|
|
Books > Christianity
The original guide to "practicing the presence of God" "We must not
grow weary of doing little things for the love of God, who looks
not on the great size of the work, but on the love of it." In this
classic work, which has instructed and inspired millions, a humble
17th-century monk reveals the secrets of daily, moment-by-moment
fellowship with God. "In the way of God, thoughts count very
little," writes Brother Lawrence, who spent much of his monastic
life in the kitchen. "Love does it all." Full of realistic honesty,
friendliness, and simplicity, Brother Lawrence shows that it is
possible to meet God amongst the pots and pans-in the ordinary,
daily events of life. This edition, rendered from the original
French into graceful, contemporary English, will nourish and
delight all those who seek to practice the presence of God.
Operating in the Courts of Heaven has become an international bestseller that has supernaturally transformed lives all over the world. It’s not another prayer strategy; it’s a blueprint for engaging a spiritual dimension called the Courts of Heaven. Robert Henderson Biblically teaches believers how to come before the Court and present their cases of unanswered prayers or delayed breakthroughs to the Righteous Judge.
In this new and updated edition featuring brand new material, Robert presents fresh Biblical insights and a systematic framework that shows all believers how to enter the Courts of Heaven. In addition, Robert answers common questions about the Courts and reveals how this place in the spirit is available to all believers through Jesus’ blood.
Discover how to:
- Engage the three dimensions of prayer, experiencing God as Father, Friend and Judge
- Shift from “battlefield” to “courtroom” prayer
- Apply the verdict of Jesus’ finished work on the cross
- Understand how Christians can remove generational curses
- Recognize your accuser and overrule his cases against you
- Access and unlock your book of destiny
- Enter and operate in the court of Heaven by faith
God’s passion is to answer your prayers. When you learn how to operate in the court of Heaven, you can undo the spiritual legalities that stand in the way of your answered prayer. Get ready for miraculous results!
How can we transmit a living, personal Catholic faith to future generations? By coming to know Jesus Christ, and following him as his disciples.
As we emerge from a pandemic into a post-Christian world, these are times of immense challenge and enormous opportunity for the Catholic Church in the United States. Consider these statistics:
Fully 10 percent of all adults in America are ex-Catholics.
Nearly three-quarters of young Catholics think that they could be a good Catholic without going to Mass every Sunday.
Catholic marriages have declined by almost two thirds since 1969, even as the number of Catholics in the United States has grown significantly.
Only one third of Catholics believe that the bread and wine actually become the Body and Blood of Jesus Christ at the consecration during Mass.
If the Church is to reverse these trends, the evangelizers must first be evangelized. In other words, Catholics in the pew must make a conscious choice to know and follow Jesus before they can draw others to him.
25 World Church songs, with an emphasis on Central and South
America. Includes: Cantai ao SenhorEl cielo cantaRe ya mathemathaIf
you believe
Redeem your story, redefine your creativity, and make a life that
truly matters Sometimes the greatest gift you can receive is for
your life to fall apart. After years stuck in a painful cycle
fueled by past abuse and ongoing addiction, actor, artist, and
director Blaine Hogan finally hit rock bottom. No longer able to
hide behind the veneer of success or find comfort in the shadows of
compulsion, Blaine was forced to look at the story his life was
telling and realize he'd lost the plot. Desperate to find hope, he
gave up a budding career and took a major life detour where he
discovered that facing his past was the key to unlocking a new kind
of creativity. In Exit the Cave, Blaine shares the stories that
shaped him while exploring how our relationship to our past defines
how we imagine the future and live in the present. Through powerful
personal revelations, he invites you to take up the practices of
radical imagination and real creativity so you can tell a better
story with your life. If you've ever been stuck, addicted, ashamed,
discontented, or lost, take courage--a richer, more imaginative,
and meaningful life is waiting for you just outside the cave. "A
tender but fierce story of survival, reckoning, and redemption.
Blaine manages to somehow weave themes of acting, allegory,
addiction, family, and faith into one beautifully written account
of his own healing. This is the kind of story that will redeem
you."--Laura McKowen, bestselling author of We Are the Luckiest
"Blaine Hogan has inspired me for many years with his unique way of
seeing the world. In this book you'll find a blast of inspiration
and a trusty guide to help you exit the cave and enter a world that
is real and beautiful and vital."--Brad Montague, New York Times
bestselling author and illustrator of The Circles All Around Us,
Becoming Better Grownups, and Kid President's Guide to Being
Awesome
According to legend, the language of the birds was a mystical
language God used to talk with Adam and Eve when he walked with
them in the garden of Eden. Amy Nemecek listens for this divine
dialect as she communes with God on her walks along country roads
and creek banks, through forests and hayfields. She observes the
world around her with expectation, knowing that God still speaks to
us as he is at work making all things new. If we have ears to hear,
we can catch snippets of his grace in the watercolor silhouette of
a bird, the thrum of a tractor engine, the tang of a grapefruit,
the curvature of an ampersand. Amy doesn't want to miss any of it,
so she remains attentive to the smooth grit of beach sand, the
tendrils of a nebula, and the steady gaze of a fossil. She delights
in the details, and you will too. In this collection of lyric and
narrative poems, you are invited to walk with her as she reflects
on larger themes of beauty, loss, motherhood, family, and vocation.
