to find their meaning.”

“John took Mary, the mother of Jesus, with him, into his home, following Jesus's words. We too have opened the door to Mary, to take her into our home and have her with us. With John the Evangelist we too "make a p lace for her in our home"; thanks to her we find our rightful place day by day. When we do this, her presence reveals itself throughout her words and her journeyings. And she shares with us her own zest for life.”

“As Mother to each of us, Mary reveals to us the path of her place of grace. She prepares this inner path, leads us to it and sets us upon it. Whether we are farmworkers, officials, doctors or teachers, the one essential thing in our whole life is to find that place in ourselves, to establish ourselves there in a state of listening, discernment and decision. Living doesn't just happen automatically, and it isn't an easy thing to do.”

I hope those quotes give you a feel for this volume. There were many things in this volume that caught my attention. And much that caused me to slow down and take notes. It is a volume I will reread again and again. For a little volume it packs a great deal of excellent information.

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 two books in this series I have read are excellent, if the others are as good as those two; 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 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
8. The Prayer Jesus Taught Us: Our Father - Fr Ugo Vanni


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

Monday, 9 December 2024

Story of a Soul The Autobiography of St. Thérèse of Lisieux - Jacob Bertrand Janczyk, Michael-Joseph Parish, and Anne-Elisabeth Giuliani - Ascension Catholic Classics

Story of a Soul The Autobiography of St. Thérèse of Lisieux 
Fr Michael-Joseph Parish
Anne-Elisabeth Giuliani
John Clarke, O.C.D. (Translator)
Ascension Catholic Classics
ISBN 9781954882904
eISBN 9781954882911

Story of a Soul The Autobiography of St. Thérèse of Lisieux -  Jacob Bertrand Janczyk, Michael-Joseph Parish, and Anne-Elisabeth Giuliani - Ascension Catholic Classics

Reading this volume was a bit of a different process. It is the third in a series from Ascension press called Catholic Classics, and there is a podcast version by Gregory Pine and Father Michael-Joseph Parish. Father Parish is new this season and Father Gregory Pine is not part of this year’s series. Also this year the test by Saint Theresa was read by a woman with a French accent. I listened to the podcast in the morning and then read the associated sections in the evening. In essence I worked through the book twice. It was great to listen to their commentary each day, and read their commentary before the different sections of the book. The description of this edition of this book is:

“Story of a Soul, the third book of the Catholic Classics series, is created in collaboration with the Carmelites and uses the only full authorized English translation of this classic work.

Often considered one of the most influential and inspiring works of the Church, this classic yet relevant text was written by Doctor of the Church St. Thérèse of Lisieux and details her life and love for the Lord in spite  of trial and illness. Through the years, it has remained a key reflection on the spiritual life for believers who seek to love God with all their hearts.

Exploring topics that St. Thérèse learned throughout her life, Story of a Soul teaches Catholics how to embrace their spiritual “littleness” as a quick path to heaven, how to live their call to love, and how to choose God in the midst of great suffering. 

This text draws readers ever closer to God as St. Thérèse details the events of her life and her prayer, both of which were focused solely on deep intimacy with God and honoring him.

Featuring the only full authorized English translation, this special version renews Catholics' understanding and appreciation of this spiritual classic. It also includes:

Expert commentary to make the text more approachable to readers by Fr. Jacob Bertrand Janczyk, O.P., and Anne-Elisabeth Giuliani

A foreword by Cardinal Anders Arborelius, O.C.D.

An insert of sacred art of St. Thérèse from Ascension’s Sacred Art Collection of Holy Men and Women by Tianna Williams

25 images from the life of St. Thérèse throughout the book from the Carmelites.”

The podcast was preceded by a novena to Saint Theresa before beginning on the text. The sections and chapters in this edition are:

About the Catholic Classics
Foreword by Cardinal Anders Arborelius, OCD
Introduction to the Catholic Classics Edition by Fr Jacob Bertrand Janczyk, OP
Introduction to the First Edition
Prologue
Thérèse’s Family and Cousins

MANUSCRIPT A
Commentary on Chapter 1 by Anne-Elisabeth Giuliani
Chapter 1 Alençon (1873–1877)
Commentary on Chapter 2 by Fr Jacob Bertrand Janczyk, OP
Chapter 2 Les Buissonnets (1877–1881)
Commentary on Chapter 3 by Anne-Elisabeth Giuliani
Chapter 3 The Distressing Years (1881–1883)
Commentary on Chapter 4 by Fr Jacob Bertrand Janczyk, OP
Chapter 4 First Communion, Boarding School (1883–1886)
Commentary on Chapter 5 by Anne-Elisabeth Giuliani
Chapter 5 After the Grace of Christmas (1886–1887)
Commentary on Chapter 6 by Fr Jacob Bertrand Janczyk, OP
Chapter 6 The Trip to Rome (1887)
Commentary on Chapter 7 by Anne-Elisabeth Giuliani
Chapter 7 The First Years in Carmel (1888–1890)
Commentary on Chapter 8 by Fr Jacob Bertrand Janczyk, OP
Chapter 8 Profession and Offering to Merciful Love (1890–1895)

MANUSCRIPT B
Commentary on Chapter 9 by Anne-Elisabeth Giuliani
Chapter 9 My Vocation Is Love (1896)

MANUSCRIPT C
Commentary on Chapter 10 by Fr Jacob Bertrand Janczyk, OP
Chapter 10 The Trial of Faith (1896–1897)
Commentary on Chapter 11 by Anne-Elisabeth Giuliani
Chapter 11 Those Whom You Have Given Me (1896–1897)
Epilogue

APPENDICES
Letter Thérèse Carried on Her Heart
Act of Oblation of Merciful Love
Thérèse’s Explanation of Her Coat of Arms
Chronology
About ICS

This translation or edition has it’s:

Imprimi potest: Terence J. Flynn, Provincialis Washingtonensis, O.C.D.

