2020 Catholic Planner: Black, Compact


Book Description

The Catholic Planner is the perfect tool for Catholics to organize their busy lives while keeping Christ at the center. The Catholic Planner was created to help you accomplish all of your goals, stay organized, make time for yourself and your loved ones, and stay grounded in your faith throughout the year. Features include Sunday's mass readings, reflection space, saint feast days, and more. It's a journal. It's a planner. Stay on track with your goals and your Catholic faith.




2020-2021 Catholic Planner Academic Edition: Black, Compact


Book Description

The Catholic Planner Academic Edition is made specifically for Catholic students. It features the layout that thousands of Catholics love about the original Catholic Planner with small alterations to cater to students.




2019-2020 Catholic Planner Academic Edition: Black, Compact


Book Description

The Catholic Planner Academic Edition is made specifically for Catholic students. It features the layoutthat thousands of Catholics love about the original Catholic Planner with small alterations to cater to students.




2020 Catholic Planner: Black


Book Description

The Catholic Planner is the perfect tool for Catholics to organize their busy lives while keeping Christ at the center. The Catholic Planner was created to help you accomplish all of your goals, stay organized, make time for yourself and your loved ones, and stay grounded in your faith throughout the year. Features include Sunday's mass readings, reflection space, saint feast days, and more. It's a journal. It's a planner. Stay on track with your goals and your Catholic faith.




Fratelli Tutti


Book Description




2022 Catholic Planner: Black, Compact


Book Description

The Catholic Planner is the perfect tool for Catholics to organize their busy lives while keeping Christ at the center. The Catholic Planner was created to help you accomplish all of your goals, stay organized, make time for yourself and your loved ones, and stay grounded in your faith throughout the year. Features include Sunday's mass readings, reflection space, saint feast days, and more. It's a journal. It's a planner. Stay on track with your goals and your Catholic faith.




2020 Catholic Planner: Wine, Compact


Book Description

The Catholic Planner is the perfect tool for Catholics to organize their busy lives while keeping Christ at the center. The Catholic Planner was created to help you accomplish all of your goals, stay organized, make time for yourself and your loved ones, and stay grounded in your faith throughout the year. Features include Sunday's mass readings, reflection space, saint feast days, and more. It's a journal. It's a planner. Stay on track with your goals and your Catholic faith.




2020 Catholic Planner: Navy, Compact


Book Description

The Catholic Planner is the perfect tool for Catholics to organize their busy lives while keeping Christ at the center. The Catholic Planner was created to help you accomplish all of your goals, stay organized, make time for yourself and your loved ones, and stay grounded in your faith throughout the year. Features include Sunday's mass readings, reflection space, saint feast days, and more. It's a journal. It's a planner. Stay on track with your goals and your Catholic faith.




Catholics and Contraception


Book Description

As Americans rethought sex in the twentieth century, the Catholic Church's teachings on the divisive issue of contraception in marriage were in many ways central. In a fascinating history, Leslie Woodcock Tentler traces changing attitudes: from the late nineteenth century, when religious leaders of every variety were largely united in their opposition to contraception; to the 1920s, when distillations of Freud and the works of family planning reformers like Margaret Sanger began to reach a popular audience; to the Depression years, during which even conservative Protestant denominations quietly dropped prohibitions against marital birth control. Catholics and Contraception carefully examines the intimate dilemmas of pastoral counseling in matters of sexual conduct. Tentler makes it clear that uneasy negotiations were always necessary between clerical and lay authority. As the Catholic Church found itself isolated in its strictures against contraception—and the object of damaging rhetoric in the public debate over legal birth control—support of the Church's teachings on contraception became a mark of Catholic identity, for better and for worse. Tentler draws on evidence from pastoral literature, sermons, lay writings, private correspondence, and interviews with fifty-six priests ordained between 1938 and 1968, concluding, "the recent history of American Catholicism... can only be understood by taking birth control into account."




Responding to Suicide


Book Description

Winner of the Resource of the Year award and a first-place award in resources for ministry from the Association of Catholic Publishers and a third-place award in pastoral ministry books from the Catholic Media Association. Many pastoral leaders feel ill-equipped to respond to the turmoil of those who face the death by suicide of a loved one. Responding to Suicide is the first book written for Catholic leaders that takes a holistic approach to understanding suicide and ministering effectively in its aftermath. More than a dozen leading mental health practitioners, Catholic theologians, and pastoral care experts share how best to respond to suicide as leaders in parishes, schools, healthcare systems, and other Church settings. The book offers a cross-disciplinary approach that provides basic information about the central role of mental health in suicide and clarifies Church teaching about suicide, funerals and burials for those who have died by suicide, and their afterlife. The National Center for Health Statistics and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report that suicide was the tenth most common cause of death among Americans of all ages in 2017 and the second leading cause of death among fifteen to twenty-four year-olds. Death by suicide is usually sudden, often violent, and frequently comes at the end of a long and difficult struggle with a mental illness. Heaped on top of that is a social stigma that leaves loved ones in shock and often burdened with shame. Responding to Suicide addresses common concerns of the bereaved following a suicide: skepticism that Catholic leaders will understand; fear that the Church teaches that their loved one is in hell; and belief that they will find little if any support in the Church. More than a dozen contributors from across the spectrum of Catholic life provide rich guidance rooted in firsthand experience of suicide loss. Contributors include Deacon Ed Shoener, Bishop John P. Dolan, Msgr. Charles Pope, Leticia Adams, Archbishop Wilton Gregory, Msgr. Stephen Rossetti, and clinical experts in the field of mental health and suicide. They share personal stories of loss, grief, hope, and healing, and clear up misconceptions about Church teaching. They offer practical takeaways for pastoral leaders: dos and don’ts when talking about suicide guidance for preaching and planning funerals information on the role of mental illnesses in suicide resource lists for those who grieve as well as for your own professional development suggested protocols for ministering to a school or parish community following a suicide ideas about forming parish outreach ministries to the bereaved that address the needs of suicide loss