Friday, December 30, 2011

Weekly Giveaway (12/30)

"Find out how much God has given you and from it take what you need; the remainder is needed by others." - St. Augustine

Because I've built up a large collection of duplicate books and resources, each week I'm giving away one or more of these items, absolutely free, no strings attached.

You can enter anytime during each week for that week's giveaway, with a new giveaway beginning each Friday. To see a list of past giveaways, go here.



Strengthening Your Family: A Catholic Approach to Holiness at Home
by Marge Fenelon

Today's giveaway includes THREE COPIES of a great new book. Three different winners will receive Marge Fenelon's Strengthening Your Family: A Catholic Approach to Holiness at Home (Our Sunday Visitor, paperback, 192 pages). In this book you'll find simple, practical ways to foster a holy atmosphere in your home from which everything else can flow. You'll learn how to live in the world, but not of the world, as you help your family develop the skills and attitudes that will serve them well, no matter what the challenge. Check out these two glowing endorsements:

"Strengthening Your Family presents a treasure trove of timeless truths of the Catholic Church that provide help, hope, and inspiration even in the most challenging of parenting situations." - Teresa Tomeo, Syndicated Catholic Talk Show Host

"Marge gets it right as she relates how focusing on encouraging and expecting growth in virtue and character will lead to the only real, true, ultimate goal holiness of life."
- Most Reverend Timothy M. Dolan, Archbishop of New York


To win this week's giveaway, leave a comment below answering this question:

What do you do to make your own home a holy place?



The winning comment will be randomly selected on Friday morning using a random number generator, and the giveaway item(s) will be sent out, free-of-charge, shortly thereafter.

In the future I'll be giving away many more books and resources--sometimes multiple items per giveaway. So check back next Friday!

Update: The drawing is closed for the week of Friday, December 30. Congratulations to Sarah, Ana, and Cory for winning this week! Check your e-mail for instructions on receiving the book. If you don't see an e-mail from me, check your spam box--apparently e-mails with "giveaway" in the subject line often end up there.

Thursday, December 29, 2011

10 Reasons for Hope - 2011 Edition

Inspiring video from CatholicVote (and the talented Spirit Juice Studios):

Review - "Surrender!" by Fr. Larry Richards


Fr. Larry Richards is certainly one of the most dynamic teachers in the Catholic Church (watch this video and see what I mean.) His preaching is electric and fiery and his blunt aphorisms often provide a needed spiritual shock therapy. His unique style bled through the pages of his first book, Be A Man!: Becoming the Man God Created You to Be, which challenged men to pursue heroic sanctity and Godly manhood. I think that title is the best Catholic book out there on masculine spirituality.

Fr. Richards’ newest book, Surrender! The Life-Changing Power of Doing God’s Will (Our Sunday Visitor, paperback, 155 pages), packs a similar punch. In the book, Fr. Richards explains that the first step to discovering God’s will is obvious: converse with Him daily through prayer and ask Him what He wants. But after we discover God’s will, which in many cases is the easy part, we’re faced with the difficult question of whether we surrender to it or not.

“It’s as simple as that,” says Fr. Richards. “Are we going to do God’s will, even if we don’t want to? That’s the real question, isn’t it? It goes beyond knowing what God wants us to do—to being willing to carry through and do it.”

Reading Surrender! is like having a wise spiritual director walk you through one of Christianity’s murkiest questions: “what is God’s will for my life?” Fr. Richards provides sharp advice to help cut through our paralyzing fears and stubborn self-wills, the resistances we build to carrying out God's plan.  Surrender! would be an especially good book for young Christians who are discerning their path in life, but all can benefit from Fr. Richards’ powerful advice.


Wednesday, December 28, 2011

My 2012 Reading List


Besides continuing my Year of C.S. Lewis, here are some books I'm planning to finish in 2012:

- Confessions by St. Augustine (reading)
- The Brothers Karamazov by Fyodor Dostoyevsky (reading)
- Steve Jobs by Walter Isaacson (reading)
- The Everlasting Man by G.K. Chesterton
- Introduction to the Devout Life by St. Francis de Sales
- The Iliad by Homer
- The Seven Storey Mountain by Thomas Merton
- Apologia Pro Vita Sua by Cardinal John Henry Newman
- An Essay on the Development of Doctrine by  Cardinal John Henry Newman
- Theology for Beginners by Frank Sheed
- Life of Christ by Fulton Sheen
- Witness to Hope by George Weigel

Have you read any of these?
Which books are you planning to read in 2012?

Fr. Barron: Why I Loved to Listen to Christopher Hitchens



Also check out Marc Barnes tribute to Hitchens' admittedly brilliant style. Hitchens may have been a poor philosopher and theologian, but the man could write.

Whenever I read his poetic flourish, quotable wit, and keen British humor I thought, "This man is exactly what C.S. Lewis would have been had he remained an atheist."

Why I'm Glad the Pope is 'Just a Man'


My latest article over at IgnitumToday.com (formerly VirtuousPla.net):

“You actually follow the Pope?!” people have asked me, sure that this is just as silly as believing in fairies. “He’s just a man like you and me! What are you brainwashed?”

For many years, I wondered the same thing about Catholics. Before I entered the Church I questioned why so many people were devoted to a simple, strange old fellow in a white dress. After all, he’s just a man, right?

But today the fact that the Pope is “just a man” no longer keeps me away from the Church. In fact now it’s just the opposite; it’s one more reason I embrace her."

Read the rest of the article at IgnitumToday.

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

What will books look like in the future?



