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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Christianity > Roman Catholicism, Roman Catholic Church > General
In Writing Tamil Catholicism: Literature, Persuasion and Devotion
in the Eighteenth Century, Margherita Trento explores the process
by which the Jesuit missionary Costanzo Giuseppe Beschi
(1680-1747), in collaboration with a group of local lay elites
identified by their profession as catechists, chose Tamil poetry as
the social and political language of Catholicism in
eighteenth-century South India. Trento analyzes a corpus of Tamil
grammars and poems, chiefly Beschi's Tempavani, alongside archival
documents to show how, by presenting themselves as poets and
intellectuals, Catholic elites gained a persuasive voice as well as
entrance into the learned society of the Tamil country and its
networks of patronage. This project has received funding from the
European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme
under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement No 840879.
Inquisitions of heresy have long fascinated both specialists and
non-specialists. A Companion to Heresy Inquisitions presents a
synthesis of the immense amount of scholarship generated about
these institutions in recent years. The volume offers an overview
of many of the most significant areas of heresy inquisitions, both
medieval and early modern. The essays in this collection are
intended to introduce the reader to disagreements and advances in
the field, as well as providing a navigational aid to the wide
variety of recent discoveries and controversies in studies of
heresy inquisitions. Contributors: Christine Ames, Feberico
Barbierato, Elena Bonora, Lucia Helena Costigan, Michael Frassetto,
Henry Ansgar Kelly, Helen Rawlings, Lucy Sackville, Werner Thomas,
and Robin Vose
The world needs saints to show it the way to true humanity. The
Church needs saints to show it how to live out its calling.The
witness of the lives of the saints is a powerful testimony to the
reality of God's plan and the possibility for truly following it in
one's life. So often, we do not see this witness. We see hypocrisy
and mediocrity among Christians. That is why we must look to the
saints -- the ones who really followed the words of Christ and let
them be carried out fully in their lives. The saints also give us a
reason to hope. Saints were not born; they were made through a life
of cooperation with God's grace despite many difficulties,
weaknesses, and temptations.This book, written from a Catholic
perspective, provides an overview to the lives of the saints
celebrated the entirety of the Roman calendar. It covers the whole
Church year, and makes for inspirational spiritual reading any time
of the year, providing an introduction to the patron saints for
many walks of life. Included are the Blessed Virgin Mary and St.
Joseph, Apostles like St. Peter and St. Paul, early martyrs like
St. Perpetua and St. Felicity, early evangelizers like St. Patrick,
medieval giants such as St. Thomas Aquinas, American saints such as
St. Elizabeth Ann Seton and St. John Neumann, and many others.
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Lay Spirituality
(Hardcover)
Pierre Hegy; Foreword by Paul Lakeland
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R1,135
R953
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In The Spiritual Exercises of Saint Ignatius Loyola: Contexts,
Sources, Reception, Terence O'Reilly examines the historical,
theological and literary contexts in which the Exercises took
shape. The collected essays have as their common theme the early
history of the Spiritual Exercises, and the interior life of
Ignatius Loyola to which they give expression. The traditional
interpretation of the Exercises was shaped by writings composed in
the late sixteenth century, reflecting the preoccupations of the
Counter-Reformation world in which they were composed. The
Exercises, however, belong, in their origins, to an earlier period,
before the Council of Trent, and the full recognition of this fact,
and of its implications, has confronted modern scholars with fresh
questions about the sources, evolution, and reception of the work.
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