Catholic Books For Men
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A MAN NAMED JOHN ~ LIFE OF POPE JOHN XXIII ~ ALDEN HATCH ~1963 CATHOLIC BOOK 1st $12.99 |
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THE FAITH OF A MODERN MAN by Louis Evely 1969 pb CATHOLIC Christian Book $3.99 |
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The Young Man’s Guide By Rev. Fr. Lasance Catholic Prayer Book – 1910 Copyright $29.99 |
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Men of Maryknoll Keller and Berger Catholic Book 1944 Missionary Adventures D/J $21.99 |
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1954 Catholic Book A MAN BORN AGAIN St. Thomas More by John E. Beahn, Bruce Pub $20.00 |
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1965 GREAT AGES OF MAN time life hc vint book AGE OF FAITH catholic cathedrals $6.98 |
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Prayers for Catholic Men, Pacer, Mike 9780867168815 NEW Book $13.37 |
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Catholic Child Book ~ GREAT MEN OF THE NEW TESTAMENT $1.00 |
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1967 The Catechism of Modern Man in the Words of Vatican II Catholic Book $18.00 |
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novel CATHOLIC FAMILY BOOK CLUB hardcover ONLY ONE HEART- MAN SANG WHEN SUFFERED $9.98 |
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Songs of Angels – Christmas Hymns and Carols $5.60 No Description AvailableNo Track Information AvailableMedia Type: CDArtist: SHAW,ROBERTTitle: SONGS OF ANGELS-CHRISTMAS HYMNStreet Release Date: 08/29/2006… |
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Comedy Superstars: Richard Jeni – Crazy From the Heat [VHS] $12.95 … |
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The Man on the Ox and Other Tales with Book(s) [VHS] $8.85 … |
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Padre Pio Miracle Man $8.99 This movie captures the Capuchin friar s intense faith and devotion, and deep spiritual concern for others, as well as his great compassion for the sick and suffering. It reveals the amazing details and events in Padre Pio s life as a boy and throughout his 50 years as a monk, dramatizing the frequent attacks of the Devil on him, as well as the persecution he suffered at the hands of people, inclu… |
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Into Great Silence (Two-Disc Set) $16.75 INTO GREAT SILENCE – DVD Movie… |
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Molokai: The Story Of Father Damien $12.46 This biography of Father Damien, the Catholic priest who in 1873 volunteered for service on the eponymous Hawaiian leper colony, doesn’t hesitate to idolize its subject, and why should it? For 15 years Damien ministered almost single-handedly to the quarantined community, supplying what medication he could procure while struggling against the red tape from organizations (religious and governmental… |
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Good Things Happened Today $12.95 “A dynamic inspirational fiction about personal growth and development.” Good Things Happened Today will inspire you to be a better person, to live a better life, uniquely blending spiritual connection and philosophy with action and adventure. If you have ever reflected on the purpose and meaning of your every day life, Good Things Happened Today is a must read for you. When a self-consumed, obses… |
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Plaid Skirt Confessions (An Erotica / Erotica May December Romance) $4.99 FROM BESTSELLING & AWARD-WINNING AUTHOR SELENA KITTHALF A MILLION NAUGHTY BOOKS SOLD IN 2011GUARANTEED QUALITY – THIS KITTY’S CREAM RISES TO THE TOP!——————Leah and Erica have been best friends and have gone to the same Catholic school since just about forever. Leah spends so much time with the Nolans—just Erica and her handsome father now, since Erica’s mother died—that she’s p… |
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Strong Fathers, Strong Daughters: 10 Secrets Every Father Should Know $8.19 In today’s increasingly complicated world, it’s often difficult for parents to connect with their daughters-and especially so for fathers. In this unique and invaluable guide, Dr. Meg Meeker, a pediatrician with more than twenty years’ experience counseling girls, reveals that a young woman’s relationship with her father is far more important than we’ve ever realized. To become a strong, confident… |
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The Works of G.K. Chesterton (36 Books with active table of contents) $1.00 Works of Chesterton in one large Kindle edition. Works include:Father Brown:The Innocence of Father BrownThe Wisdom of Father BrownNovels:The Ball and the CrossThe Barbarism of BerlinThe Club of Queer TradesThe Flying InnMagicManaliveThe Man Who Was ThursdayThe Napoleon of Notting HillThe Trees of PrideNon-Fiction:Alarms and DiscursionsAppreciations and CriticismAll Things ConsideredThe Appetite o… |
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Catholic $19.47 Catholic |
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Elementary Books For Catholic Schools $16.46 Elementary Books For Catholic Schools |
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For Men Only, Series 1: Strategies for Living Catholic $12.95 For Men Only, Series 1: Strategies for Living Catholic |
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Books and Men $17.12 Books and Men |
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Books And Men $18.81 Books And Men |