The Huffington Post has a fascinating interview with David Prichard, President and CEO of Ingram Content Group. Ingram is the world's largest book distributor and a leading force in the eBook revolution.

Here are some of David's insights (emphasis mine):

"Enhanced e-books are only in their infancy, allowing authors to add alternative endings or interviews. Down the road, who knows what's possible? Maybe we will have biometric devices that can sense your pulse and body temperature and change the plot based on your feelings -- and you think Stephen King is scary now."

........

"Piracy isn't a new issue. In fact, the majority of pirated copies are from print books being photocopied and distributed rather than from the distribution of digital copies. Keep in mind that what separates books from other forms of entertainment: for those who can't or don't want to pay for books, they've always been available for free from libraries."

........

"Ingram also purchased VitalSource, an electronic textbook platform that is our fastest growing business. We now have 2 million students using the platform worldwide. It's transforming the way students interact with educational material. Textbooks come alive using video, audio, and text, and allow students to share notes. It has technology that allows us to tell a publisher: "Nobody is reading Chapter 8." Or, "People like these three chapters best so you might want to expand them." It helps the students learn better by engaging with the material in the way that they learn best."

Read the rest of the article here.

Learning from The Excommunicated Saint


Today we continue our regular series here at The Thin Veil called "Learning from the Saints". Our guide is saint-expert Bert Ghezzi, a dear friend of mine and the author of numerous books including Voices of the Saints, Saints at Heart, and Adventures In Daily Prayer. His newest book is Discover Christ: Developing a Personal Relationship with Jesus. You can learn more about Bert and his work at www.BertGhezzi.com.

Today, Bert shares the interesting story of St. Fabiola, a fourth-century saint and today's patroness, who was actually excommunicated from the Church before her canonization. Read below to learn more.



St. Fabiola (d. 399) belonged to the group of high born women who fell under the influence of St. Jerome. However, unlike St. Paula and St. Marcella who embraced the religious life, Fabiola pursued her Christian calling in the world. A gifted and competent Roman woman, she seems to have been driven by a restlessness that she directed into Christian social activism.

Fabiola’s friendship with Jerome cooled over the issue of her divorce and remarriage. Because her husband was abusive and unfaithful, she obtained a civil divorce. But Fabiola remarried while he was still alive, a violation of church law.

So she was excommunicated. But when her second husband died, she reconsidered her behavior, repented, and reconciled herself to the church. After she performed public penance at the Lateran cathedral the pope restored her to full communion.

St. Jerome tells us that Fabiola, typically passionate and headstrong, then channeled her energies into important Christian service:

When she was restored to communion, what did Fabiola do? Having once suffered shipwreck, she was unwilling again to face the risks of the sea. Therefore, instead of re-embarking on her old life, she sold all that she could lay hands on of her property (it was large and suitable to her rank). And she converted it into money so she could give it to the poor. She was the first person to found a hospital, where she might gather sufferers from the streets and where she might nurse the unfortunate victims of sickness and want.

She often carried on her own shoulders persons infected with jaundice or covered with filth. She also often cleansed the revolting discharge of wounds which others, even men, could not bear to look at. She fed her patients with her own hand, and moistened the scarce breathing lips of the dying with sips of liquid.

I know of many wealthy and devout persons who, unable to overcome their natural repugnance to such sights, perform this work of mercy by the agency of others. They give money instead of personal aid. I do not blame them and am far from construing their weakness of resolution into a want of faith.

While, however, I pardon such squeamishness, I extol to the skies the enthusiastic zeal of one who is above it. A great faith makes little of such trifles. Fabiola so wonderfully alleviated the disease of the suffering poor that many healthy people began to envy the sick.”

Fabiola’s redirecting her life bore significant fruit. She made history by founding the first public hospital on record in the West.

In 395, Fabiola visited Jerome in Bethlehem. She had hoped to spend the rest of her days there, but she could not tolerate the lifestyle of Paula’s religious community. Jerome quipped that her only idea of solitude was stopping at an inn, like Mary at Bethlehem, then continuing on her fast-paced journey. So Fabiola returned to Rome where she continued her works of private and public charity. With St. Pammachius, for example, she founded a large hostel for sick and poor pilgrims that became world famous.

St. Fabiola died in 399. Jerome said that all the people of Rome gathered at her funeral to acknowledge her generous contributions.

Mother Teresa loved this verse that describes St. Fabiola, who seems to me to stand as a distant forebear of the saint of Calcutta:

"Love has a hem to her garment
That reaches the very dust.
It sweeps the stains
From the streets and lanes,
And because it can, it must."

We celebrate St. Fabiola’s feast day on December 27. She is the patron of difficult marriages, the divorced, victims of physical abuse and unfaithfulness, and widows.


Read more from Bert at his website, www.BertGhezzi.com, or check out his many books on Amazon.

       

A Tweeting, Blogging, Podcasting Bishop

A common reaction people have after seeing the subtitle of my book is, "Bishops who tweet?! Are there really any bishops on Twitter?" Much to their surprise I explain that there's about a dozen who actively tweet and the contingent is steadily growing.

Yet one Catholic bishop stands out among those who have embraced new media: Bishop Christopher Coyne (@bishopcoyne). In addition to being an auxiliary bishop, Coyne was recently named apostolic administrator for the Archdiocese of Indianapolis by Pope Benedict XVI. All of those responsibilities, however, don't prevent him from connecting with his flock.

