|
|
Books > Religion & Spirituality > Christianity > Christian worship
From Fr. Michael E. Gaitley, MIC, author of the bestselling book
Consoling the Heart of Jesus, comes an extraordinary 33-day journey
to Marian consecration with four giants of Marian spirituality: St.
Louis de Montfort, St. Maximilian Kolbe, Blessed Teresa of
Calcutta, and Blessed John Paul II. Fr. Michael masterfully
summarizes their teaching, making it easy to grasp and simple
enough to put into practice. More specifically, he weaves their
thought into a user-friendly, do-it-yourself retreat that will
bless even the busiest of people. So, if you've been thinking about
entrusting yourself to Mary for the first time or if you're simply
looking to deepen and renew your devotion to her, 33 Days to
Morning Glory is the right book to read and the perfect retreat to
make.
If you're easily distracted when praying, you're not alone. In
fact, if you struggle to pray in the first place, that's not
unusual either. Tim Chester tells us how we can be great pray-ers.
And he admits that that's a really bold claim. 'The secret of great
praying has nothing to do with human effort or skill,' he explains.
'Lots of people would like to think that it does because they want
to make prayer an achievement.' But the secret of great praying is
... Knowing three things about God: * That God the Father loves to
hear us pray * That God the Son makes every prayer pleasing to God
* That God the Holy Spirit helps us as we pray Tim looks at: why
prayer is easy (how we pray), why prayer is difficult (why we pray)
and the arguments and priorities of prayer (what we pray). Prayer
is a child asking her father for help. And that's not beyond any
one of us.
This volume of the Connections Worship Companion series offers
complete liturgies-from the call to worship to the closing charge,
with prayers and litanies for every need in between-for all
worshiping occasions between Advent and Pentecost of Year A,. Part
of the Connections commentary series, these worship resources help
congregations illuminate the connections between Scripture and
liturgical rhythms. A "Making Connections" essay precedes each
liturgical season's resources, providing context for worship within
the themes and purpose of the season.
|
|