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  • 10 of the Most Beautiful Mother Teresa Quotes on Love

    John Kubasak - Jun 29, 2016
    Blessed Teresa of Calcutta was world renowned for her love of the poor.  Her work turned out to be even more impressive, when in 2007, ten years after her death, her writings revealed that she had experienced a lengthy time of spiritual dryness.  From near the start of her ministry in Calcutta up through her death, she felt abandoned by God.  This news was greeted with shock by the rest of the world.  One of the brightest, Christ-like lights shining in the world, going...
  • The 10 Best St. John Paul II Quotes on Love of All Time

    Jeannie Ewing - Jun 28, 2016
    In a society that applauds sexual liberty, excuses rape, defends same-sex “marriage,” and promotes contraception and abortion based on the loose definition of “love wins,” St. John Paul II reminds us that love is love only when it is lived through the lens of self-sacrifice.  If we base our idea of love on attraction or other fuzzy emotions, we gravely misunderstand the truth about love.  Here are ten quotes from this beloved pope—and saint of our...
  • 10 Most Beautiful Mother Teresa Quotes on the Family

    Jeannie Ewing - Jun 21, 2016
    Most people remember Blessed Mother Teresa for her work with the poorest of the poor in Calcutta.  A pioneer in modern implementation of peace and justice, she also spoke openly about controversial topics, such as abortion and the importance of traditional marriage and family life.  In her no-nonsense, yet charitable, manner, Mother Teresa delivered the truth in a palatable and achievable manner.  Her words of wisdom regarding the family are timeless treasures that we can...
  • 10 of the Most Beautiful John Paul II Quotes on Prayer

    Jeannie Ewing - Jun 9, 2016
    Almost fifteen years ago, I received a refrigerator magnet with an image of St. John Paul II with Blessed Mother Teresa of Calcutta and the quote, “We are not called to be successful, but faithful.”  Since that time, the magnet has traveled with me throughout several moves and many life changes.  When I glance at it, I inwardly smile and am instantly encouraged.  St. John Paul II certainly had the spiritual charism of encouragement.  The topics he covered, though...
  • How These Martyrs for the Faith Can Get You Really Inspired

    Sara and Justin Kraft - Jun 2, 2016
     “Martyr” is a Greek word meaning witness.  St. Peter himself uses the word in the Acts of the Apostles referring to all the apostles as “martyrs” to Jesus’ resurrection.  In later years, the word came to mean a person who gave up his life rather than deny Jesus. One of the greatest gifts of the martyrs is their example of courage which we can look to when we face ridicule or pressure to make our faith only a private matter with little influence on...
  • Do You Bear Christ’s Light to the World with Joy?

    Anne Stricherz - May 30, 2016
    There is much to be said for the architecture on campus at the University of Notre Dame. Though some would consider the Eck Visitors’ Center the first stop as they get their map of the 1250-acre campus, many are anxious to enter the Bookstore where you can purchase much more than textbooks. However, placed between the two buildings is a statue that isn’t hard to recognize. It’s Our Lady—Notre Dame, in an all-enveloping embrace of Elizabeth, her cousin. This statue,...
  • What Do You Know About These Marian Miracles?

    W. P. Bennett - May 26, 2016
    People love Marian Apparitions.  There just seems to be something about the sites at which Mary has appeared that keep people flocking to them, centuries after the actual apparition.  You’ve probably heard about some of the most famous ones- Guadalupe, Lourdes, Fatima—but there are many sites, some of which have hundreds of thousands of pilgrims each year, that you may not have heard of.  Places like Knock, Ireland; Kiebho, Rwanda, and even Green Bay, Wisconsin all...
  • How to Make the Most of these Beautiful Spiritual Gifts

    John Kubasak - May 24, 2016
    One of the pitfalls of Catholicism in general is that we can look at the sacraments like a coffee stand stamp card.  The sacrament of confirmation is very susceptible to that mindset, and it reduces the gifts of the Holy Spirit to a simple checklist.  The whole list comes from Isaiah 11:1-3: wisdom, understanding, counsel, fortitude, knowledge, piety, and fear of the Lord. They were qualities used to describe the coming Messiah; by virtue of our baptism and incorporation into the...
  • These Meditations will Fill Your Day with Peace

    Jeannie Ewing - May 16, 2016
    Every new mom is eager to learn about this strange and wondrous new world of navigating diapers, crying spells, and sleepless nights, so she turns to the local advice column in the hopes of finding some timeless insight to guide her. But true counsel can only be found in our beautiful spiritual mother, Mary.  As often as we seek common parenting advice for the modern mom, so should we spend time pondering the sage wisdom that cannot be found in lists or articles.  Mary, a person of few...
  • What Do You Know About These Inspiring May Saints?