Bishop Coyne uses the full new media gamut to teach and dialogue with people all across the world. Every morning he tweets reflections on the day's Mass readings and posts daily notes and links on Facebook. His blog, Let Us Walk Together, provides a behind-the-sacristy look at the life of a Catholic bishop. And his weekly podcast extends his thoughts to the "digital continent" bringing them, in his words, "where no bishop has gone before."

One of Bishop Coyne's latest projects is a compelling 3-part podcast discussing the revised translation of the Mass. He describes the series as a "mystagogical conversation", an allusion to the reflective period Catholic converts go through following Baptism and Confirmation. Since we've used the new translation for a month, the Church now has ample experience to reflect on. Bishop Coyne is a gifted theologian, and in this series he offers some truly brilliant insights.

Here'a short video interview I did with Bishop Coyne at the recent Catholic New Media Conference where he explains why new media is so powerful:



For more from Bishop Coyne, be sure to follow him through Twitter, Facebook, his blog, and his podcast.

Sunday, December 25, 2011

Got a new Kindle for Christmas? Build Your Catholic eBook Library

If you received a new Kindle for Christmas, you're probably busy browsing the Amazon Kindle store. I know when I got mine a few months ago I spent the whole weekend downloading different titles. In fact I think I downloaded more than 50 before I even read one.

If that sounds like you, you might enjoy this list I recently put together of the best Catholic eBooks. From books on the Catholic Lifetime Reading Plan to gems of Catholic literature, from titles by saints and Doctors of the Church to selections from the Church fathers, you'll find a little of everything.

The best part is that all of these eBooks are either cheap or free. That means this a great way to build a solid Catholic e-library without spending a ton of money.  So check it out below and start downloading!

Build a Catholic eBook Library on the Cheap


Saturday, December 24, 2011

"The Nativity" by C.S. Lewis

Among the oxen (like an ox I'm slow)
I see a glory in the stable grow
Which, with the ox's dullness might at length
Give me an ox's strength.

Among the asses (stubborn I as they)
I see my Savior where I looked for hay;
So may my beast like folly learn at least
The patience of a beast.

Among the sheep (I like a sheep have strayed)
I watch the manger where my Lord is laid;
Oh that my baaing nature would win thence
Some woolly innocence!

Friday, December 23, 2011

Weekly Giveaway (12/23)

"Find out how much God has given you and from it take what you need; the remainder is needed by others." - St. Augustine

Because I've built up a large collection of duplicate books and resources, each week I'm giving away one or more of these items, absolutely free, no strings attached.

You can enter anytime during each week for that week's giveaway, with a new giveaway beginning each Friday. To see a list of past giveaways, go here.



The Church and New Media: Blogging Converts, Online Activists, and Bishops Who Tweet
by Brandon Vogt

Today's giveaway is lonnnnnnggggg overdue--a brand new, signed copy of The Church and New Media. If you've been reading the blog for a while, or any of the reviews, you're probably familiar with the book. But here's a short description:

"We’re in the middle of the biggest communication shift since the advent of the printing press. Facebook has over 750 million users. Three billion YouTube videos are watched every day. And last year alone, Americans sent 1.8 trillion text messages. What does this all mean for the Church? How can Christians harness these new tools to reach out, to teach, to build community, and to change the world?

Following Pope Benedict’s call to embrace the “digital continent,” The Church and New Media will guide you through this new digital landscape. It’s time to engage the digital revolution."




To win this week's giveaway, leave a comment below answering this question:

Why do you think Christians should use new media?



The winning comment will be randomly selected on Friday morning using a random number generator, and the giveaway item(s) will be sent out, free-of-charge, shortly thereafter.

In the future I'll be giving away many more books and resources--sometimes multiple items per giveaway. So check back next Friday!

Update: The drawing is closed for the week of Friday, December 23. Congratulations to David B. for winning this week! Check your e-mail for instructions on receiving the book. If you don't see an e-mail from me, check your spam box--apparently e-mails with "giveaway" in the subject line often end up there.

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Fr. Barron comments on Christmas

Fans of epic adventure, rejoice!

I'm cleaning up my drool after watching the new trailer for The Hobbit, which will hit theaters in December 2012. If you haven't read the book yet, the release date gives you a plenty of time to finish it before seeing the film.

"I'm looking for someone to share in an adventure...." - Gandalf



"The Lord of the Rings is a fundamentally religious and Catholic work." - J.R.R. Tolkien

If you want to understand the Catholic symbolism within the The Lord of the Rings, the best source is Joseph Pearce's series of lectures titled, "The Hidden Meaning of the Lord of the Rings". You can download the whole series for free from Catholic Courses, but be sure to use the code FirstCourse at checkout (as per the instructions here.)

Another great talk is Peter Kreeft's "Christianity in the Lord of the Rings". Up until a couple months ago it was free, but now it costs a paltry $0.99. At that price, it's more than worth it.

UPDATE: Steven Greydanus has some great analysis of the new Hobbit trailer.

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

My Favorite 15 Books of 2011

*If you missed them, here were my favorite books from 2010*

Anyone who reads this blog knows that I'm a bibliophile. I love books and devour as many as I can. Last year I finished 108 books, and while I didn't quite crack that many in 2011, I came pretty close. The final tally will have me finishing more than 85 titles, including more than 21,000 pages. It can be difficult to choose your favorites when you read that many books, but alas, I've narrowed them down to my top fifteen books from 2011.

The Erasmus quote hanging above my desk.
To be clear, these are my fifteen favorite books. They're not necessarily the most acclaimed, the most timeless, or the best-written. They're simply the ones that I liked the most. But if you need a subjective measuring stick, these are the books that I keep thinking about well after finishing them. They continue to pop into mind and linger for weeks.

