Book picks similar to
Sr. Clare Crockett: Alone with Christ Alone by Kristen Gardner
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catholic
memoirs-and-biographys
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Glory of God: Experience a Supernatural Encounter with His Presence
Guillermo Maldonado - 2012
God designed you to dwell in His presence, understand His heart, and experience His divine power—transforming your life and enabling you to do miracles and wonders that reveal His majesty on earth. Through the insights Guillermo Maldonado presents in The Glory of God, you can personally…Develop a passion and thirst for GodBe ignited by God’s fire to do the “impossible”Become a dynamic witness and see lives transformedConfirm the gospel with supernatural signsEnter into spiritual rest—and watch God workReceive the miracle you need!The glory of God is a reality to be experienced. Enter into His manifest presence today and be changed forever.
On the Unseriousness of Human Affairs: Teaching, Writing, Playing, Believing, Lecturing, Philosophizing, Singing, Dancing
James V. Schall - 2001
Schall cites Charlie Brown, Aristotle, and Samuel Johnson with the same sobriety-the sobriety that sees the truth in what is delightful and even amusing. Schall contends that singing, dancing, playing, contemplating, and other "useless" human activities are not merely forms of escape from more important things-politics, work, social activism, etc.-but an indication of the freedom in and for which men and women were created. Echoing philosophers such as Josef Pieper, Schall explains how the modern world has inverted the rational order of human affairs, devaluing the activities of leisure and placing an exaggerated emphasis on utilitarian concerns. Though he does not deny the importance of those necessary and prosaic activities that take up the bulk of our daily lives, Schall puts these pursuits in perspective by asking, what do we do when everything we have to do is done? Defending the importance of simply wasting time, losing ourselves in play, and Chesterton's claim that "a thing worth doing is worth doing badly," Schall contends that the joy that accompanies leisure, festivity, and conviviality gives us a glimpse of the eternal. Such activities also enable us to get beyond ourselves - indeed call us beyond ourselves - and are therefore essential if we are to rightly order our worldly concerns. For as Schall reminds us, neither man nor his projects are the highest things in the universe, and it is only by understanding this fact that man can attain to his true dignity. Citing Aristotle, Samuel Johnson, Charlie Brown, and New Yorker cartoons with equal sobriety, Schall unfolds a defense of both Being and being, of the radi