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YEAR OF FAITH: A Reading from My Sisters the Saints by Colleen Carroll Campbell

Reading Teresa’s [Teresa de Cepeda y Ahumada, Teresa of Ávila] story helped me understand for the first time why my parents had returned to her works so oft en and spoken of her with such affection. In Teresa, I found a woman of passion and purpose whose journey was all the more compelling for its detours.

Teresa’s spicy, messy, and meandering spiritual journey cast my own struggles in a new light. Perhaps the discontent that had dogged me for the past year was not a spiritual dead end or a signal that I needed to work harder at tidying up my life. Maybe it was the opening chapter in a love story like the one Teresa had lived, a story in which a divine protagonist pursues his beloved with reckless ardor and ultimately wins her heart. Reading about Teresa’s ecstatic prayer experiences— in which she felt Jesus consuming her with a love so sweet and piercing that she thought she might die on the spot— I felt a desire for divine intimacy kindled within me.

I also felt inspired by the discovery that Teresa’s ardent faith had not squelched her natural boldness and originality but purified and intensified both, allowing her to use her gift s for a higher good. For Teresa, faith was a source of liberation, not oppression. She surely was a product of her times; her apologies for “womanly dullness of mind” make that clear. Yet Teresa defended a woman’s calling to the same heights of mystical prayer to which God calls men and praised women for the special love and faith they showed Jesus while he was on earth. In an early draft of The Way of Perfection, she laments that the all- male ranks of judges in her day see “no virtue in women that they do not hold suspect,” and she looks forward to the day “when everyone will be known for what he is . . . these are times in which it would be wrong to undervalue virtuous and strong souls, even though they are women.”

Slapping the feminist label on Teresa may be a stretch, but this trailblazer’s single- minded focus on God’s will led her to embark on adventures and undertake risks that would have intimidated most men of her day— and most secular feminists of ours. Through it all, Teresa retained her Spanish wit and zest for life, encouraging her nuns to join her for laughter, music, and dancing during recreation periods and delivering spiritual insights in an earthy, intuitive voice that reveals a uniquely feminine spiritual perspective.

Meeting Teresa marked a significant step in my nascent spiritual journey, though I did not understand its full significance until years later. Teresa was the first woman saint I discovered as an adult; she was the first to model a mixture of faith, femininity, and freedom that I could admire and appropriate for my own life. I had no plans to join the cloistered Carmelites and no illusions that my mumbled daily prayers would morph into ecstasies anytime soon. It did not cross my mind that I should forgo plunging necklines or an extra beer on my girls’ nights out, much less don a hair shirt or maintain monastic silence.

For all the differences between Teresa’s life and mine, though, I could see strong parallels: an aching hunger for meaning, boredom with worldly pleasures and success, a passionate and often prideful intensity that could be used for great good or great folly. In Teresa, I saw the kind of woman I might become if I ever took God seriously enough to try. And I found a friend to whom I could turn in prayer, someone who could give Jesus an extra nudge on my behalf when I needed help overcoming the temptations of superficiality and sensuality that Teresa knew well.

Excerpted from My Sisters the Saints by Colleen Carroll Campbell. Copyright © 2012 by Colleen Carroll Campbell. Excerpted by permission of Image, a division of Random House, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.


READING GUIDE: My Sisters the Saints by Colleen Carroll Campbell

Questions for Individual or Group Reflection for

My Sisters the Saints

 

Chapter 1: Party Girl

In this chapter, Colleen discusses her feelings of emptiness and taking her first steps to “open the door to God.” What was your first step? What could your next step be toward God?

In the anecdote featuring her boyfriend, Colleen realizes that their relationship is actually a “placeholder” for something more satisfying. Have you ever had a placeholder in your life where God should have been? Do you have one now that needs to be surrendered to Him?

Both Saint Teresa of Ávila and Colleen speak of leading a double life. Neither was living in a conspicuously sinful way, yet they each confessed to the torturous feeling of “living in two worlds.” Do you ever feel as though you’re living in two worlds, caught between cultural norms and your faith?

(more…)


YEAR OF FAITH: A Reading from Render Unto Caesar by Charles Chaput

The Christian mission in the world comes from the nature of God himself. Catholics believe in one God. But he is a God in three Persons sharing one nature. This belief is not just an exercise in theology. It’s central to Catholic life. It gives a framework to all Christian thought and action. For Catholics, God is a living community of love—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit—and in creating us, God intends us to take part in that community of mutual giving. All of Christian life comes down to sharing in the exchange of love within the heart of the Trinity and then offering that love to others in our relationships.

For Christians, reality is grounded in both unity and plurality. Personhood, whether we mean the Persons of the Trinity or our human person, is always bound up with relationship. God is eternal and unchanging, but he is not static. Within the life of the Trinity, there are the Trinitarian missions of the Father loving the Son, the Son loving the Father, and the Holy Spirit proceeding from the love between Father and Son—and all human beings have a mission in the world that reflects that divine love and takes part in that exchange. Of course, these are nice ideas. Anyone can give them a pious nod. Even many Catholics mouth the word love without a clue to what it really implies.