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Men And Books $22.77 Men And Books |
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Books By Catholic Authors In The Carnegie Library Of Pittsburgh $22.11 Books By Catholic Authors In The Carnegie Library Of Pittsburgh |
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The Catholic World $40.88 The Catholic World |
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The Catholic Faith $16.68 The Catholic Faith |
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Catholic Legends $20.13 Catholic Legends |
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The Catholic Encyclopedia $38.9 The Catholic Encyclopedia |
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Catholic Harp $15.92 Catholic Harp |
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”By legal or moral suasion let us put it away”: Temperance in Baltimore, 1829–1870. $49.99 This study revisits the history of temperance in Baltimore in order to present an inclusive and revealing narrative analyzing the work of Catholic men and women, free blacks, and the city’s few Jews alongside the more familiar story of white Protestant anti-alcohol activists. Their stories illustrate the ways in which people of different faiths, social classes, and ethnic backgrounds defined “temperance” at different times, and crafted a variety of approaches to alcohol restriction, regulation, or prohibition. My work exposes the ways in which antebellum Protestant and Catholic temperance strategies overlapped, particularly by demonstrating how the Washingtonians both influenced and were influenced by the work of the Irish Catholic temperance reformer, Father Theobald Mathew. But it shows how, in the end, denominational and ethnic differences dashed any real chances for Catholic-Protestant cooperation. And it chronicles how Protestant reformers’ turn toward strict regulation and, in the aftermath of a failed “Maine Law” campaign, prohibition, marginalized Catholic temperance reformers. Finally, it answers the question of what happened to this social reform through the Civil War years, on the home front and in the military, by tracing temperance activism during the war and the post-war years, ending up at the Panic of 1873 and the rise of a national prohibition movement. Throughout, it covers the work of both male and female reformers, and the shifting concerns that shaped male and female leadership.;Two points of entry help define the topic: temperance organizations and their leaders. Sources used in this study included temperance society minute books, constitutions, addresses, meeting notices, annual reports, articles of incorporation, city directories, newspapers, estate and cemetery records, church records, census reports, court records, temperance literature (fact and fiction), state legislative records, and biographical files. The abundance of secondary |
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”By legal or moral suasion let us put it away”: Temperance in Baltimore, 1829–1870. $49.99 This study revisits the history of temperance in Baltimore in order to present an inclusive and revealing narrative analyzing the work of Catholic men and women, free blacks, and the city’s few Jews alongside the more familiar story of white Protestant anti-alcohol activists. Their stories illustrate the ways in which people of different faiths, social classes, and ethnic backgrounds defined “temperance” at different times, and crafted a variety of approaches to alcohol restriction, regulation, or prohibition. My work exposes the ways in which antebellum Protestant and Catholic temperance strategies overlapped, particularly by demonstrating how the Washingtonians both influenced and were influenced by the work of the Irish Catholic temperance reformer, Father Theobald Mathew. But it shows how, in the end, denominational and ethnic differences dashed any real chances for Catholic-Protestant cooperation. And it chronicles how Protestant reformers’ turn toward strict regulation and, in the aftermath of a failed “Maine Law” campaign, prohibition, marginalized Catholic temperance reformers. Finally, it answers the question of what happened to this social reform through the Civil War years, on the home front and in the military, by tracing temperance activism during the war and the post-war years, ending up at the Panic of 1873 and the rise of a national prohibition movement. Throughout, it covers the work of both male and female reformers, and the shifting concerns that shaped male and female leadership.;Two points of entry help define the topic: temperance organizations and their leaders. Sources used in this study included temperance society minute books, constitutions, addresses, meeting notices, annual reports, articles of incorporation, city directories, newspapers, estate and cemetery records, church records, census reports, court records, temperance literature (fact and fiction), state legislative records, and biographical files. The abundance of secondary |
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1492: The Fourth Caravel of Christopher Columbus $23.95 This book is the narration of the political and cultural conditions in Spain before the re-conquest of Granada and the negotiations necessary to finance this voyage of discovery. Even though everyone has always known that Columbus left Palos with three caravels, there has always been evidence that the a fourth once, equipped by privateers, had followed the expedition. However, because the Catholic Kings were the ones responsible for such enterprise, the emphasis was put on their project as colonization and conversion to Christianity of the people in Cathay.La Fusta had a great cargo capacity and could accommodate 40 men. She was equipped with oars to sail the Mediterranean Sea, where the winds are not strong, as well as with square sails needed in the Ocean to stand the Trade Winds (Vientos Aliseos). When the Santa Maria was destroyed, La Fusta was left in Santo Domingo with the men who built Fort Navidad.The proof is still in Santo Domingo at El Museo de Las Casas Reales. |
