I could have listened to Dr. James Hitchcock all day, he is absolutely fascinating. Â But the next best thing is to read his tremendous work, “The History of the Catholic Church:Â Â From the Apostolic Age to the Third Millennium”. Â The content is the best, the layout makes it so very accessible, and the storytelling is engaging…a must have and a perfect gift for family and friends! Â In our discussion, we discuss the influence of the papacy, Constantine, the 13th and 15th century, St. Augustine and St. Thomas Aquinas, and so much more. Â Not enough time, but so much fun. Â Don’t miss! Â One of my favorites of 2012!
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You can find the book here
“For years, James Hitchcock has been our premier historian – a dissident from conventional wisdom, well-armed and solid. Here he pioneers a new method for presenting a long sweep of history: an orderly and altogether fascinating series of vignettes – of arguments, movements, distinctive persons, and concrete events. There is just enough narrative in these sequences to carry the reader along, but without involving her in excessive interpretation. This book provides both a great resource for easy reference, and a stimulating definition of a Christian humanism that holds in tension the transcendent and the down to earth, the holy and the sinful. This is a tension which Hitchcock maintains throughout.”
– Michael Novak
Tags: family, James Hitchcock, papacy, thomas aquinas, work
This entry was posted on Thursday, December 20th, 2012 at 1:57 pm
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Once again we are joined by the fantastic Dr. Matthew Bunson!  We discuss his new work which brings us the life of “St. Kateri: Lily of the Mohawks”.  The humble daughter of a Mohawk chief and a Roman Catholic mother, Kateri (named after St. Catherine of Siena) Tekakwitha lived a short life (she died at the age of 24). But she was such a powerful witness, so much so, that even the famed “black robe” Jesuit missionaries were awed  “by her perfection of the virtues, her mystical prayer life, and her total love for Christ.”  Her last words were: “Jesus, I love you.”  No one tells a story like Dr. Bunson, and he doesn’t fail to captivate this time when describing  the life of this remarkably holy woman.
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You can find the book here
“Written by experienced and prolific authors Matthew and Margaret Bunson, St. Kateri: Lily of the Mohawks is the most definitive biography of Kateri Tekakwitha.”
Here is St. Kateri and Dr. Matthew Bunson featured on “Rome Reports”
Tags: osv, our sunday visitor
This entry was posted on Tuesday, November 13th, 2012 at 3:34 pm
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Episode 1 – Roots of the Faith: Witnesses to Tradition. A grand overview of Church tradition as passed down to us by the Fathers of the Church…it’s scope and relevance for our lives today!Â
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Roots of the Faith – From the Church Fathers to You with Mike Aquilina, makes clear that just as an acorn grows into a tree and yet remains the same plant, so the Catholic Church is a living organism that has grown from the faith of the earliest Christians into the body of Christ we know today. Hosted by Kris McGregor
Also visit Mike’s “Discerning Hearts” page for more audio downloads and information!
Tags: mike aquilina, roots of the faith, st. paul center for biblical theology
This entry was posted on Wednesday, September 26th, 2012 at 10:42 am
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A Doctor of the Church, a distinguished Jesuit theologian, writer, and cardinal, born at Montepulciano, October 4, 1542; died 17September, 1621.
When you look up the word “prudence” in the dictionary, you may find his picture. Why? Does the name “Galileo” ring a bell. Many think they know the story…but do you? If you’ve never heard St. Robert Bellarmine’s role and thoughts on the matter, than you haven’t heard the whole story. Take a listen to Dr. Matthew Bunson break open the “Galileo issue” from a truly Catholic perspective.  Fascinating.
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For more on this great saints life check out the article found on New Advent
Tags: cardinal, catholic, catholic podcast, catholic prayer, cathollc spirituality, doctor of the church, galileo, jesuit, matthew bunson, prudence, st robert bellarmine, theologian
This entry was posted on Monday, September 17th, 2012 at 3:03 am
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St. Maximus the Confessor lived approx. 500 years after Hippolytus. He is one of the last fathers of the Church and is consider one of the first of her doctors. A beautiful writer and homelist he said this once:
The sun of justice, rising into the clean mind, reveals Himself and the reasons of all that He created and will create.