Only about half of the books were published in 2011. But as C.S. Lewis would say, a book's newness isn't always an advantage. In fact, novelty can be a disadvantage, since newer books haven't been tested by time. In any case, the older books may be new to you, so that's all that matters.

With all of that said, here are my favorites from 2011 (in descending order):



15. Verbum Domini (The Word of the Lord)
by Pope Benedict XVI

One critique I hear from a lot of non-Catholics is that the Catholic Church ignores Scripture. Well many of those qualms should be put to rest with this apostolic letter from the Pope, the result of an October 2008 synod of bishops. Pope Benedict XVI writes brilliantly on the Church's love and subservience to the Word of the Lord, which includes the Bible, but isn't limited to it. He's careful to draw the distinction between the two, explaining that the Word of God is much more than a book--it's the person of Jesus Christ.

The letter also includes a great section on the liturgy, noting how the Mass is the central home of the Word. The Pope also offers some practical ways to engage the Bible. He's particularly high on lectio divina, a contemplative mode of spiritual reading.

If you want a good summary of what the Catholic Church teaches about the Word of God, there's no better source than this.

(Verbum Domini is about 180 pages long in book form, so I think that's the easiest way to read it. But you can also find it for free online in text, PDF, or Word format. The latter format, of course, is supremely ironic.)



14. A Man of the Beatitudes: Pier Giorgio Frassati
by Luciana Frassati
(My Review)

A good chunk of my "Year with Pier-Giorgio Frassati" took place in 2011, and this was the best book I read on him. Not only was it written by his sister, Luciana, which makes it a very personal biography, but the chapters are also interestingly themed by the beatitudes. When Pope John Paul II made Pier-Giorgio a "Blessed" back in 1990, he called him a "man of the beatitudes". I think he was spot on. This is what I said in my earlier review:

"Pier Giorgio was meek, he was a peacemaker, he was poor in spirit, he hungered and thirsted for righteousness, and he embodied all the rest of the beatitudes. The core of Jesus's most famous sermon was the core of Pier Giorgio's entire life. That's why he's a saint. And that's why his life is so attractive."

If you don't know much about this young saint, this book provides a wonderful introduction.



13. Shirt of Flame: A Year With St. Therese of Lisieux
by Heather King

In addition to spending time with Pier-Giorgio Frassati, I also dwelled with another saint who died at the young age of 24--St. Therese of Lisieux. St. Therese is such an odd saint. She didn't start a religious order, she didn't run a hospital, and at her death she was known by maybe a few dozen people. But her powerful autobiography, The Story of a Soul, made her popularity explode. I remember reading somewhere that outside of the Bible, Story of a Soul was the best-selling religious book of the twentieth century.

Well it turns out I wasn't the only one to spend a year with this spiritual master. Talented writer Heather King did the same, and her new book Shirt of Flame is her resulting memoir.

One reason I love this book is because Heather and Therese are so similar. They write with the same raw authenticity and share a spirituality centered on grace and "small things". One reviewer described Heather's writings as "the grit of sanctity." I think you could say the same of Therese, too. King really captures the simple holiness of Therese's "Little Way" and shows how it can be lived in the modern world.

During my own year, I read a number of other Therese biographies by writers like Joseph Schmidt, Kathryn Harris, and even Dorothy Day, but Heather's book was my favorite. It's more of a spiritual biography that goes beyond mere facts and dates and it really draws you into the soul of St. Therese. Heather's approach draws you close, right to the level of spiritual friendship. For the deep spiritual communion this book yields, I highly recommend it.



12. If Protestantism Is True
by Devin Rose
(My Review)

Devin Rose is really smart, but better than that he's kind. And that's on full display in his new book, If Protestantism Is True. The book is an example of charitable apologetics--defending the faith with love as much as truth. It certainly covers controversial issues, but it does so without resorting to caustic rhetoric.

The resulting book is unique defense of Catholicism. It's different from many other books on apologetics in that it doesn't really seek to prove that Catholicism is true. Instead, it pokes holes in several core Protestant beliefs.

Devin's main tool is reductio ad absurdum, which extends a certain belief to it's natural conclusion. When the conclusion is shown to be absurd, the original belief must be rejected.

So for instance, Devin uses the example of the canon of Scripture (the list of the book in the Bible.) Most Protestants and Catholics agree on the 27 books that make up the New Testament. Yet Protestants don't believe in the authority of the Catholic Church. However, if the Church has no authority, then it had no authority back in the fourth century to decide which books made up the New Testament. This would mean that Protestants, who typically ground their faith solely on the Bible, would not know for sure which books made up the New Testament--a perilous problem, indeed.

Throughout the rest of the book, Devin uses other examples to show that Protestantism can't possibly be true, all in a cool, collected manner free of angry polemics.



11. Evangelization for the Third Millennium
by Avery Cardinal Dulles

Over the past year, I've done a ton of reading on the New Evangelization. From Popes Paul VI, John Paul II, and Benedict XVI to experts like Fr. John McCloskey, Peter Williamson, and Ralph Martin,  I've read widely and deeply on the topic.

In my reading, this book stands as the best volume on the topic. Dulles was a brilliant thinker--some argue he was America's greatest theologian--and here he's at his best. He synthesizes the official teachings of the Church on evangelization, especially Evangelii Nuntiandi (see blow) and Redemptoris Missio, as well as current trends and best practices from around the Church. It's comprehensive yet short (144 pages), intelligent yet accessible.

For a primer on the New Evangelization, and a guide to evangelizing yourself, there's no better book.