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1513 Works: 1513 Architecture, Piri Reis Map, Palazzo Della Cancelleria, Santa Maria in Via, Apostolici Regiminis, Hortulus Animae $14.14 Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher’s book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Excerpt: Apostolici Regiminis was a papal bull issued 19 December, 1513, by Pope Leo X , in defence of the Roman Catholic doctrine concerning the immortality of the soul .Theological content Its object was to condemn a two-fold doctrine then current: That the soul of man is of its nature mortal, and that it is one and the same soul which animates all men. Others, prescinding from the teaching of revelation, held that doctrine to be true according to natural reason and philosophy.Leo X condemned the doctrine in itself and from every point of view. He refers to the definiteion of the Council of Vienne (1311) published by Pope Clement V (1305-14) which taught that the soul is “really, of itself, and essentially, the form of the body”; and then declares that it is of its own nature immortal, and that each body has a soul of its own.This doctrine is said to be clear from those words of the Gospel, “But he cannot kill the soul”, and “he who hates his soul in this world preserves it for eternal life”. Moreover, if the condemned doctrine were true, the Incarnation would have been useless, and we should not need the Resurrection; and those who are the most holy would be the most wretched of all.The Bull enjoins on all professors of philosophy in universities to expound for their pupils the true doctrine and refute the false one. To prevent such errors in future, the Bull makes it obligatory on all ecclesiastics, secular and regular, in holy orders, who devote their time to the study of philosophy and poetry for five years after the study of grammar and dialectic, to study also theology or canon law.References (URLs online) This article incorporates text from the entry Apostolici Regiminis in Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913, a publication now in the public domain . A hyperlinked version of |
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1584 Establishments $14.14 Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher’s book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: Settlements Established in 1584, United Kingdom Parliamentary Constituencies Established in 1584, Arkhangelsk, Newport, Uppingham School, Bere Alston, Oakham School, Yarmouth, Lymington, Newtown, Haslemere, Emmanuel College, Cambridge, Puerto Hambre, Gosset, Urswick Grammar School, Ubbo-Emmius-Gymnasium. Excerpt: Coordinates : 52°12 13 N 0°7 26.3 E / 52.20361°N 0.123972°E / 52.20361; 0.123972Colleges of the University of Cambridge Emmanuel College item College name : Emmanuel College item Named after : Jesus of Nazareth (Emmanuel ) item Established : 1584 item Admittance : Men and women item Master : The Lord Wilson of Dinton item Undergraduates : 465 item Graduates : 185 item Sister college : Exeter College, Oxford item Location : St Andrew’s Street (map) item College website Emmanuel College is a constituent college of the University of Cambridge .The college was founded in 1584 by Sir Walter Mildmay on the site of a Dominican friary. Mildmay, a Puritan , originally intended Emmanuel to be a college of training for Protestant preachers to rival the successful Catholic theological schools that had trained Dominican friars for years.Emmanuel still has some theological students, but has broadened itself to include students of a wide variety of subjects, and opened its doors to female students in 1979.”Emma “, as the college is known throughout the university, attracts large numbers of undergraduate applications owing to its reputation as a “friendly college” (although several other colleges also claim this), and it has the distinction of being the “only College in Cambridge to offer a laundry service”. Emmanuel topped the Tompkins Table , which ranks colleges according to end-of-year examination results, in 2003, |
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1593 Establishments $19.99 Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher’s book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: People From Tarnobrzeg, Religious Organizations Established in 1593, Settlements Established in 1593, States and Territories Established in 1593, Tarnobrzeg, ‘s-Gravendeel, Stonyhurst College, Discalced Carmelites, Parish of Our Lady of Perpetual Help in Tarnobrzeg, Hieronim Dekutowski, Marischal College, Jaboatão Dos Guararapes, Church of Our Lady of Perpetual Help in Tarnobrzeg, Accademia Di San Luca, Karatsu Domain, Uzundzhovo, Dzików Castle, Madresfield Court, Michal Józefczyk, San Salvador de Jujuy, Stary Oskol, Laukaa, Academy of Saumur, Roman Catholic Diocese of Solsona, Chapel of All Saints in Tarnobrzeg, Jacek Zielinski, Sakura Domain, Serbinów, Andrzej Mleczko, Jesus de Huenuraquí, Max Beer, Prescot Playhouse, Chivicura, Dzików Confederation, Valuyki, Siarka Tarnobrzeg. Excerpt: The Academy of Saumur was a Huguenot university at Saumur in western France. It existed from 1593, when it was founded by Philippe de Mornay , until shortly after 1683, when Louis XIV decided on the revocation of the Edict of Nantes , ending the limited toleration of Protestantism in France.Amyraldism Main article: Amyraldism The Academy was the home of Amyraldism , an important strand of Protestant thought of the seventeenth century. Also called Salmurianism or hypothetical universalism, it was a movement remaining within Calvinism .The French theologians at Saumur, in the 17th century, taught also that Christ came into the world to do whatever was necessary for the salvation of men. But God, foreseeing that, if left to themselves, men would universally reject the offers of mercy, elected some to be the subjects of his saving grace by which they are brought to faith and repentance According to this view of the plan of salvation, election is |
