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Forty Penances for Spiritual Exercise: Living the Great Gift of
Mercy, is a collection of popular penances arranged by a parish
priest for faith-sharing groups meeting over six weeks, or for an
individual reader seeking more creative ways to pray. They include
10 psalms, 22 other scripture passages, a walk to search for
beauty, un-telling a lie, remembering one's baptism, a freely done
tithe, the immensity and absurdity of sin, 72 tools of the
spiritual craft, naming my cross, what's missing, anger the Jesus
way, Saint Benedict's 12 steps to humility, the song that makes me
say "yes ," the at-hand stretch, the greatest command, to bed one
hour early, four or five toward intimacy, the breath of the Risen
Lord, and claiming apostleship. Stephen Joseph Wolf is a parish
priest in Nashville who spends most Mondays in silence and solitude
writing for faith-sharing groups and spiritual direction. Visit
idjc.org.
99 Poems, a bunch of odd pictures, and 3 downside-up songs. These
twenty years of lines tell of one vocation in progress still by the
grace of our patient God. Except for random thoughts while running,
really jogging, I rarely thought of poetry and put not a poem on
paper since some Christmas lines in the second grade. Introduced to
journaling, and asked to write a psalm, "a song to God" a habit
settled in and then a second. When a writer advised that a poem is
a thing that ought be read out loud, editing became intense joy. A
seminary teacher more than once described a priest's life as being
with people in the sacred moments of life. In a very odd way, these
poems have been with me in the sacred moments of my own life. They
have helped me to remember what I believe God is saying to each of
us every moment of every day and night: "I made you, I know you,
and I love you." - Rev. Steve Wolf
Psalter of Lectio is a revised guide to using your Bible to pray
the way a monk might pray outside of the monastery. "Psalter" means
the collection of psalms and canticles (poems and songs embedded in
scripture) used by the early hermits, a collection developed by St.
Benedict and the entire monastic tradition, which is always in a
state of reform. "Lectio" is shorthand for "lectio divina," which
means literally "sacred reading." Psalter of Lectio allows a
pray-er to review the antiphons of all of the psalms and canticles
prayed by the Church on a particular day of the week, choose an
antiphon that seems to speak to him or her, and then go to the
related psalm or canticle to listen to what the Lord might want to
say on a particular day. The introduction includes concise and
descriptive paragraphs on ways to use the book, the traditional
four-step process of lectio divina (read, meditate, dialogue, and
sitting open to contemplation), brief summaries of what some of
today's teachers of praying are saying, and an invitation into
"lectio continua," or continuous day-to-day reading in prayer of
the Bible in its entirety, as one abbot says, "omitting nothing,
doing honor to the integrity of revelation." Psalms for Night
Prayer are also offered, as are simple charts comparing Psalter of
Lectio with the Four-Week Psalter used by most priests and
religious, and a chapter-a-day reading plan for praying the entire
Catholic Bible over 44 months. Most significant are the three blank
lines following each psalm antiphon to allow the pray-er to enter
the psalm verses prayed, and so build his or her own Personal
Psalter for those times when prayer is difficult. Compiled by a
parish priest who loves praying the Psalms and the Gospels, Psalter
of Lectio may be the best answer to the oft-repeated question of
believers: I want to pray with my Bible; how do I begin?
A Simple Family Breviary is a modern version of the Little Office
of Saint Francis of Assisi by a parish priest trying to help
families pray together. Each prayer session includes a traditional
song, a psalm of the season, either a psalm of Saint Francis or a
psalm from the commons of Mary and the Saints, and closing praises.
The order of prayer is easy to follow and offers variety day to day
and month to month, and includes a calendar of major feasts of the
church year. This simple once-daily prayer is suitable for a
family, the classroom, midday at work, and with co-workers. Stephen
Joseph Wolf is a parish priest of the diocese of Nashville, and
Angie Bosio is Director of Youth Ministry at St. Stephen Catholic
Community in Old Hickory, Tennessee.
Tree of Life: Incarnation, Passion & Glory, Saint Bonaventure
on the Christ Story. This is Saint Bonaventure's 13th Century
collection of fifty meditations on the Incarnation, Passion, and
Glory of Jesus Christ. Following the 1978 translation by Dr. Ewert
Cousins, parish priest and spiritual director Stephen Joseph Wolf
offers a paraphrase with brush-ink drawings.