10. The Problem of Pain
by C.S. Lewis
(My Review)

According to St. Thomas Aquinas, there are really only two objections to Christianity. One is that everything in the world can be explained without God, so He's not needed. That objection doesn't so much disprove God as it suggests that He isn't necessary.

The second objection is more serious. It's also the objection most prevalent among atheists today. Often called "the problem of evil", this one says that if God is all-powerful and all-loving, how can evil possibly exist? Since there clearly is evil in the world, then God must not be who we think He is; He's either not all-powerful or not all-loving.

Gallons of ink have been spilled in response to this problem, but I think Lewis' Problem of Pain is the best reply. With care and gentleness, he walks through each of the premises in the so-called problem, spending most of his time developing a proper definition for each term. I explain that more in my review:

"God's goodness, according to Lewis, doesn't mean "niceness" in the modern sense. It doesn't mean that God's ultimate goal is for us to be carefree and comfortable. God, Lewis reminds, is "our father who art in heaven," not "our grandfather who art in heaven." Which means he sometimes refines us, allowing challenges that eventually benefit us and bring us to fuller life. God does this not in spite of his goodness, but precisely because of it."

If you've ever felt despair over evil in the world, or have ever asked God, "how could you let this happen to me?!" then this book will provide some guidance.



9. Evangelii Nuntiandi (On Evangelization in the Modern World)
by Pope Paul VI

From now on, if anybody ever says to me, "Evangelization? Catholics don't do that, it's a Protestant thing!" I'm going to smack them in the face with this book. It is the single best source of official Catholic teaching on evangelization that shows how central it is to our faith.

Now most Catholics remember Pope Paul VI for his controversial encyclical, Humanae Vitae, which reaffirmed Catholic teaching on contraception and sexuality. Unfortunately, Evangelii Nunitandi is often lost in the shadows. And that's a serious shame.

One could argue that this in today's post-Christian world, this is the most important Church document in recent history. According to Pope Benedict XVI, we're facing an unprecedented "dictatorship of relativism", which is buoyed by a rejection of all things religious. His proclamation of a "Year of Faith" in the face of militant atheism, and his establishment of the Pontifical Council for Promoting the New Evangelization are both signs that our world's greatest need is for man to encounter Christ--for the first time or once again.

Evangelii Nunitandi is a manifesto for the New Evangelization, a gameplan for reaching the world, and I think it should be required reading for all Catholics.



8. How the Catholic Church Built Western Civilization
by Thomas Woods

Most people, including most atheists and agnostics, recognize the Church's contributions to art and music and architecture. For the most part, that's clear and indisputable. But scholar Thomas Woods argues that her influence goes much further than that. His bold proclamation, as the title of his book suggests, is that the Catholic Church built Western civilization.

At first I thought that claim was a bit hyperbolic, maybe even triumphalist. Yet after reading the book I now wholeheartedly agree. Sure, other groups and institutions contributed to the development of Western culture, but at the end of the day, Western civilization as we know it would not exist without Catholicism. Quite simply, nothing else has shaped it more than the two-thousand-year-old Catholic Church.

In the book, Woods offers many examples to support this claim. For one, modern hospitals and charitable structures emerged from the Catholic Church. She's also responsible for several things we take for granted like free-market economics, universities, and Western law, which all stem from Catholicism. Scientific fields like optics, geology, astronomy, and modern cosmology were fathered by religious academics set on discovering God's design.

Interestingly, one of the most important contributions is the grounding of philosophy on reason and logic. The Catholic Church is often accused of anti-intellectualism by non-believers, yet she actually paved the way for the Enlightenment and the Scientific Revolution. These systems of rationalism owe their very existence to medieval scholars like St. Thomas Aquinas and St. Bonaventure.

If someone ever tells you that Catholicism is "the greatest evil in the world", just hand them this book.



7. The War of Art
by Steven Pressfield

Writing is really hard. If you've tried to write seriously or consistently, you know exactly what I mean. And I'm not even referring to difficulties with diction and syntax and grammar. I mean the inertia that hangs like a cloud whenever you stare at a blank screen.

Steven Pressfield, a veteran conqueror of blank screens himself, has written a no-holds barred gameplan for defeating this internal opposition, which he calls Resistance. His advice is valuable for writers, but can really apply to anyone creating anything: writers, painters, designers, musicians, and even engineers like me.

With a sharp, blunt style that reminds me of Seth Godin, Pressfield advocates for true professionalism among creatives. If you want to be a good writer, he suggests, your only job is to show up, sit down at your computer every day and just write. Don't listen to the voice that says, "I don't have anything to write about" or the one that claims, "I just don't feel the creative juices flowing." If you tune-out that Resistance and slog forward, you'll find that the creativity will come. The only way to win your inner creative battles is to fight vigorously with discipline--wisdom that holds true in the spiritual realm, as well.

The War of Art is short and lively and a real kick-in-the-pants. And I think it's a modern classic. Many of my favorite authors say it's their favorite book on writing, and one of them actually re-reads it twice each year. I'd recommend the book to any writer or creative, but Pressfield's advice can be applied to almost every area of life.



6. A People of Hope
by Archbishop Timothy Dolan and John Allen Jr.
(My Review)

If you aren't familiar with Archbishop Timothy Dolan, you will be soon. In just a handful of months he was named Archbishop of New York, the most prominent diocese in America; he was selected by Pope Benedict XVI to be on the Pontifical Council for Promoting the New Evangelization; and just this year he was elected President of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. According to veteran Church reporter John Allen Jr., Dolan is set to become the most influential Catholic in American history and will be the face of American Catholicism for the next decade or more.

