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Mike
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Oct 23, 2012 09:29AM

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I would certainly join that effort. I enjoyed reading the old conversations here. I am a Catholic adult educator with special love for the virtues and the moral life. I focus on helping Catholics grow in intimacy with our Lord by rediscovering the joy of learning and living their faith. I will happily give whatever I can contribute to this group!
Jeff Arrowood
Www.fromtheabbey.com

I would certainly join that effort. I enjoyed reading the old conversations here. I am a Catholic adult educator with special love for the virtues and the moral life. I focus on helping C..."
Wonderful to hear from you! Contributors are welcomed.

It is good of you to reactivate this group. I have have young children so I'm not real reliable on GoodReads, but really enjoy the interaction with others seeking growth in Catholic spiritual growth.
Thanks,
Thadeus
Hi. My name is Manny. It's been a while since I joined Goodreads but I don't come very often. I find it hard to navigate. However, I am a great book lover, as well as Roman Catholic. If a good conversation comes up, I'll certainly make the effort to come here more often. Peace.

It is good of you to reactivate this group. I have have young children so I'm not real reliable on GoodReads, but really enjoy the interaction with others seeking growth in Catholic spiritua..."
Good to hear from you. I am not as reliable in posting as I would like to be; I am in graduate school pursuing an M.A. in Theology and that consumes most of my time. I am trying to find a way to use some of the readings from school as posts here but that is a work in progress.
Please join in any conversation as you have time.

Welcome to the group.
Hopefully, you will find some interesting books and posts here.

Hope to learn a thing or two from this group.
Thanks.

I thought I'd share a couple of publishers of good Catholic content that I've come by recently. One is Catholic Way Publishing and the other is Wyatt North Publishing. Wyatt North can be found on Twitter and Facebook and has been putting together short "life and prayers of" ebooks that introduce many well-known saints (most are $3 or less and they also release for free for a limited time that is advertised through Twitter and FB).
Catholic Way Publishing has some outstanding classics in ebook format by St. Alphonsus Liguori and others. These are also sold for under $5 a piece.
I look forward to hearing what is on your mind here on the Catholic Thought group.

Welcome to this site,Alejandro and more importantly welcome to the Church.

Welcome Ken.

I thought I'd share a couple of publishers of good Catholic content that I've come by recently. One is Catholic Way Publishing and the other is ..."
Thadeus, thanks so much for pointing us toward Catholic Way Publishing. I have not been there but will give them a try shortly.
I will also post some other sites with low cost or free ebooks.



Welcome Emily! I hope that the members here can supply you with informative and enjoyable Catholic titles.



Welcome! I hope that you will share other titles you find along the way.


Briefly, I'm a Catholic convert from the New Age movement. My journey as a Catholic began as ultra-liberal, but I've become increasingly traditional, gravely concerned as I am by secular society and the danger of (well-meaning) liberal Catholics unconsciously _colluding_ with secular materialism.
The tension between these things traditional and liberal, secular and New Age make up for a lot of what I think about, read about and also blog about at http://corjesusacratissimum.org (for anyone who might be interested in the same).
God bless you all,
Roger
Welcome Roger. I only dip my toe on occasion here on Goodreads. I don't exactly find it that user friendly. But still I have comments to this group emailed to me.
More importantly I want to welcome you to our wonderful faith. It always touches me when someone makes a dramatic change in their lives and finds the Catholic Church. Thank you. Conservative, Liberal, neutral, though I express my opinions on blogs and news articles, I just let the Church handle it. My focus is concentrating on my relationship with Christ. God bless you.
By the way, for those interested, I too have a blog. It's mostly on my literary interests, but I vary it with music, an expression of my faith, and a touch of personal stories, such as on my four year old son. Here for those who want to check it out:
http://ashesfromburntroses.blogspot.com/
More importantly I want to welcome you to our wonderful faith. It always touches me when someone makes a dramatic change in their lives and finds the Catholic Church. Thank you. Conservative, Liberal, neutral, though I express my opinions on blogs and news articles, I just let the Church handle it. My focus is concentrating on my relationship with Christ. God bless you.
By the way, for those interested, I too have a blog. It's mostly on my literary interests, but I vary it with music, an expression of my faith, and a touch of personal stories, such as on my four year old son. Here for those who want to check it out:
http://ashesfromburntroses.blogspot.com/

Sorry so long in posting but you know how sometimes life gets in the way. I have a special devotion to Saint John Paul II but am really looking forward to reading a book on Pope Francis. To me he seems very much like Saint John Paul II and is a very humble man which is something I admire? How do you feel about Pope Francis Roger?