This is why so much of modern Christian life seems like a bad version of a mediocre Beatles song rather than the morning of Pentecost. For a Christian, love is not simply an emotion. Feelings pass. They’re fickle, and they often lie. Real love is an act of the will; a sustained choice that proves itself not just by what we say but by what we do.

Excerpted from Render Unto Caesar by Charles J. Chaput. Copyright © 2009 by Charles J. Chaput. Excerpted by permission of Image, a division of Random House, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.


First English-Language Edition of ON HEAVEN AND EARTH by Jorge Mario Bergoglio, Pope Francis, to be Published by Image Books on April 19

Vintage Espanol to Release Spanish-Language Edition; Random House Audio To Issue Audio Version

(New York, NY, March 19, 2013) — The first English-language edition of On Heaven and Earth: Pope Francis on Faith, Family and the Church in the 21st Century by Jorge Mario Bergoglio, who last week was elected Pope Francis, will be published on April 19 by Image Books, the Catholic-interest imprint of Random House, Inc.’s Crown Publishing Group.

The book will be released simultaneously in print, digital, and audio formats in the U.S. and Canada. A Spanish-language edition titled Sobre el Cielo y la Terra will also be issued in North America by Vintage Espanol, also a Random House, Inc. imprint, in print and digital formats.  A Spanish-language edition of the book with the same title was previously published in 2010 in Latin America and Spain by Random House Mondadori.

Written with Rabbi Abraham Skorka, Rector of the Latin American Rabbinical Seminary in Buenos Aires, Argentina, On Heaven and Earth records seminal discussions from numerous hours of conversation between the two religious leaders, and addresses such topics as God, fundamentalism, atheism, the Holocaust, abortion, homosexuality, euthanasia, same-sex marriage, and globalization.   A revisiting of these conversations is particularly relevant at the onset of Pope Francis’ pontificate, as they offer a unique perspective on his commitment to strengthening interreligious relations through participation in a respectful dialogue on theological and worldly issues.

Maya Mavjee, President and Publisher of the Crown Publishing Group, acquired North American, World English, audio, electronic, first serial, and large print rights from Núria Cabutí, CEO of Random House Mondadori.

Said Ms. Mavjee, “We are honored to publish Jorge Mario Bergoglio’s important book in English for the first time. On Heaven and Earth’s context of interreligious dialogue is one that will have great global appeal, speaking to Catholics and to readers across a wide range of faith and cultural backgrounds.”

Founded in 1954 with the mandate of providing quality religious titles to readers at an affordable price, Image Books is the only imprint from any trade publisher that is exclusively dedicated to Catholic topics. It has a uniquely rich history of publishing leading and classic Catholic-interest authors such as Pope John Paul II, Pope Benedict XVI, Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan, Cardinal Donald W. Wuerl, Archbishop Charles J. Chaput, Father Robert Barron, Mother Angelica, Mother Teresa, John L. Allen, Jr., Mike Aquilina, Raymond Arroyo, Colleen Carroll Campbell, Bill Donohue, Scott Hahn, Ronald Rolheiser, Amy Welborn, and Christopher West.

The parent company of Random House, Inc. is Bertelsmann SE & Co. KGaA.

 Media inquiries should contact Katie Moore, Publicist, kamoore@randomhouse.com, 719-268-1936


YEAR OF FAITH: A Reading from Called to Love by Carl Anderson

Love between man and woman is a communion that reforges the partners into a new unity. Communion, like the proverbial coin, has two sides, which we can call, respectively, “identity” and “difference.” It goes without saying that identity and difference are at the center of every relationship with other people. The interplay of the two is essential to understanding the meaning of love in general. Nevertheless, this interplay attains a special degree of intensity in the love between man and woman, which lives in the interchange between the masculinity of the male body and the femininity of the female body. Let us consider each of the two dimensions of love in turn.
The book of Genesis, as we have seen, emphasizes God’s sole initiative in creating Eve. The creation account thereby underscores the equal dignity of the first couple: Eve comes no less directly from God than Adam does. As John Paul II notes, Genesis 2 throws the equality of man and woman into relief through the very language it uses to refer to them. Most of us probably interpret the account of Eve’s creation as the story of how a male human being named “Adam” got himself a wife. Th e picture changes somewhat when we learn that the name “Adam” is actually a play on the Hebrew word for earth: ha¯’ada¯ma¯h. For, as John Paul II points out, it’s only aft er the woman is created that the Bible first uses the Hebrew word for man in the sense of “male”: ‘isˇ. When Eve appears on the scene, a new vocabulary suddenly emerges along with her: The text shift s from ha¯’ada¯ma¯h, which emphasizes man’s connection with the earth which it then immediately pairs with the word for “woman”: ‘isˇsˇa¯h. Note the ingenious wordplay: The woman is called ‘isˇsˇa¯h because she has been taken from man.  It’s as if Adam, hitherto a stand- in for “man” in the generic sense, had suddenly woken up to the fact that he is a male, whose existence makes sense only because he has a female counterpart (and we have to imagine Eve going through a similar experience in her turn). Far from degrading women to an inferior status, then, the story of Adam’s rib actually underscores that Adam and Eve, male and female, are identical in their dignity and their common humanity.

Excerpted from Called to Love by Carl Anderson and Jose Granados. Copyright © 2009 by Carl Anderson. Excerpted by permission of Image, a division of Random House, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.



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