She contemplates the sacredness of ordinary moments that we usually
don't recognize except in hindsight. Twining through every line is
an aching hopefulness that ties together her love of words, her
devotion to scripture, and her deep gratitude for each of life's
joys and griefs. "Rub dust on your palms, pluck the ripened
sunshine, and taste this poetic grace." -Dwight Baker, president
and CEO of Baker Publishing Group
Therese of Lisieux (1873-1897), also known as St. Therese of the
Child Jesus and the Holy Face, is popularly named the Little
Flower. A Carmelite nun, doctor of the church, and patron of a
score of causes, she was famously acclaimed by Pope Pius X as the
greatest saint of modern times. Therese is not only one of the most
beloved saints of the Catholic Church but perhaps the most revered
woman of the modern age. Pope John Paul II described her as a
living icon of God. Her autobiography Story of a Soul has been
translated into sixty languages. Having long transcended national
and linguistic boundaries, she has crossed even religious ones. As
daughter of Allah, she is venerated widely in Islamic cultures.
Therese has been the subject of innumerable biographies and
treatises, ranging from hagiographies to attacks on her
intelligence and mental health. Thomas R. Nevin has gained access
to many untapped archival materials and previously unpublished
photographs. As a consequence he is able to offer a much fuller and
more accurate portrait of the saint's life and thought than his
predecessors. He explores the dynamics of her family life and the
early development of her spirituality. He draws extensively on the
correspondence of her mother and documents her influence on
Thereses autobiography and spirituality. He charts the development
of Thereses career as a writer. He gives close attention to her
poetry and plays usually dismissed as undistinguished and argues
that they have great value as texts by which she addressed and
informed her Carmelite community. He delves into the French medical
literature of the time, in an effort to understand how the
tuberculosis of which she died at the age of 24 was treated and
lamentably mistreated. Finally, he offers a new understanding of
Therese as a theologian for whom love, rather than doctrines and
creeds, was the paramount value. Adding substantially to our
knowledge and appreciation of this immensely popular and attractive
figure, this book should appeal to many general readers as well as
to scholars and students of modern Catholic history.
In Jeremiah 12:5 God says to the prophet, "If you're worn out in
this footrace with men, what makes you think you can race against
horses?" We all long to live life at its best-to fuse freedom and
spontaneity with purpose and meaning. Why then do we often find our
lives so humdrum, so unadventuresome, so routine? Or else so
frantic, full of activity, but still devoid of fulfillment? How do
we learn to risk, to trust, to pursue wholeness and excellence-to
run with the horses instead of shuffling along with the crowd? In a
series of profound reflections on the life of Jeremiah the prophet,
Eugene Peterson explores the heart of what it means to be fully and
genuinely human. In his signature pastoral style, he invites
readers to grasp the biblical truth that each person's story of
faith is completely original. Peterson's writing is filled with
humor and self-reflection, insight and wisdom, helping to set a
course for others in the quest for life at its best. This special
commemorative edition includes a preface taken from Eric Peterson's
homily at his father's memorial service.
MEMBERS OF A SMALL CHURCH GATHERED TOGETHER TO PRAY FOR their youth
leader and four boys who were about to embark on a mission trip to
Mexico. Seventeen days later, all five of them were dead. Life
painfully changed after the accident. After the horrific experience
of recovering the bodies and evading a greedy American Embassy in
Mexico, I returned home to find little in the way of solace from
the church family I was counting on. Instead, I was expected to be
a strong example of Christian faith for everyone else. Attempting
to conceal my emotional struggle would eventually cause me to
question both my sanity and relationship with God. Being assured
that the accident was all part of "His plan," my concept of God
turned into one of a cold and callus monarch. This wasn't the God I
had signed up for.
"Remove your sandals from your feet, for the place on which you are
standing is holy ground." -Exodus 3:5 "The Holy Land is
everywhere." -Black Elk The two epigraphs that preface Angela
Alaimo O'Donnell's Holy Land introduce the reader to the central
theme that permeates her poems: that holy places deserve to be
regarded with reverence and that all places are holy places. In her
afterward, the poet traces these foundational concepts to her
Catholic childhood wherein religious instruction consisted largely
of memorizing the Baltimore Catechism. "One of questions the
Catechism poses is 'Where is God?' The answer is 'God is
everywhere.' We believed this to be true. God was in church, but
God was also in our house (a crucifix in every room), in the
backyard, in our Buick (rosary beads swinging from the rearview
mirror), at our birthday parties in the basement, and in our own
bodies. And though those places may not sound very holy, they were.