I see him as a man of unmistakeable sincerity, heart, piety and the courage to challenge evils such as global capitalism . . .
However, as beautiful as these qualities are, St. John Paul II seems to me, in my all-too-subjective take understanding (obviously), as a GIANT of not only saintliness, but penetrating understanding of the crisis of the Church and the world that I just can't yet see in Pope Francis.
Not seeing that crisis in the world and in the Church as St John Paul II did, it seems to me that, subtly at least, Pope Francis has begun to reverse a number of important things St. John Paul II stood for.
Compare - for example - the document Dominus Jesus with some of Francis' gestures in terms of ecumenism.
I am also very concerned about Cardinal Rodriguez Maradiega, who Pope Francis has appointed as the head of his council of 8 - and is even now being perceived as something like "vice-pope."
Certainly, Cardinal Maradiega stands for some very different things than St. John Paul II did ...

I see him as a man of unmistakeable sincerity, heart, piety and the courage to challenge evils such as glob..."
Oh Roger I totally agree that John Paul II was GIANT of saintliness. Although I do admire Pope Francis's humbleness to me, at least, no one will ever approach John Paul II. I have read many biographies of John Paul II and would like to read at least a few of Pope Francis to make comparisons. Have to honest though, I did not get warm fuzzies with Benedict XVI.

I see him as a man of unmistakeable sincerity, heart, piety and the courage to challenge evils such as global capitalism . . .
However, as beautiful as these qualities are, St. John Paul II seems to me, in my all-too-subjective take understanding (obviously), as a GIANT of not only saintliness, but penetrating understanding of the crisis of the Church and the world that I just can't yet see in Pope Francis.
Not seeing that crisis in the world and in the Church as St John Paul II did, it seems to me that, subtly at least, Pope Francis has begun to reverse a number of important things St. John Paul II stood for.
Compare - for example - the document Dominus Jesus with some of Francis' gestures in terms of ecumenism.
I am also very concerned about Cardinal Rodriguez Maradiega, who Pope Francis has appointed as the head of his council of 8 - and is even now being perceived as something like "vice-pope."
Certainly, Cardinal Maradiega stands for some very different things than St. John Paul II did ...

I went to Catholic Schools my entire life. My books stem from the mainstay orphan Katie, trying to find her way in Hell's Harbor, Maine.
I was the Catholic/Religion Saints Editor for Suite 101, which has evolved into informational chunks in the web. I write reviews. Columbia Press asked me to write a review of Francis, Bishop of Rome: A Short Biography: Jorge Bergoglio on Heaven and Earth.
I'd be happy to help with your group if I can remember anything from college Theology - lol! I do look forward to meeting new goodread friends!
Kind regards,
mkildor

I see him as a man of unmistakeable sincerity, heart, piety and the courage to challenge evils such as glob..."
Hi Roger,
I see some of your points regarding differences but in many respects I feel we should expect differences. We have been experiencing a run of some really remarkable people serving as Pope. Each of them different and from different backgrounds but each very good in their own way.
Who would have thought that a poet and philosopher would turn out to be such a great leader and Pope but John Paul II truly was Great. Benedict, the theologian, what a wonderful teacher. And now, Francis; his first year has been wonderful but in a much different way than the two Popes before him. That is exactly the part I find stimulating.

More importantly I want to wel..."
Manny,
I stopped by and read portions of your blog, I enjoyed it. Thanks for letting us know about it, and for posting a John Vianney quote I had never saw before:
"If you care about what people think of you, then you should not have become Catholic."
-St. John Vianney
Mike




Welcome Joseph, my prayers are with you for a successful year in seminary.



Thank You Mike! I will check them out. I don't have the book for the group read yet but I hope i'll get to participate :)

My name is Zachary; I'm a seminarian for the Diocese of Des Moines studying in Rome. I enjoy reading the novels of the French writer Francois Mariac (he has a very profound and uniquely-Catholic view of human action), as well as Tolkien's lesser-known works (I didn't particularly like the Lord of the Rings), but my favorite author of all time is Charles Dickens. I also enjoy reading the philosophy of Aristotle, Maritan, Blondel, Sartre, and Aquinas.



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