X

The Catholic Catalogue: A Field Guide to the Daily Acts That Make Up a Catholic Life

Product ID : 44172550


Galleon Product ID 44172550
Model
Manufacturer
Shipping Dimension Unknown Dimensions
I think this is wrong?
-
1,538

*Price and Stocks may change without prior notice
*Packaging of actual item may differ from photo shown

Pay with

About The Catholic Catalogue: A Field Guide To The Daily

Product Description The popular mother-daughter team behind the hit website TheCatholicCatalogue.com helps readers to discover, rediscover, and embrace the holidays and seasons of Catholic life through this collection of prayers, crafts, devotionals and recipes.  This beautifully designed book will help readers celebrate Catholicism throughout the years, across daily practice and milestones. The Catholic Catalogue is a field guide, a list of far ranging topics, that should aid any Catholic, whether steeped in the tradition or just discovering spirituality for the first time, to understand the daily acts that make up a Catholic life. And like the most useful field guides, it is divided into user-friendly sections and covers such topics as the veneration of relics, blessing your house, discovering a vocation, raising teenagers, getting a Catholic tattoo, planting a Mary garden, finding a spiritual director, and exploring your own way in the tradition. With more than 75 inspiring chapters, this book promises to be a resource that individuals and families will turn to again and again, helping to make room in their busy lives for mystery and meaning, awe and joy.  Review “From St. Polycarp's martyrdom to prayerful room blessings,  The Catholic Catalogue offers a smart, modern look at the varied aspects of our faith tradition. Through personal stories and well-researched history, Musick and Keating not only describe the building blocks for a Catholic household, but demonstrate why, for so many, the Catholic Church feels like home.” —Kerry Weber, managing editor for  America, and author of  Mercy in the City "Putting the richness of Catholic liturgy and life on full display, Melissa Musick and Anna Keating show us that Christianity is constituted by keeping habits, performing practices, and embodying the traditions of the church. This book will be useful to Catholics, indeed to all Christians, looking for ways to make their faith practical. At one point, this remarkable mother-and-daughter team quote Thomas Aquinas who reminds us, ‘The things we love tell us what we are.’  The Catholic Catalogue instructs us in the virtue of love and thus helps to make us what we are called to be: disciples." —Stanley Hauerwas, Duke Divinity School   "Honest, graceful, wry, informative, wonderfully unegotistically erudite, and a startling pleasure to read. Also a long inky lovely prayer of celebration and love and reverence and delight in Catholicism as a verb, seems to me."—Brian Doyle, author of  Grace Notes and  How the Light Gets In   "It is written that faith without works is dead; one could not ask for a better guide to a lively life of faith.  The Catholic Catalogue offers ritual recipes for the everyday and extraordinary moments alike; presenting often-neglected wonders from two thousand years of tradition in precisely the form we need them today. Every domestic church should have one." —Nathan Schneider, author of  God in Proof: The Story of a Search from the Ancients to The Internet About the Author ANNA KEATING is a freelance writer and former high school teacher. Her essays have appeared in  First Things,  Salon,  America,  Notre Dame Magazine,  Commonweal,  the Denver Post, and elsewhere. She graduated from Notre Dame, and co-owns and lives above Keating Woodworks, a handmade-furniture studio in Colorado. MELISSA MUSICK is a columnist for National Catholic Reporter and Celebration. She is the author of eight books on religion and spirituality. Her essays have appeared in  First Things,  Commonweal, G IA,  Notre Dame Magazine,  Catholics in Alliance for the Common Good, and  Give Us This Day. She studied at Grinnell College and St. Thomas Seminary, and was a college chaplain for nine years. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. 1 What We Keep: The Veneration of Holy Relics And so we afterwards took up his bones which are now more valuable than precious stones and finer than refined gold, and laid them