In my mind, that's a wonderful thing. Dolan is precisely the right person to represent the Church. He's warm, he's charismatic, he's funny, and he's a very dynamic speaker. All of these traits are on display in A People of Hope, a book-length interview between Dolan and Allen. The book isn't a traditional biography, as I explain in my review:

"A People of Hope is less "about" Dolan and more "with" Dolan. The book’s give-and-take style lets Dolan speak for himself and this is precisely where he shines. His captivating rhetoric is equal parts Lincoln, Kennedy, and Martin Luther King, Jr. and is so electric that you feel he could easily be a politician if he wasn’t a bishop."

I highly recommend this fascinating look at the most important leader of the American Catholic Church. To see what Dolan is all about, read this book.



5. An Ocean Full of Angels 
by Peter Kreeft
(My Review)

Dr. Peter Kreeft is pretty well-known in the Catholic world. He's written more than 60 books on theology, apologetics, and philosophy and was a big influence on many Catholic converts (including this one). But with An Ocean Full of Angels, he attempts something completely different--a novel.

How would you describe this book? Well in the words of its publisher, An Ocean Full of Angels  is "the damnedest novel you’ll ever read." How's that for a description? Even better than that, here's Kreeft's own summary:

"An Ocean Full of Angels  is an angel’s-eye view of the connections between Jesus Christ, Muhammad, dead Vikings, sassy Black feminists, Dutch Calvinist seminarians, very large Mother-substitutes, armless nature-mystics, Caribbean rubber dancers, the Wandering Jew, angels in disguise, three popes in one year, Cortez, Romeo and Juliet, the sea serpent, our Lady of Guadalupe, the demon Hurricano, islam in the art of body surfing, the universal fate wave theory, the Palestinian intifadah, the fatal beauty of the sea, dreams of Jungian archetypes, the dooms of the Boston Red Sox, the abortion wars, the Great Blizzard of ’78, the wisdom of the ‘handicapped,’ the ecumenical jihad, the psychology of suicide, and the end of the world.

But that’s an oversimplification."

This book is strange, but at the same time it's incredibly beautiful. It's disorganized yet memorable, jilted yet lyrical. While it's not your typical Kreeft book, it does contain many of his favorite themes: the brilliance of C.S. Lewis, the ocean's enchantment, the strength of logic, and the force of the culture war. It has that haunting quality--much like the stories of Flannery O'Conner--which ensures that after you finish, you won't soon forget it. For that alone, it's a worthy read.



4. Moonwalking With Einstein: The Art and Science of Remembering Everything
by Joshua Foer

Joshua Foer was a normal science reporter, who one day was sent to the World Memory Championships for a story. But when he got there, he was blown away. He saw guys memorizing two decks of playing cards in just a couple minutes; others recited thousands of random digits in sequence; more were memorizing hundreds of lines of poetry they had heard just five minutes before.

Shocked by these feats, Foer wondered what made them possible. Yet no matter where he turned it seemed that these men were no different than you or me. Their brains were average size, they had no physical or mental abnormalities, and if you met them in a restraunt you would never guess they were world-class memory champions.

And the competitors admitted as much. They told Joshua that anyone, in fact, could do what they do with a minimal amount of practice. Foer was skeptical, but he decided to call their bluff. One of the men agreed to take him under his wing, and for one year he'd tutor Foer in the "art and science of remembering everything."

Foer's book is a memoir of all that he learned and experienced during that year and it's completely captivating. One reason why is that Foer is a fantastic story teller. He writes in the mold of Malcolm Gladwell, using plenty of off-the-wall anecdotes and many obscure connections (in what other book will you find the real-life Rain Man compared to Japanese chicken sex-selectors?)

Along with recounting his own journey, Foer gives a general history of "memory" stemming back to great orators like Cicero and Quintilian and even to saints like Augustine and Aquinas. He reveals the powerful tools that memory-experts have used through the centuries to recall lists and speeches, backward or forward.

Moonwalking with Einstein ends with a bang as Foer finds himself in the U.S. Memory Championships after just a year of practice. I won't spoil the ending, but I will say that Moonwalking with Einstein may be the most fascinating book on this list. I've definitely mentioned it in more conversations than any other title and enthusiastically recommend it.



3. Jesus and Jewish Roots of the Eucharist
by Dr. Brant Pitre

I thought I had a pretty good understanding of the Eucharist, but that was until I read this book. I knew the Biblical passages that mentioned this sacrament--specifically Matthew 26, John 6, and 1 Corinthians 11--but looking back, I was only scratching the surface. Dr. Brant Pitre, a rising theologian who studied under Dr. Scott Hahn, uses his rich background in Jewish culture to show how the Eucharist was not just a first-century innovation. It actually has roots deep in the Jewish faith and was foreshadowed for centuries.

Dr. Pitre explores three specific items that point to the Eucharist: the ancient Jewish Passover meal, the miraculous Manna from heaven, and the oft-forgotten Bread of the Presence. Through history and theology, he shows how these three keys unlock the full meaning of the Eucharist.

He also reveals the clear connections between the Passover meal, the Eucharist, and the Crucifixion. For instance, Dr. Pitre explains that in the Passover meal, there were four cups that were part of the ritual. Drinking the fourth cup signified that the meal was over and the sacrifice had been completed. But when Jesus celebrates his final Passover meal the night before his death, he only drinks three. After just three cups, his disciples get up and leave the table.