Love defeats those three: self-deception, because she is not proud; Interior envy, because she is not jealous; Exterior envy, because she is generous and serene.
All the treasures of wisdom and knowledge are inside our hearts hidden.
Faith without love does not act in the soul the illumination of the divine knowledge.
When the mind receives the ideas of things, by its nature is transformed according to each and every idea. If it sees the things spiritually, it is transfigured in many ways according to each vision. But if the mind becomes in God, then it becomes totally shapeless and formless, because seeing Him who has one face it comes to have one face and then the whole mind becomes a face of light.–Â taken from Speech on Love
This entry was posted on Monday, August 13th, 2012 at 12:03 pm
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Just click and
take a vitual tour of
St. Mary Major
From Rome Reports:
Rome is in a festive mood with a special celebration at Saint Mary Major, one of the four most important basilicas of the Eternal City.
Pope Benedict XVI referred to this unique event in Rome during his General Audience held in Castel Gandolfo.
BENEDICT XVI
Today, where we remember the dedication of the Basilica of Saint Mary Major, the liturgy invites us turn our gaze to Mary, Mother of Christ. Always look to Her, dear young people, following her example in faithfully carry out God’s will. ”But the Basilica itself has also been celebrating this day with the traditional “snow” of rose petals recalling the events around the appearance of the Blessed Mother to Pope Liberius showing him where to build the new Church.
The morning after this dream, on August 5 in the year 358, a miraculous snowfall appeared on the Esquiline Hill of Rome – despite it being mid-summer. Here is where the great basilica stands now.
Since then, the Basilica has maintained a very special relationship with the Eternal City as it keeps the image known as the ‘protector of Rome’ or the help of the Roman people.
It marked a day of celebration to remember this unique moment in the history of the Church
The Papal Basilica of Saint Mary Major is an ancient Roman Catholic Marian basilica of Rome. It is one of the four major or four papal basilicas, which, together with St. Lawrence outside the Walls, were formerly referred to as the five “patriarchal basilicas” of Rome.
Tags: Basilica of Saint Mary Major, st. mary major
This entry was posted on Sunday, August 5th, 2012 at 6:29 am
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This entry was posted on Sunday, July 15th, 2012 at 8:34 pm
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This entry was posted on Sunday, July 15th, 2012 at 8:28 pm
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Sunday 1 October 2000 (excerpt taken from vatican.va)
2. “The precepts of the Lord give joy to the heart” (Responsorial Psalm). These words of the Responsorial Psalm clearly reflect the experience of Augustine Zhao Rong and his 119 companions, martyrs in China. The testimonies which have come down to us allow us to glimpse in them a state of mind marked by deep serenity and joy.
Today the Church is grateful to her Lord, who blesses her and bathes her in light with the radiant holiness of these sons and daughters of China. Is not the Holy Year the most appropriate moment to make their heroic witness shine resplendently? Young Ann Wang, a 14-year-old, withstood the threats of the torturers who invited her to apostatize. Ready for her beheading, she declared with a radiant face: “The door of heaven is open to all”, three times murmuring: “Jesus”. And 18-year-old Chi Zhuzi, cried out fearlessly to those who had just cut off his right arm and were preparing to flay him alive: “Every piece of my flesh, every drop of my blood will tell you that I am Christian”.
The other 85 Chinese men and women of every age and state, priests, religious and lay people, showed the same conviction and joy, sealing their unfailing fidelity to Christ and the Church with the gift of their lives. This occurred over the course of several centuries and in a complex and difficult era of China’s history. Today’s celebration is not the appropriate time to pass judgement on those historical periods: this can and should be done elsewhere. Today, with this solemn proclamation of holiness, the Church intends merely to recognize that those martyrs are an example of courage and consistency to us all, and that they honour the noble Chinese people.