Because God was there. Is there." In addition to affirming this
foundational belief, these poems extend the terrain, moving beyond
the geographical and the physical to the temporal, the carnal, the
intellectual, and the spiritual realms. They assert that our days
are blessed, our bodies are blessed, our minds and souls are all
blessed and sacred ground. The poet explores a broad spectrum of
physical locations, beginning with poems set in the Holy Land and
moving on to places closer to home, ranging from the west of
Ireland to rural Minnesota, from New York City to the Texas border.
She also probes the temporal spaces we occupy, experiences of death
and birth, love and loss, desire and desolation that mark our human
passage. The English word holy is related to the Germanic word
heilig, a word that means blessed and also carries within it the
idea of wholeness. Holy Land attempts to honor both the holiness
and the wholeness of our world-from Gotham to Golgotha, the Bronx
River to the Sea of Galilee-and to honor the holiness and wholeness
of our blessed and broken humanity.
Got a minute? Thanks to beloved Franciscan priest and retreat
leader Fr. Albert Haase, that's all you need to stay in touch with
the Gospel every Sunday through the Church year. Inspired by his
early days in a busy urban parish, Sundays on the Go is Fr.
Albert's gift to busy Catholics - just enough to keep you on track
with Jesus, even when you're on the run! This first edition of
Sundays on the Go features: A reading for every Sunday of Year A of
the liturgical year Handy Scriptural references to each Gospel
passage A brief, direct, and pithy homily from Fr. Albert A
reflection question and a prayer Special readings for Solemnities
and Feasts through the year Fr. Albert's words will help you to
prepare for Sunday Eucharist, and stay in touch with the Gospel all
week long. Sundays on the Go is the perfect gift for busy Catholics
of all ages - professionals, parents, students, and anyone who's
short on time - in need of spiritual wisdom, encouragement, and a
strong connection with the Gospel.
Internationally bestselling author and German monk Anselm Grün presents ancient wisdom for leadership today.
Whether you lead a business, a family, a non-profit, or a church group, this book will help you discover the joy of leadership and create a sanctuary where a group of people mobilize their spiritual resources, ask relevant questions, love, trust, and respect one another.
Leadership is not about power, status, and titles. According to the Rule of St. Benedict, true leadership is about awakening creativity in others and building an environment of trust and respect. It’s less about maximizing profits and more about finding meaning.
Radical in its time, this 6th century rule offers an approach to leadership that is clear and refreshing in its simplicity. Benedict is primarily concerned with the characteristics of a leader, and how such a person needs to work on himself in order to be able to lead at all. To Benedict, leading through personality is more important than any methods and strategies.
In this insightful book, Benedictine monk and internationally bestselling author Anselm Grün offers practical wisdom on all aspects of leadership, including:
The Qualities of a Leader
Benedict’s View of Human Nature
Leadership as Service
Awakening Creativity
Management of Material Possessions
Respecting Boundaries
Thinking from the heart
Avoiding workaholism
Benedict’s rule does not moralize or preach. It shows how economic function and economic security for a large number of people can be combined with respecting creation and the human beings around us. Leadership is an art, full of challenges but also deeply satisfying.
What would you do to inherit a million dollars? Would you be
willing to change your life? Jason Stevens is about to find out.
Red Stevens has died, and the older members of his family receive
their millions with greedy anticipation. But a different fate
awaits young Jason, whom his great-uncle Stevens believed might be
the last vestige of hope in the family. "Although to date your life
seems to be a sorry excuse for anything I would call promising,
there does seem to be a spark of something in you that I hope we
can fan into a flame. For that reason, I am not making you an
instant millionaire." What Stevens does give Jason leads to The
Ultimate Gift. Young and old will take this timeless tale to heart.
Liliana Vela hates the term victim. She's not a victim, she's a
fighter. Stubborn and strong with a quiet elegance, she's
determined to take back her life after escaping the clutches of
human traffickers in her poor Mexican village. But she can't stay
safely over the border in America--unless the man who aided in her
rescue is serious about his unconventional proposal to marry her.
Meric Toledan was just stopping at a service station for a bottle
of water. Assessing the situation, he steps in to rescue Liliana
from traffickers. If he can keep his secrets at bay, his wealth and
position afford him many resources to help her. But the mysterious
buyer who funded her capture will not sit idly by while his prize
is stolen from him. Melissa Koslin throws you right into the middle
of the action in this high-stakes thriller that poses the question:
What is the price of freedom?
|
|