The next day, hanging on the Cross, Jesus utters those cryptic words: "I thirst." In response a couople men lift up some sour wine. Jesus sips it then says, "It is finished."

That phrase has been a certain source of controversy among Biblical scholars. What "it" was Jesus talking about? According to Dr. Pitre, Jesus was marking the symbolic drinking of the Four Cup of the Passover. By saying "It is finished." Jesus was insinuating that his Passover sacrifice--the New Passover meal of His Body--was complete. In that one phrase, He linked the Cross with the Passover and established the first Mass. He was the New Lamb who was sacrificed for all in the ultimate climax of Jewish history.

Jesus and Jewish Roots of the Eucharist unlocks several more connections like this. It will leave you mesmerized by God's plans throughout history, and if you're like me, you'll constantly find yourself pausing to say, "Wow! I never saw that before!"



2. The Harry Potter series
by J.K. Rowling

Two years ago, I read The Chronicles of Narnia. Last year, I read The Lord of the Rings trilogy. This year, after reading all of the surrounding praise and controversy, I tackled J.K. Rowling's famous Harry Potter series.

This ended up being one of the best decisions I made all year. After reading the books, I stand with English professor John Granger who says that we should embrace and celebrate this series precisely because readers of all ages become transformed by it's subtle virtue. They learn about:

"...the importance of a pure soul; love's power, even over death; sacrifice and loyalty; a host of images and shadows about Christ; and how 'right belief' is essential for personal transformation and victory over evil.”

The stories themselves are very well-told, despite what critics may suggest. They're incredibly imaginative and engaging. Rowling, like Lewis and Tolkien, comes with a deep background in myth, philology, and classical literature and it really shows. Her characters and plot entranced me every bit as much as those from Lewis and Tolkien.

But what makes these books particularly special, I think, is their ability to condition us in virtue. Reading about Harry's virtuous decisions has in indelible effect on readers of all ages. It actually makes it easier for us to make the same choices in our own lives outside of the books.

You might begin reading this thinking you are just reading a kid's story, as do many readers of the Narnia chronicles, but you'll finish significantly transformed. And that's the mark of a great book.



1. Catholicism: A Journey to the Heart of the Faith
by Fr. Robert Barron
(My Review)

How can I do this book justice? It's not just my favorite book from 2011; it's simply the best book I've ever read on Catholicism. I can't think of anyone more capable of writing this book than Fr. Robert Barron. He's brilliant and articulate, to be sure, but he's also one of today's most-cultured theologians (much like his hero, Hans Urs Von Balthasar, who Pope Benedict XVI described as "perhaps the most cultured man of our time.") Barron uses his mastery of art and architecture, story and song, philosophy and theology to show that Catholicism isn't just true and good--it's also profoundly beautiful.

Because Catholicism paints such a compelling portrait of the Catholic faith, it's the first book I'd give to a skeptical friend. It's also the first book I'd pass to a fallen-away Catholic or the spiritual-but-not-religious guy who says, "All religions lead to God so what's really special about Catholicism?"

This book unveils the distinctive "Catholic thing" in all its fullness. It's a feast for the eyes and a banquet for the mind, and I feel like if I say any more I'll be in danger of hyperbole. It's just that good. So buy it, read it, and give it in spades; celebrate this magnificent work.



Very Honorable Mentions:
- A Book of Saints for Catholic Moms by Lisa Hendey (My Review)
- Between Heaven and Mirth by Fr. James Martin (My Review)
Designing Disney by John Hench
- Enrique's Journey by Sonia Nazario
- Prayer in the Digital Age by Matt Swaim (My Review)
- The Great Books Reader edited by John Mark Reynolds
- The Shallows by Nicholas Carr (My Review)



Other 2011 Best Book Lists:
Comprehensive collection of "Best Books" lists
- Amazon.com
- New York Times
- Christianity Today's Books and Culture
- Kevin de Young
- Tony Reinke
- Trevin Wax
- Sam Storms



Now it's your turn. What were the best books you read in 2011?

Monday, December 19, 2011

"In Defense of Sanity" - Review


In Defense of Sanity: The Best Essays of G.K. Chesterton
G.K. Chesterton

I'll admit what few are willing to say: it’s tough to read G.K. Chesterton. Now when I say that, I’m not just talking about his complexity or abundant use of paradox, though both are certainly difficult. I’m referring to the fact that Chesterton was so unbelievably prolific that determining where to start is a real challenge. He published scores of book, hundreds of letters, and more than five thousand essays throughout the twentieth century. So where to begin?

Thankfully, for those of us who can’t wade through all of his material, we now have a great solution. A trio of the world’s leading Chesterton authorities—Dale Ahlquist, Joseph Pearce, and Aidan Mackey—have joined forces to collect his greatest essays into one volume, In Defense of Sanity: The Best Essays of G.K. Chesterton (Ignatius, paperback, 387 pages).

Chesterton's essays provide a great introduction to his thought. According to Ahlquist, “The breadth of G.K. Chesterton’s achievement as an essayist is matched only by its depth. He is incredibly prolific and stunningly profound. Reading his essays not only provides a perfect lesson of this art form, but a lesson on everything else.”

And he truly means everything else. These 67 essays cover everything from Charles Dickens to mystics to barbarians to the difference between stained glass window and fireworks. They could have easily titled the book, "G.K. Chesterton’s Guide to Everything." And because the essays are only 5-6 pages each, the book is easy to pick up and read in spurts.