Resplendent in this host of martyrs are also the 33 missionaries who left their land and sought to immerse themselves in the Chinese world, lovingly assimilating its features in the desire to proclaim Christ and to serve those people. Their tombs are there as if to signify their definitive belonging to China, which they deeply loved, although with their human limitations, and for which they spent all their energies. “We never wronged anyone”, Bishop Francis Fogolla replied to the governor who was preparing to strike him with his sword. “On the contrary, we have done good to many”. (In Chinese) God sends down happiness.
Tags: Augustine Zhao Rong, catholic, catholic podcast, catholic prayer, cathollc spirituality, china, Church in China HOMILY, martyrdom, martyrs, martyrs in China, Responsorial Psalm, St. Augustine Zhao Rong
This entry was posted on Monday, July 9th, 2012 at 8:09 am
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I love the writing of Evelyn Waugh…his prose are some of the best of our time, if not of all time.  And when that talent is used to pen a biography of the heroic English martyr, Edmund Campion, a tremendous blessing has been given to all who gleen it’s pages.  What a story…what a life.  We are joined once again by the wonderful Vivian Dudro to discuss this incredible work, as well as the life and times of this great saint.
[powerpress]
You can find the book here
From the description:
Evelyn Waugh presented his biography of St. Edmund Campion, the Elizabethan poet, scholar and gentleman who became the haunted, trapped and murdered priest as “a simple, perfectly true story of heroism and holiness.â€
But it is written with a novelist’s eye for the telling incident and with all the elegance and feeling of a master of English prose. From the years of
success as an Oxford scholar, to entry into the newly founded Society of Jesus and a professorship in Prague, Campion’s life was an inexorable progress towards the doomed mission to England. There followed pursuit, betrayal, a spirited defense of loyalty to the Queen, and a horrifying martyr’s death at Tyburn.
Tags: catholic, catholic podcast, catholic prayer, cathollc spirituality, edmund campion, english martyrs, english reformation, Evelyn Waugh, holiness, ignatius press, mission
This entry was posted on Monday, July 2nd, 2012 at 12:47 pm
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“For Greater Glory: The True Story of  Cristiada The Cristero War and Mexico’s Struggle for Religious Freedom” is meant as a companion book to the film of the same name, but it truly be considered a stand alone in its own right.  Ruben Quezada does a fine job of outlining a horrific persecution which occurred just south of our border a little over 80 years ago, yet many of us know little or nothing about.  The Mexican government brutally killed men, women and children in an attempt to snuff out the life of the Roman Catholic Church in Mexico in the 1920’s.  Bishops and priests were martyred, Churches descrated, along many other atrocities. “Vivo Christo Rey” became the prayer triumphantly proclaimed by the Church Militant…this the story of their fight for religious freedom
[powerpress]
You can find the book here
“For Greater Glory is a top-flight production whose message of the importance of religious freedom has particular resonance for us today.â€
— Most Reverend José Gomez, Archbishop of Los Angeles
“For Greater Glory is ‘must-see’ viewing for all those who care about faith and liberty today.â€
— Carl Anderson, Supreme Knight, Knights of Columbus
As you read you’ll discover:
• Who were the Cristeros?
• What drove the Mexican government to ruthlessly persecute Catholics?
• Can a priest “wage warâ€
• What role did groups like the Knights of Columbus play in this armed resistance?
• Why did thousands of Catholics – priests, religious, lay people – willingly give their lives in the Cristiada?
• What role did the U.S. play in ending this bitter conflict?
• What did the Pope do to support the Church in Mexico?
• Which characters in the movie went on to become Catholic saints and blesseds in real life?
• Why is this dramatic episode of history so little known today?
• What is the lesson of the Cristiada for those struggling for religious freedom today?
Tags: catholic, catholic podcast, catholic prayer, cathollc spirituality, cristero wars, freedom, igantius press, mexican martyrs, mexico, Ruben Quezada, Vivo Christo Rey
This entry was posted on Friday, June 29th, 2012 at 7:47 am
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This is a FANTASTIC summation of the lives of Peter and Paul in the life of the early Church by Vatican Radio…don’t miss it!
Why Peter and Paul ?
Wherever you go in Rome you always see Saint Peter and Saint Paul linked together.