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1620s Disestablishments: 1620 Disestablishments, 1621 Disestablishments, 1622 Disestablishments, 1623 Disestablishments, 1624 Disestablishments $19.84 Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher’s book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: 1620 Disestablishments, 1621 Disestablishments, 1622 Disestablishments, 1623 Disestablishments, 1624 Disestablishments, 1625 Disestablishments, 1627 Disestablishments, 1628 Disestablishments, 1629 Disestablishments, Kingdom of Navarre, Wessagusset Colony, Kingdom of Mutapa, Roman Catholic Diocese of Sion, Cuper’s Cove, Newfoundland and Labrador, Republic of Salè, Maribo Abbey, Duchy of Livonia, Prince Charles’s Men, Sacra Di San Michele, Whitefriars Theatre, Curtain Theatre, Fotheringhay Castle, Sweetheart Abbey, Duchy of Krnov, Protestant Union, Duchy of Urbino, Wenden Voivodeship, Dorpat Voivodeship, Parnawa Voivodeship, County of Santa Fiora, County of Guastalla. Excerpt: The Kingdom of Navarre (Spanish: , Basque: , French: ), originally the Kingdom of Pamplona, was a European kingdom which occupied lands on either side of the Pyrenees alongside the Atlantic Ocean. The kingdom of Navarre was formed when local Basque leader Íñigo Arista was elected or declared King in Pamplona (traditionally in 824) and led a revolt against the regional Frankish authority. The southern part of the kingdom was conquered by the Crown of Castile in 1513, and thus became part of the unified Kingdom of Spain. The northern part of the kingdom remained independent, but it was joined with France in a personal union in 1589 when King Henry III of Navarre inherited the French throne as Henry IV of France, and in 1620 it was merged into the Kingdom of France. There are similar earlier toponyms but the first documentation of Latin navarros appears in Eginhard’s chronicle of the feats of Charles the Great. Other Royal Frankish Annals give nabarros. There are two proposed etymologies for the name of Navarra/Nafarroa/Naparroa: Note that Joan Corominas does not |
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1630s Disestablishments: 1631 Disestablishments, 1632 Disestablishments, 1633 Disestablishments, 1634 Disestablishments, 1635 Disestablishments $20.21 Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher’s book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: 1631 Disestablishments, 1632 Disestablishments, 1633 Disestablishments, 1634 Disestablishments, 1635 Disestablishments, 1637 Disestablishments, 1638 Disestablishments, 1639 Disestablishments, Duchy of Pomerania, Catholic League, Red Seal Ships, Post-Imperial Mongolia, Nogai Horde, Admiral’s Men, Saxe-Eisenach, Counts and Dukes of Bar, the Swan, Lady Elizabeth’s Men, Saxe-Coburg, Stolberg-Stolberg, Plymouth Council for New England, Solms-Assenheim, Solms-Rödelheim, Barony of Sax, Salm-Reifferscheid. Excerpt: Coat of arms The Duchy of Pomerania (German: , 12th century 1637) was a duchy in Pomerania on the southern coast of the Baltic Sea, ruled by dukes of the House of Pomerania (Griffins). The duchy originated from the realm of Wartislaw I, a Slavic Pomeranian duke, and was extended by the Lands of Schlawe and Stolp in 1317, the Principality of Rügen in 1325, and the Lauenburg and Bütow Land in 1455. During the High Middle Ages, it also comprised the northern Neumark and Uckermark areas as well as Circipania and Mecklenburg-Strelitz. The Dukes of Pomerania were vassals of Poland from 1122 to 1138, of the Duchy of Saxony from 1164 to 1181, of Denmark from 1185 to 1227, and of the Holy Roman Empire from 1181 to 1185 and from 1227 to 1637, including periods of vassalage to the Margraves of Brandenburg. Most of the time, the duchy was ruled by several Griffin dukes in common, resulting in various internal partitions. After the last Griffin duke had died during the Thirty Years’ War in 1637, the duchy was partitioned between Brandenburg-Prussia and Sweden. In the 12th century, Poland, the Holy Roman Empire’s Duchy of Saxony and Denmark conquered Pomerania, ending the tribal era. The Pomeranian GriffinThe Stolp (Supsk) and Schlawe (Sawno) areas (l… More: |
