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James Cardinal Gibbons was Archbishop of Baltimore when he asked
Mother Loyola to write this story of the Life of our Lord. As a
revered author himself, and considering the number of such stories
available even then, we can only imagine the admiration he must
have held for Mother Loyola's rare talent for narrative. She does
not disappoint in this story, for as always, she brings to life the
most vivid images of our Lord, such that the children who read it
will feel almost as if they were following the dusty paths our
Saviour trod.
Now enhanced with an abundance of contemporary engravings and
lithographs, this newly typeset edition is an invaluable means of
impressing upon the minds of young children the reality of our God
become Man.
Forty Hours.
One Guide.
In these meditations before the Blessed Sacrament, Mother Mary
Loyola's distinctive style skillfully guides the reader toward
prayerfulness without supplying any preformulated prayers.
From "Catholic World," May 1901: "There is nothing exaggerated,
artificial, or impossible in the pages before us; they contain
merely a collection of musings and devotional monologues written
with a directness and spontaneity that will appeal strongly to many
who can get little profit out of less natural and more fervent
writing."
From "The Irish Ecclesiastical Record," January 1902: ..".Mother M.
Loyola is as much at home when depicting the trials, the
aspirations, and the consolations of adults as in leading little
children along the road of true penance. Each visit seizes,
generally with thrilling vivacity, one idea; the subject is weighed
in the presence of our Lord, the conclusions are always practical."
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Home for Good (Paperback)
Mother Mary Loyola; Edited by Herbert Thurston; Contributions by Lisa Bergman
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R469
Discovery Miles 4 690
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Out of stock
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The unassuming title "Home for Good" and the original motivation
Mother Loyola had in writing this book-that is, to help young
ladies who were finishing boarding school to make the right choices
in life-both utterly belie the groundbreaking significance of its
content. While Mother Loyola's King of the Golden City is charming
and entertaining; while her catechesis books are both informative
and inspiring; and while her devotional works are unparalleled in
their ability to reach the hearts of their readers, Home for Good
is a rock on which an unshakable faith can be built amidst the
storms and calms of everyday life.
Having spent most of her adult life in educating young ladies,
Mother Loyola was intimately familiar with the character of youth
as well as the challenges young people face when confronted with
the temptations of worldliness. Though this book was written with
her young charges in mind, it is no less relevant to young men, who
endure the same enticements-and in our own culture, perhaps even
greater ones. It is a clarion call to young Catholics to hold fast
to their faith and morals in a world that seeks to destroy that
faith at every opportunity. Readers of all ages, both male and
female, have equally to gain by reading from this book regularly.
MANY circumstances will determine the character of our preparation
for the visit of a guest-his rank, his relations with us, the
object of his visit, and perhaps Onr special needs at the time. But
one disposition will ensure its fitness and its acceptableness in
every caso. Let him but hear "Welcome" from our lips, or rather see
"Welcome " in our face, and he will be satisfied. "Welcome" greets
the sovereign in letters of light. It is seemly on the lips of the
poorest peasant, of the casual acquaintance, of the intimate
friend, of the parent, and of the child It never tires, it never
grows monotonous or superfluous. For it takes a new meaning with
every change of circumstance affecting our guest or ourselves. If
either is joyous or sad, wronged, weary, anxious, burdened,
disturbed-it suits itself to every need. Our Lord is one of us and
like us in all things, sin excepted. His Heart responds like ours
to the sound of "Welcome " It beat quicker as, tired at evening
with His daily toil, He crossed the threshold of His house at
Nazareth and read it in Mary's face. As He saw it stamped clear and
bright all the house over at Bethany. As He heard Martha.'s
greeting, reverent yet hearty, and her sister's whisper inaudible
to all but Him. So sweet to His ear is its sound, that He
condescends to invite it: "Zacheus, make haste and come down, for
this day I must abide in thy house. And he came down and received
Him with joy." "And they drew nigh to the town whither they were
going, and He made as though He would go farther. But they
constrained Him, saying: stay with us, because it is towards
evening, and the day is now far spent. And He went in with them."
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