    Jeannie Ewing - May 10, 2016
    The month of May heralds spring and lush, abundant life throughout creation – in the blossoms on trees, vibrant colors of flowers, and songbirds who return to nest after a long winter’s hiatus.  A month largely devoted to our Blessed Mother, May also holds several notable feast days of other saints, many of whom withstood intense trials and false accusations of heresy.  Throughout history, saints have been those who choose exemplary virtue in the face of uncertainty,...
  • 15 Beautiful Reminders of Your Mother’s Love for You

    Jeannie Ewing - May 5, 2016
    Since the beginning of Christianity, saints and sages have venerated the role of Mary in our salvation.  Her unassuming nature, yet bold confidence in God, beckons us who are riddled with sin to approach her heart with confidence and find relief in her motherly love.  As the Protestant Reformation silenced prayers and devotions to our Lady, calling them idolatrous, faithful Christians remained steadfast in their heartfelt supplications to the one who bore our Savior.  Known by...
  • Do You Struggle to Forgive those Who Hurt You?

    Jeannie Ewing - Apr 21, 2016
    Let’s face it: Most of us struggle with forgiveness, whether it’s letting go of a hurt someone has committed against us or forgiving ourselves for offenses against others.  As Catholics, we are well aware that it is important, and, indeed, a command, to forgive, yet we still aren’t sure how to forgive well.  Does forgiveness mean we forget someone’s henous act?  Does it mean we ignore the person who has harmed us in the hopes that the wrongdoing will simply...
  • How to Live out the Our Father

    John Kubasak - Apr 18, 2016
    Most Catholics learned this prayer by heart as a child.  As with anything memorized, it’s possible to say the entire Our Father at Mass without reflecting on the words.  However, this prayer merits the deepest reflection because it comes from the very mouth of Jesus. The Church has been saying the Our Father since our Lord first taught it to the disciples two millennia ago. If you are uncertain on how to pray, where to start, what to say, mimic the disciples: go to Jesus and...
  • Boost Your Easter Season with these 10 Inspiring Saints

    Jeannie Ewing - Apr 7, 2016
    We read about the saints or perhaps learn distantly of their heroic virtue, often noting our own lack of sanctity and the seeming impossibility of our own sainthood. We are all saints in the making.  What’s beautiful about the communion of saints is that they lived on earth in a fleshly body, just as we do, and, throughout the ages, have suffered from various ailments, psychological or emotional torment, temptation, and have learned to overcome their own particular vices, bad habits,...
  • Do You know How to Live the Resurrection?

    Jeannie Ewing - Mar 29, 2016
    We are a Resurrection people.  Sometimes we forget that simple but poignant truth, especially as we scurry about in the midst of alarming news concerning modern-day martyrdoms, suicides, natural disasters, economic crises, and political upheaval.  It’s all too easy to get caught up in fear, which ultimately distracts us from remembering who we are as people of hope. Lent is about the metamorphosis of the Resurrection.  Now that Easter is upon us, regardless of how your Lent...
The Ultimate List of U.S. Catholic Shrines

Download The Ultimate List of U.S. Catholic Shrines Free!

Download our FREE e-Book and go on a virtual tour of the many beautiful shrines in the United States of America. Here’s what you get: • Detailed description of each shrine with map divided by state • Interesting facts, history, and trivia surrounding each shrine • Beautiful images of each sacred location

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I Was A Pilgrim In History

I Was A Pilgrim In History

The book tells of the journey of the Magi from Egypt where they first witnessed a vision of the birth of the child Messiah. The story follows the Magi to their meeting with Herod and finding the Holy Family. It then follows the Holy Family’s flight to Egypt and their return trip to Nazareth. The story explores some new details of Jesus’ childhood and how His identity was kept secret. The story continues to the time of the Crucifixion of Jesus, and it ends with the Blessed Mother completing the first Stations of the Cross. 

An Introduction to the Life and Writings of Cora Evans

An Introduction to the Life and Writings of Cora Evans

An Introduction to the Life and Writings of Cora Evans: Wife, Mother, and Mystic is a personal journal written by one of her best friend, Christian Brother, Edward Behan. Behan shares his knowledge of Cora's life and writings, of her thoughts and insights, which unfolded over six years of inspiring friendship. This book sheds much light on Cora and her relationship with our Lord.

The Refugee from Heaven

The Refugee from Heaven

The Refugee from Heaven recounts the life of Jesus Christ as an eyewitness, beginning with the first meeting between Jesus and Peter, on the shores of Mount Carmel Bay. With vivid detail and dialogue, this unique account breathes new life into well-known figures of the Gospels.

A Time to Laugh and a Time to Weep

A Time to Laugh and a Time to Weep

NOW AVAILABLE! A Time to Laugh and A Time to Weep is a prayerful journey for healing, forgiveness, charity, kindness, and courage that traverses the highs and lows of motherhood and faith in light of Cora Evans’ writings. Travel alongside Cora Evans and Jeannie Ewing — one a woman of the early twentieth century, another a modern Catholic living in the frenzied, post-modern Information Age — and realize that truth, beauty, and wisdom exist outside of time.

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