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1938 In Australia $19.99 Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher’s book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: 1938 Elections in Australia, 1938 in Australian Rules Football, 1938 Vfl Season, 1938 British Empire Games, 1938 Nswrfl Season, 1938 Australian Grand Prix, Day of Mourning, Queensland State Election, 1938, 1938 Claxton Shield, South Australian State Election, 1938, 1938 Kyeema Crash, Matthews V Chicory Marketing Board, 1938 Vfl Grand Final, Wakefield By-Election, 1938, Henwood V Municipal Tramways Trust. Excerpt: Elections were held in the Australian state of Queensland on 2 April 1938 to elect the 62 members of the state’s Legislative Assembly . The Labor government of Premier William Forgan Smith was seeking a third term in office. During the previous term, the Country and United Australia parties had emerged out of the united Country and Progressive National Party , which had represented conservative forces for over a decade.The most notable feature of the election campaign was the Protestant Labor Party , established in 1937, which claimed that the Forgan Smith Ministry was disproportionately Catholic and made extravagant claims that three-quarters of all police and public servants in the State were Catholic. Despite the campaign, Labor only lost one seat, Kelvin Grove, to the party.The unsuccessful Protestant Labor candidate for Ithaca, George Webb, lodged a petition against the return of Labor member Ned Hanlon . He was initially successful in the Supreme Court when the case was heard by Justice E.A. Douglas, who voided the election result on 12 October on the basis of a finding that two men who had acted improperly were Hanlon’s agents, but Hanlon appealed to the Full Bench of the Supreme Court and on 16 December 1938, his appeal was allowed. A further appeal by Webb to the High Court was refused leave on 31 March 1939. Key dates Date: Event Results |
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1st-Century Christian Martyrs: 1st-Century Christian Martyr Saints, Paul of Tarsus, Saint Peter, Matthew the Evangelist, Mark the Evangelist $30.8 Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher’s book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: 1st-Century Christian Martyr Saints, Paul of Tarsus, Saint Peter, Matthew the Evangelist, Mark the Evangelist, Thomas the Apostle, Barnabas, Bartholomew the Apostle, Luke the Evangelist, Onesimus, James the Just, Jude the Apostle, Saint Petronilla, Simon the Zealot, Apollinare, Aphrodisius, Seven Apostolic Men, Nereus, Achilleus, Domitilla, and Pancras, Hermagoras of Aquileia, James, Son of Alphaeus, Martinian and Processus, Seven Deacons, Leontius, Hypatius and Theodulus, Edistus, Andronicus of Pannonia, Orontius of Lecce, Peter of Rates, Romulus of Fiesole, Torquatus of Acci, Herodion of Patras, Onesiphorus, Hermes of Philippopolis, Hermas of Dalmatia, Paulinus of Antioch, Felicula, Flavius Clement, Clateus, Parmenas, Nicanor the Deacon, Plautilla, Evellius, Abercius and Helena. Excerpt: Simon Peter (Greek: , Pétros, “stone, rock”; c. 1 BC AD 67), sometimes called Simon Cephas (Greek: , Symn Kphas; Aramaic: ; Syriac: , Sëmn Kêfâ) after his name in Hellenized Aramaic, was a leader of the early Christian Church, who is featured prominently in the New Testament Gospels and the Acts of the Apostles. Peter was the son of John or of Jonah, and was from the village of Bethsaida in the province of Galilee. His brother Andrew was also an apostle. Simon Peter is venerated in multiple churches and regarded as the first Pope by the Roman Catholic Church. After working to establish the church of Antioch for seven years presiding as the city’s bishop and preaching to the ones who were scattered (i.e., Jews and Hebrew Christians.), in Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia Minor and Bithynia, Peter went to Rome. In the second year of Claudius, it is claimed, he overthrew Simon Magus, and held the Sacerdotal Chair for 25 years. At the hand of Nero, |
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21st-Century Men: 21st-Century Eastern Orthodox Clergy, 21st-Century Roman Catholic Priests, 21st-Century Sportsmen, Robbie Fowler $26.71 Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher’s book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: 21st-Century Eastern Orthodox Clergy, 21st-Century Roman Catholic Priests, 21st-Century Sportsmen, Robbie Fowler, Bobby Clarke, John Terry, Mats Sundin, Marlon King, Ashley Cole, Charlie Adam, Wayne Bridge, Brad Friedel, Alex Reid, Ramzi Abid, Adolfo Nicolás, Jon Sobrino, Nikolaos Loudovikos, Victor Sokolov, Peter Nguyen, Louis-Philippe Jean, Cliff Drysdale, Marc R. Alexander, Guy Sansaricq, Stuart Abbot, David Bascome, John Masso, Steve Ludzik, Michael Harper, Francisco Fernández Carvajal, John Berg, Oleg Velyky, Ryan Bonni, John H. Erickson, Jon Cortina, Cuthbert Johnson, Rafael Diaz, Zlatko Sudac, José Rodríguez Carballo, Edmundo Mellid, Josef Bisig, Alban Mccoy. Excerpt: Appearances (Goals). National team caps and goals correct as of 09:14, 23 October 2008 (UTC)Robert Bernard “Robbie” Fowler (born 9 April 1975) is an English footballer, who plays for Perth Glory FC in the Australian A-League. He is best remembered for his playing days at Liverpool in two spells, and is the fourth-highest goalscorer in the history of the Premier League. Fowler scored 183 goals in total for Liverpool, of which 128 were scored in the Premier League. He subsequently played for Leeds United and Manchester City, before returning to Liverpool in January 2006. He moved clubs again 18 months later to sign for Cardiff City. He refused a one year “pay as you play” contract extension and signed with Blackburn Rovers on a three-month “pay as you play” deal instead. However in December 2008, he departed Blackburn and became a free agent. He has been capped for England twenty-six times, scoring seven goals. The most recent of these appearances came in the 2002 World Cup. Fowler was born in Liverpool, Merseyside, and brought up in the inner city area of Toxteth. At |