Orthodoxy remains Chesterton’s most famous book, and his novels, mysteries, and poetry better reveal his imagination. But In Defense of Sanity offers the most complete introduction to Chesterton’s worldview. It's intelligent, entertaining, and whimsical, just like Chesterton himself, and it reveals the characteristic sanity which makes him the true Apostle of Common Sense.

Friday, December 16, 2011

Weekly Giveaway (12/16)

"Find out how much God has given you and from it take what you need; the remainder is needed by others." - St. Augustine

Because I've built up a large collection of duplicate books and resources, each week I'm giving away one or more of these items, absolutely free, no strings attached.

You can enter anytime during each week for that week's giveaway, with a new giveaway beginning each Friday. To see a list of past giveaways, go here.



Augustine of Hippo: A Biography
by Peter Brown

Today's giveaway is a biography of one of the Church's most important theologians. Augustine of Hippo: A Biography, is a comprehensive look at this Church Doctor, clocking in at over 550 pages. It's also considered the best biography on St. Augustine as Peter Brown, the author, is the leading English-language authority on the saint. Here's a description from Amazon:

"This classic biography was first published thirty years ago and has since established itself as the standard account of Saint Augustine's life and teaching. The remarkable discovery recently of a considerable number of letters and sermons by Augustine has thrown fresh light on the first and last decades of his experience as a bishop. These circumstantial texts have led Peter Brown to reconsider some of his judgments on Augustine, both as the author of the Confessions and as the elderly bishop preaching and writing in the last years of Roman rule in north Africa.

Brown's reflections on the significance of these exciting new documents are contained in two chapters of a substantial Epilogue to his biography (the text of which is unaltered). He also reviews the changes in scholarship about Augustine since the 1960s. A personal as well as a scholarly fascination infuse the book-length epilogue and notes that Brown has added to his acclaimed portrait of the bishop of Hippo."


To win this week's giveaway, leave a comment below answering this question:

If you could have a 10-minute conversation with any of the Church Doctors, who would it be and why?




The winning comment will be randomly selected on Friday morning using a random number generator, and the giveaway item(s) will be sent out, free-of-charge, shortly thereafter.

In the future I'll be giving away many more books and resources--sometimes multiple items per giveaway. So check back next Friday!

Update: The drawing is closed for the week of Friday, December 16. Congratulations to Diana for winning this week! Check your e-mail for instructions on receiving the book. If you don't see an e-mail from me, check your spam box--apparently e-mails with "giveaway" in the subject line often end up there.

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Touched-up Banner

Thanks to the generous Thomas Sanjuro, the blog banner now features higher-resolution shots of my holy heroes. Thanks, Thomas!

(If you get the chance, read Thomas' excellent interview with Lisa Hendey. Thomas is the Electronic Outreach Director for his parish, a position I wish more parishes and dioceses had.)

"Are you a spiritual glutton?" asks St. John of the Cross

That's the piercing question suggested by St. John of the Cross, whose feast day is today. His spirituality was fortified by the firm rock of faith, not on the fleeting sands of emotion. It thrived even in the midst of hunger and dryness, a model for all the dark periods in our life.

St. John has sharp words for those of us who build our faith on warm feelings and (gasp!) an excess of spiritual reading:

"All their time is spent looking for satisfaction and spiritual consolation; they can never read enough spiritual books, and one minute they are meditating on one subject and the next on another, always hunting for some gratification in the things of God.

God very rightly and discreetly and lovingly denies this satisfaction to these beginners. If he did not, they would fall into innumerable evils because of their spiritual gluttony and craving for sweetness. This is why it is important for these beginners to enter the dark night and be purged of this childishness."

Credit for the quote goes to Dr. Tom Neal, who to me is akin to St. John himself. Dr. Tom wrote his doctoral thesis on the spiritual giant and says that reading St. John is like eating enriched uranium: even tiny portions of his doctrine have immense transformative, explosive power if taken into the spiritual life.

My favorite introduction to St. John's spirituality is Fr. Thomas Dubay's masterwork, Fire Within: St. Teresa of Avila, St. John of the Cross, and the Gospel on Prayer (Ignatius Press, 1990). As the title suggests, the book is also a guide to St. John's friend and fellow Doctor, St. Teresa of Avila.

Finally, here's some poignant commentary on the saint from Fr. Steve Grunow, the brilliant Assistant Director at Word on Fire.



(Image credit: Icons-Interfaith)

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

"That image converted an entire nation..."

Yesterday was one of the greatest Marian feast days in the Church calendar, the Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe. What's amazing about this icon, besides its mysterious origin, is the fact that this one image effectively converted almost all of Central America from barbaric paganism to Christianity.

Listen to Fr. Robert Barron (who else?) explain its significance.


Yesterday, our parish had a vibrant, 4:00am Mass to celebrate the feast. I didn't make it, but I heard the worship was loud and vibrant and was followed by singing, dancing, and the characteristic passion of our Spanish-speaking community.


It's hard to explain how much this event means to Latin American Catholics. To get a sense, head over to The Frame, a photo blog operated by the Sacramento Bee. They have a great photo essay of pilgrims making their way to Mexico City to celebrate the feast.


See all the pictures at The Frame.

(Image Credit: Our Lady of Guadalupe from Wikipedia)

Looking for a spectacular Christmas gift?

The epic 10-part "Catholicism" DVD series, widely praised here and far, is normally $149. But for the holiday season Amazon has it for just $99!


I agree with George Weigel who says that this is "the most important media project in the history of the Catholic Church in America." It would be a remarkable Christmas gift for you, your family, a friend, a priest or anyone else.

Watch these trailers and, after being blown away, order your set here!