A Simple Family Breviary is a modern version of the Little Office
of Saint Francis of Assisi by a parish priest trying to help
families pray together. Each prayer session includes a traditional
song, a psalm of the season, either a psalm of Saint Francis or a
psalm from the commons of Mary and the Saints, and closing praises.
The order of prayer is easy to follow and offers variety day to day
and month to month, and includes a calendar of major feasts of the
church year. This simple once-daily prayer is suitable for a
family, the classroom, midday at work, and with co-workers. Stephen
Joseph Wolf is a parish priest of the diocese of Nashville, and
Angie Bosio is Director of Youth Ministry at St. Stephen Catholic
Community in Old Hickory, Tennessee.
Pondering Our Faith is revised with the New Creed and offers a
six-week review of Catholic faith basics for followers of Jesus the
Christ to learn, teach and pray: The New Evangelization, The
Church, Sacraments, Vocation, Moral Formation In Christ, and The
Sacred. Compiled by Nashville parish priest and spiritual director
Stephen Joseph Wolf, here too are a handful of traditional songs,
pastoral notes, and questions for reflection and story telling for
each week. Pondering Our Faith is for adults, parents and
catechists, and helpful for individual study or for groups of 5 to
15 people. Any attempt to articulate the faith will be imperfect,
because we are trying to speak about our God. The narrative of
Pondering Our Faith is excerpted with permission from the 2005
document of the U.S. Bishops, National Directory of Catechesis,
which drew on input from countless faithful, clergy and lay, in a
brave attempt of this generation to articulate the Christian faith.
Twelve Step Spirituality For Christians is a parish-tested
introduction to a vibrant spirituality of honesty, designed for
personal exploration or in groups of 5 to 15 people. The main goal
of this little book is to expose 12 step spirituality to Christians
who may not be familiar with it. Behind this is a conviction that
our culture, leaning to addiction, is called to be a culture of
life, vocation, and freedom. Some familiarity with these 12 steps
will most certainly enrich the life and prayer of every woman and
man on any faith journey. Stephen Joseph Wolf, the compiler, is a
parish priest and spiritual director in Nashville, Tennessee. The
six chapters are When I Am Weak, Let Go And Let God, Sick As Our
Secrets, Progress Not Perfection, Let It Begin With Me, and One Day
At A Time.
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God's Money (Paperback)
Stephen Joseph Wolf
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R244
R204
Discovery Miles 2 040
Save R40 (16%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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God's Money is written for everyone who has from time to time been
consumed with either a lack or an excess of money, for all who seek
to better understand why we do what we do with money, and how life
can be simpler and more real. Drawing on 14 years experience as an
accountant and 12 years as a parish priest, the author is a
"retired" CPA and Personal Financial Specialist with an MBA and a
pastor of 1,300 families with a Masters of Divinity. God's Money is
the fruit of praying over, wrestling with, and preaching on
countless passages on good use and misuse of money in the Hebrew
and Christian scriptures. He translates Deuteronomy 10:14 ("Think!
The heavens, even the highest heavens, belong to the Lord, your
God, as well as the earth and everything on it") as simply "It is
all God's Money." The second of eight sons of Nashville's best TV
repairman and church secretary, the author also draws on the
blessed experience of growing up in a household with limited
finances. God's Money is designed for faith sharing groups and for
individual readers.
Planning My Own Funeral? offers a four-week process for planning
one's own funeral, ideally in a group of 5 to 15 people. Designed
by a parish priest who considers funerals one of the best ways to
evangelize families, this little book helps an adult Christian of
any age to pray with courage about his or her eventual human death,
and how to be more fully alive now. The book can, of course, be
used by an individual. But experience suggests that it is much more
fun in a group. The concensus of those in one suburban parish after
the four weeks was "We never laughed so much while sharing our
faith!" Planning My Own Funeral? can also help the faithful
Christian to follow the spiritual advice of St. Benedict: "Keep
daily your death before you." It may not be appropriate for those
under the age of 25, and those who struggle with conditions such as
depression are especially advised to use the book in a group. Enjoy
this little immersion in the paschal mystery of Jesus our Christ.
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Danielle Steel
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