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73 Reasons to Reject Sola Scriptura – The Easy Button Bible – LIST PRICE REDUCED from $14.95 – You SAVE 55% $6.95 73 Reasons to reject Sola Scriptura – The Easy Button Bible, contains a section for each of the 73 Books found in the Catholic Bible, but the Scripture itself will be missing. In its place will be 73 arguments against the concept of Sola Scriptura (the Bible Alone) which is the Protestant belief that the Bible is the “sole rule of authority” with only 66 Books in the Bible.There is no “Easy Button” on the Bible that activates the voice of the Holy Spirit so we can understand Scripture free of division. Sola Scriptura is not Biblical, and it is a misguided concept that divides the Kingdom of God creating the doctrines of men condemned by the Apostle Paul. Anyone who lives by it has been deceived.Look about and see whether or not the world of Protestantism is fractured in belief since the days of the Reformation. Tens of thousands of legally registered Protestant denominations now bicker and differ with each other over the Bible. It is impossible that Sola Scriptura which gives birth to such division represents the Church established by Jesus Christ.Until Sola Scriptura is abandoned as a rule of faith, unity will never be achieved. |
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9th-Century Christian Clergy $9.43 Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher’s book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: Anastasius Bibliothecarius, Gottschalk of Orbais, Fedelmid Mac Crimthainn, Diarmait of Iona, Adalard of Corbie, Florus of Lyon, Odo of Glanfeuil, Ailbhe of Ceann Mhara, Louis, Hugh, Son of Charlemagne. Excerpt: Anastasius Bibliothecarius (c. 810-c. 878) was Head of archives (bibliothecarius, literally “librarian”) and antipope of the Roman Catholic Church. He was a nephew of Bishop Arsenius of Orte, who executed important commissions as Papal legate. Anastasius learned the Greek language from Eastern Roman monks and obtained an unusual education for his era, such that he appears to be the most learned ecclesiastic of Rome in the barbaric period of the 9th century. During the pontificate of pope Nicholas I (855-867) Anastasius was abbot of Santa Maria in Trastevere on the farther side of the Tiber. Among other matters, he was employed by the pope as secretary and he has been shown by Ernst Perels to be the ‘ghost-writer’ behind much papal official correspondence of these years. He was also active as an author, and translated Greek language works into Latin. Among them was the biography of St. John the Merciful, which he dedicated to Nicholas I. The successor of Nicholas, Pope Adrian II (867-872), appointed Anastasius bibliothecarius (Head of archives) of the Roman Church, an important office at the Lateran Palace that gave him further influence at the papal Court. In 869 he was sent by Louis II, Holy Roman Emperor as envoy to Constantinople, with two men of high rank in the Frankish Empire, to negotiate a marriage between Leo VI the Wise, oldest son of the Byzantine emperor Basil I, and Louis’s only child, Ermengard. When the envoys arrived at Constantinople, the Fourth Council of Constantinople was still in session, and Anastasius, who atte… More: |
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A Brief Plea for the Old Faith, and the Old Times, of Merrie England, ; When Men Had Leisure for Life, and Time to Die $24.55 This is an OCR edition without illustrations or index. It may have numerous typos or missing text. However, purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original rare book from GeneralBooksClub.com. You can also preview excerpts from the book there. Purchasers are also entitled to a free trial membership in the General Books Club where they can select from more than a million books without charge. Original Published by: Charles Dolman in 1846 in 96 pages; Subjects: Religion / Christianity / Catholic; Religion / Christian Rituals & Practice / Worship & Liturgy; Religion / Christian Theology / General; Religion / Christianity / Denominations; Religion / Christian Church / History; |
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A Call to Save $13.1 If God had a divine plan for Thomas Harrington, he made it abundantly clear right from the start. Saint Lawrence Church and Fire Station 5 loomed side by side across the street from Thomas’s boyhood home in New Bedford, Mass. It was a foreshadowing of what would become his life’s work: the priesthood and the fire service. Thomas grew up to become Father Harrington, a catholic priest in the Diocese of Fall River, . While the firefighters responded to the call to save lives, Fr. Harrington answered his own call, to save souls. Together they worked and prayed?and shared some of the most dramatic, gut-wrenching, joyous, and awe-inspiring experiences imaginable. From raging conflagrations, to the solemn march in remembrance of six brothers who perished in a Worcester warehouse fire, Msgr. Harrington’s calling has brought him joy and sadness, compassion and courage. Above all, it has brought great admiration for the brave men and women of the fire service. This memoir is a tribute to them. |