Their feast day too is celebrated on the same day . Shouldn’t they each have their own feast day?
The irony is that they fought mightily in their lifetime and not just about trivial things but about matters that went to the very heart of what Christianity is all about.
Listen to Scripture scholar Mark Benedict Coleridge , Archbishop of Canberra and
Goulburn:[powerpress = “Vatican-Radio”]
Tags: acts of the apostles, apostles, catholic, catholic podcast, catholic prayer, cathollc spirituality, early church, martyr, martyrdom, Peter and Paul, Saint Peter, st peter, st. paul, sts. peter and paul, vatican radio
This entry was posted on Friday, June 29th, 2012 at 5:57 am
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Leave it to the wonderfully thoughtful Mike Aquilina to bring us the lives of just some of those glorious maternal nurturers we call “the Mothers of the Church”.  From the well known Sts. Perpetua and Felicity and St. Monica to lesser known “mothers” like Proba the Poet and St. Olympias, Mike, along with his co-author Christopher Bailey, share their inspiring stories.  Mike Aquilina’s sincere love for these women and the witness they have provided us in our present age helps us to appreciate, once again, what God can do with ordinary people who are open to His extraordinary grace.
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You can find Mike’s book here
The Mothers of the Church include:
Holy Women of the New Testament
–St. Blandina
–St. Perpetua and St. Felicity
–St. Helena
–St. Thecla
–St. Agnes of Rome
–St. Macrina
–Proba the Widow
–St. Marcella
–St. Paula
–St. Eustochium
–St. Monica
–Egeria the Tourist
Tags: catholic, catholic podcast, catholic prayer, cathollc spirituality, Church, fathers of the church, mike aquilina, mothers of the church, osv, perpetua, st. paul center for biblical theology, witness
This entry was posted on Friday, June 8th, 2012 at 11:40 am
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[powerpress = “Vatican_Radio”]
It was the 18th of November 1965 and in Saint Peter’s Basilica the Second Vatican Council was drawing to a close when
during its penultimate session Pope Paul VI promulgated the Dogmatic Constitution on Divine Revelation.
At the time of this ground breaking Council, a young Patrick Kelly now Archbishop of Liverpool was present in Saint Peter’s Basilica witnessing on many an occasion the discussions of the Council Fathers. He shared with Veronica Scarisbrick his memories of that epoch and in a special way of that document on Revelation, gone down in history with the Latin title of ‘Dei Verbum’
Fifty years on from the beginning of that Council back on the 11th of October 1962 , among the events to mark this anniversary is a conference taking place here in Rome on April 26th sponsored by the Pontifical Lateran University and focusing on this same ‘Dei Verbum’ document.
The man to chair this meeting is the Dean of the Faculty of Church History and Fine Arts of the Church at the Pontifical Gregorian University, Jesuit Professor Norman Tanner.In an effort to find out more about ‘Dei Verbum’ Veronica Scarisbrick went round to call on him at the University there and began by asking him how important this document was at the time it was drawn up.
While acknowledging its central role Father Tanner also places it in the broader context of the Council documents and then goes on to highlight the relevance of this document today.
Tags: catholic, catholic podcast, catholic prayer, cathollc spirituality, Council Fathers, Second Vatican Council, vatican radio, Veronica Scarisbrick
This entry was posted on Thursday, April 26th, 2012 at 11:40 am
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The wonderfully intrepid Stephanie Mann joins us once again to discuss “Supremacy and Survival: Â How Catholic Endured the English Reformation”. Â The lessons of the past have much to teach us today, especially those experienced in England during the times of the Tudors and Stuarts. Â Religious liberty was the issue then, and is the issue today in many places throughout the world…even in the U.S. Â It’s not just about freedom of speech, it’s about the freedom of religion. Â What will they be writing about 500 years from now about the Catholics in America? Â Interesting…
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You can find the book here
Click here to go to Stephanie’s fantastic blog “Supremacy and Survival“
Tags: catholic, catholic podcast, catholic prayer, cathollc spirituality, Stephanie Mann, Supremacy
This entry was posted on Monday, March 12th, 2012 at 9:07 am
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