We are informed about Catholic Classics from Ascension Press that:

“There are texts by great saints that many devout Catholics are convinced they should read, but perhaps they feel overwhelmed by the thought. Most of these texts were originally written in a foreign language centuries ago. The available English translations often use terminology that has fallen out of use, making them more challenging to the modern reader. One can leave such texts with more questions than answers. They can seem unapproachable to all but scholars.

But these writings were intended as gifts to all of God’s faithful so that we can know more about God and, more importantly, so that we can know God. Each saint, each Doctor of the Church, each mystic reflects some aspect of the beauty and goodness of our creator.

To help renew Catholics’ appreciation of these works, Ascension has created this series, Catholic Classics. With updated translations, the works are more readable to modern eyes. Added introductions and commentary help unlock the text and give context to the original author’s references.

The peacock is the symbol for the Catholic Classics. It is an ancient Christian symbol of eternal life and the resurrection that reflects the perennial nature of these classics and the new life they will breathe into your spiritual life as you read them. The Scriptures tell us that King Solomon, renowned for his wisdom, kept peacocks, which were a mark of his grandeur (1 Kings 10:22). The peacock evokes the great wisdom contained in these classic works.

As you read, remember to use this opportunity as a moment of encounter with the living God. Pray as you read. See Christ in the words of his servants—of his friends—and know that he waits there for you.”

I highlighted numerous passages while reading and listening to this book. Some of them are:

“To help renew Catholics’ appreciation of these works, Ascension has created this series, Catholic Classics. With updated translations, the works are more readable to modern eyes. Added introductions and commentary help unlock the text and give context to the original author’s references.”

“As you read, remember to use this opportunity as a moment of encounter with the living God. Pray as you read. See Christ in the words of his servants—of his friends—and know that he waits there for you.”

“If you read her Story of a Soul, you will discover her message of God’s universal love. You will rediscover what the Gospel has to say to us today in our digital and technological age. We all need her freshness and smile.”

“Trinity. And Thérèse of Lisieux is more adequately called Thérèse of the Child Jesus. Later she wanted to add “of the Holy Face” to her name. She wanted to enter into the entire mystery of Jesus, from his childhood up to his death on the Cross, and have it included in her name.”

“When Thérèse was proclaimed a Doctor of the Church, many were quite surprised. What could a young nun without any theological studies add to the wisdom of the Fathers of the Church? At first, her Little Way seems too simple and humble for a Doctor of the Church.”

“Through her writing, St. Thérèse has captured the minds and hearts of countless people over the past 125 years. Without a doubt, her short life transformed the world.”

“Throughout her childhood and her life in the convent, Thérèse realized more and more that a life of holiness is not made up of great moments of difficult actions but of little moments of love; of seeing each moment and interaction, however pleasant or unpleasant, easy or difficult, as an opportunity to offer oneself in love. At the heart of the Gospel is the call to love God and to love neighbor.”

“I had often heard it [10] said that surely Pauline would become a religious, and without knowing too much about what it meant I thought: “I too will be a religious.” This is one of my first memories and I haven’t changed my resolution since then! It was through you, dear Mother, that Jesus chose to espouse me to Himself.”

“She explained the way of becoming holy through fidelity in little things; furthermore, she gave me a little leaflet called “Renunciation” and I meditated on this with delight.”

“I listened with great attention to the instructions Father Domin was giving us, even writing up a summary of them.”

“Really, I am far from being a saint, and what I have just said is proof of this; instead of rejoicing, for example, at my aridity, I should attribute it to my little fervor and lack of fidelity; I should be desolate for having slept (for seven years) during my hours of prayer and my thanksgivings after Holy Communion; well, I am not desolate. I remember that little children are as pleasing to their parents when they are asleep as well as when they are wide awake; I remember, too, that when they perform operations, doctors [76r °] put their patients to sleep. Finally, I remember that: “The Lord knows our weakness, that he is mindful that we are but dust and ashes.””

“His infinite Mercy, and through it I contemplate and adore the other divine perfections! All of these perfections appear to be resplendent with love; even His Justice (and perhaps this even more so than the others) seems to me clothed in love. What a sweet joy it is to think that God is Just, i.e., that He takes into account our weakness, that He is perfectly aware of our fragile nature. What should I fear then?”

“Oh! how sweet is the way of Love! How I want to apply myself to doing the will of God always with the greatest self-surrender!”

I hope those samples give you a feel for this version. This is an excellent volume, and was great working through it with the podcast. Note these is a bonus episode of the podcast that covers the appendices. My only regret is that the podcast worksheet the page numbers match the physical book but the eBook has different pagination, and you sort of need to guess for splitting up chapters. This book is an excellent read. It challenged me personally and I know it will do the same for you. I am thankful for having read and to be slowly applying the lessons from this Saint. I highly recommend this book and look forward to the next Catholic Classics from Ascension Press.

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

Books in the Ascension Christian Classics:

CTS Books and Booklets n the life and spirituality of St Thérèse:
Thérèse of Lisieux - On the visit of her relics to Great Britain (Do 810)
Thérèse, teacher of Prayer, by Bro Craig (D 693)
Louis and Zélie Martin, Parents of Thérèse of Lisieux, by Paulinus Redmond (B 709)