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A Church Divided: The Vatican Versus American Catholics $4.21 Is the Roman Catholic Church heading toward an irrevocable schism? Two factors that have been traditionally regarded as signs of unity and inspiration now threaten the very life of the Church: papal authority and eligibility requirements for the priesthood. Many American Catholics today are seriously questioning the authority of the Church, whose leaders claim absolute power over their faith and morals. Priests are leaving the Church and marrying publicly without dispensation from Rome; in fact, since 1965, more than 19,000 priests in the United States and 100,000 priests worldwide have married. Catholics in increasing numbers are supporting the idea of female clergy and rejecting celibacy as a requirement of the priestly office. In A Church Divided: The Vatican versus American Catholics, priest and ex-Jesuit Terrance Sweeney explores in great detail the issues of Church authority and the priesthood. Part One of this volume describes the results of two recent polls conducted by Sweeney, which reveal that a significant number of North American bishops think the mission of the Church and the pastoral needs of the faithful would be better served by a priesthood that includes marriage and celibacy, women and men. The complete results of Sweeney’s poll, which was ordered suppressed by the Superior-General of the Jesuit Order under Vatican pressure, are published here for the first time. Part Two examines Church canons mandating celibacy for priests and maleness for ordination. Exploring these canons from biblical, historical, and ethical perspectives, Sweeney concludes that Church laws imposing continence on priests violate human nature and contravene divine law by denying to clergy theGod-given right to marry. Part Two also describes how exclusion of women from the priesthood based on gender alone is an insult to the dignity of Christian women, as well as a direct contradiction of the image of God and Christ revealed in women living lives of faith and love. Confronted |
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A Civilization of Love $19.95 The head of the 1.7 million strong Catholic men”s organization Knights of Columbus champions the revolutionary ideas of Pope John Paul II on how Christians can change the world through love. From The Publisher: Carl Anderson, Supreme Knight of the Knights of Columbus, surveys the exciting and history-changing ideas of Pope John Paul II in A Civilization of Love. By popularizing not only John Paul’s vision but also that of his successor, Benedict XVI, Anderson hopes to inspire Christians to work toward creating a civilization of love. In such a civilization every person is a child of God. We are all intrinsically valuable. The battle today is between the culture of death (where people are judged by their social or economic value) and the culture of life. Anderson pushes aside religious differences in order to spread a message of hope to those who are weary of the constant turmoil of modern society. While he does specifically challenge Christians to take an active role in their faith, you do not have to be a Christian to participate in the movement toward a civilization of love. By embracing the culture of life and standing with those most marginalized and deemed useless or a burden on modern society, Christians can change the tone and direction of our culture. Anderson demonstrates that regardless of our differences, we can come together on the centrality of loving and caring for others. He brings a message of inclusion and hope in the midst of a clash of civilizations and provides a road map for helping Christians understand their role in the world. |
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A Daring Game $11 In 1837 George Borrow, the brilliant polyglot and future author of best-sellers, arrived in Madrid as agent of the British and Foreign Bible Society with the assignment to print and distribute a Protestant version of the New Testament in a staunchly Catholic land. In the first months of the year he saw through to press an edition of no fewer than 5,000 copies. Then he spent the next three years selling the book, against tremendous opposition from the Catholic Church and hostile conservative authorities, in all the nooks and corners of the land, to all classes of Spanish society, in big cities and in tiny villages. Thrice imprisoned, a dozen times nearly killed by bandits, firing-squad, disease or accident, Borrow persisted where saner men would soon have yielded. When at last he returned to England, the greater part of his ‘Scio New Testament’ had been duly sold to noblemen, donkey-drivers and jailbirds, to ‘muleteers, carmen, and contrabandistas’, to city bourgeois and intellectuals craving for a look at Europe’s most fundamental text. A Daring Game does not repeat the whole story of Borrow’s adventures as told in his sensational 1843 travelogue ‘The Bible in Spain’. Instead, it investigates the conditions and circumstances under which Borrow’s New Testament was produced and distributed, and for the first time in two centuries calculates the exact numbers of sales attained by a bookseller of genius in a land plagued by war, pestilence, ignorance and hatred. |
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A Dictatorship of Relativism? $18 In the last homily he gave before becoming Pope Benedict XVI, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger described modern life as ruled by a dictatorship of relativism which does not recognize anything as definitive and whose ultimate goal consists solely of satisfying the desires of ones own ego. An eminent scholar familiar with the centuries-old debates over relativism, Ratzinger chose to oversimplify or even caricature a philosophical approach of great sophistication and antiquity. His homily depicts the relativist as someone blown about by every wind of doctrine, whereas the relativist sticks firmly to one argumentthat human knowledge is not absolute. Gathering prominent intellectuals from disciplines most relevant to the controversyethics, theology, political theory, anthropology, psychology, cultural studies, epistemology, philosophy of science, and classicsthis special double issue of Common Knowledge contests Ratzingers denunciation of relativism. One essay relates the arguments of Ratzinger to those of two other German scholarsthe conservative political theorist Ernst Wolfgang Bckenfrde and the liberal philosopher and sociologist Jrgen Habermassince all three men assume that social order depends on the existence of doctrinal authority (divine or otherwise). The contributors here argue for an intellectual and social life free of the desire for an infantilizing authority. One proposes that the Christian god is a relativist who prefers limitation and ambiguity; another, initially in agreement with Ratzinger about the danger relativism poses to faith and morals, then argues that this danger is what makes relativism valuable. The issue closes with the first English translation of an extract from abook on Catholic-Jewish relations by Cardinal Carlo Maria Martini, on |
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A Discipline Of Drink $14.3 Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free.This is an OCR edition with typos.Excerpt from book: CHAPTER III. The Church’s Discipline. jHE Church has been compared by her Divine Founder to a field in which weeds will grow amidst the wheat until the harvest. Yet if the weeds are tolerated it is for the sake of the wheat, or it is in the hopes that, by a miracle of God’s power and mercy, the weeds may even become wheat. The Church is ever labouring to make her children holy, not by her teaching only, but by her discipline. ” I have written to you,” says St Paul, ” not to keep company, if any man that is named a brother, be … a drunkard: . . . with such an one, not so much as toeat. . . . Put away the evil one from among yourselves” (i Cor. v. 11—13). We have seen St Augustin discussing questions of discipline—how to reform abuses ; how to deal with the incorrigible. In the present chapter we have to inquire intothe treatment of drunkenness in later ages and other countries. It will be asked : What advice was given with regard to combating drunkenness ? Was there anything in Catholic antiquity like the modern system of administering the pledge ? I reply that we must here distinguish between the substance and the form. If by “administering the pledge ” we understand a popular or public enrolment of multitudes in societies, having as their special object to promote sobriety, then it is a novelty in the history of the Church.1 But if by taking the pledge we mean abstaining from the use of intoxicating drinks, either as a work of perfection, a remedy, or a penance, then it is by no means a novelty, but has been well known in all ages and countries. I can, perhaps, best explain the whole subject by distinguishing the different states and classes of men and women in the Church, and the different purposes for which abstinence was counselled or prescribed. |
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Review of the Alchemist
The Alchemist is one of those books "esoteric" feeling that makes you feel like life is alive again.
Without a doubt, playing in that "something more" that has been forgotten and the idea that you are part of a more overall.
For over Santiago, the shepherd on his adventure, you are automatically question their own adventures in life, you live to its highest goal? Why have you forgotten your way? What else is there that you should do? Have you betrayed what they were designed to make your life?
Ask questions such as this … feeling the feelings that go with these questions … It's really a wonderful way to live. For the few time you read this book, you'll feel more alive. You'll feel more in tune with "the universe". Feel this wonderful one-on-the-morning-looking outside the window – and listen to wind-feeling … I mean … unless you do not know how you feel.
Santiago follows his dreams, which takes him from Spain to Morocco and Egypt in search of treasure. During his travels, he learns the lessons of messengers who seem placed their way at the right time, just when he needs them.
The author, Paulo Coelho is a Brazilian writer is very loved. I learned that Madonna loves. I have read several of his books, but I think it's the best. It was a very small number of books in the past years I have not read it yet, so it is very possible that he has surpassed "The Alchemist. I'll check.
Some of his books were non-fiction and his own life. It is therefore able to associate, Paulo is a member of a little known Catholic mystic cult looking for spiritual growth. Mentors International attributed hitherto unknown to their older members … men who have attained a high degree of spiritual power (and worldly success?). I will not even go into some strange things they do, but if you want an idea, pick up "The Pilgrim, also by Coelho.
But read The Alchemist, it's just a good book. Certainly give you a wisdom-buzz … or "esoteric" buzz.
Today I read an interview with Paulo, where he talked about watching "Omens" in your life that only you can recognize it. It is a language that corresponds to the "universe" speaks … and, songs, feelings, synchronicities. It is a question that really speaks a lot about "The Alchemist.
Some people complain that the book is too simplistic, silly you might think there is a "plan" of his life that should have followed, must wake up, to head the "feeling" clouds and return to work.
If you are prone to such thoughts, perhaps this book is not for you. However, If you want to wake up your mind from time to time, there is no better place to do it in the clouds.
Best Catholic Books: Not by the Cover!
catholic books for men