Saturday, 20 December 2014
Friday, 12 December 2014
Saint Lucy
13th December - "The mother of St. Lucy suffered four years from an issue of blood, and the help of man failed. St. Lucy reminded her mother that a woman in the Gospel had been healed of the same disorder. 'St. Agatha,' she said, 'stands ever in the sight of Him for Whom she died. Only touch her sepulchre with faith and you will be healed'.
They spent the night praying by the tomb, till, overcome by weariness, both fell asleep. St. Agatha appeared in a vision to St. Lucy, and calling her sister, foretold her mother's recovery and her own martyrdom. That instant, the cure was affected; and in her gratitude the mother allowed her daughter to distribute her wealth amongst the poor, and to consecrate her virginity to Christ.
A young man to whom she had been promised in marriage accused her as a Christian to the heathen; but Our Lord, by a special miracle, saved from outrage this virgin whom He had chosen for His own. The fire kindled around her did her no hurt. Then the sword was plunged into her heart, and the promise made at the tomb of St. Agatha was fulfilled".
They spent the night praying by the tomb, till, overcome by weariness, both fell asleep. St. Agatha appeared in a vision to St. Lucy, and calling her sister, foretold her mother's recovery and her own martyrdom. That instant, the cure was affected; and in her gratitude the mother allowed her daughter to distribute her wealth amongst the poor, and to consecrate her virginity to Christ.
A young man to whom she had been promised in marriage accused her as a Christian to the heathen; but Our Lord, by a special miracle, saved from outrage this virgin whom He had chosen for His own. The fire kindled around her did her no hurt. Then the sword was plunged into her heart, and the promise made at the tomb of St. Agatha was fulfilled".
Our Lady of Guadalupe
The Wonder of Guadalupe provides a great understanding of Our Lady's appearances to St. Juan Diego in Mexico City in 1531: her consoling promises, the miraculous image, and the rapid conversion of nine million Aztecs to the Catholic Faith from a bloody religion of human sacrifice.
Also featured in this book are the historical background, important Church events, and scientific developments including the remarkable discovery of photographic reflections in Our Lady's eyes.
In Our Lady of Guadalupe and the Conquest of Darkness, Professor of History Dr. Warren H. Carroll provides a dramatic account of the conversion of Mexico by the combined efforts of the Conquistadores, the Franciscan missionaries, and Our Lady of Guadalupe herself.
Also featured in this book are the historical background, important Church events, and scientific developments including the remarkable discovery of photographic reflections in Our Lady's eyes.
In Our Lady of Guadalupe and the Conquest of Darkness, Professor of History Dr. Warren H. Carroll provides a dramatic account of the conversion of Mexico by the combined efforts of the Conquistadores, the Franciscan missionaries, and Our Lady of Guadalupe herself.
Tuesday, 9 December 2014
The Church Turned Upside Down & Restoring the Bastions
The Church Turned Upside Down seeks to present to the reader a number of essays that deal with the Catholic Church, both before and after the Second Vatican Council.
Restoring the Bastions answers the challenge of Von Balthasar and others who promoted the 'New Theology' that demanded that the bastions protecting the Church from the world be thrown down.
The purpose is simple. By an examination of official documents of both periods, the reader will decide if a mere facelift has occurred, or rather, whether a revolution has taken place that has overthrown the traditional teaching of the Church in favour of one more in keeping with ideas long condemned by the Church.
Restoring the Bastions answers the challenge of Von Balthasar and others who promoted the 'New Theology' that demanded that the bastions protecting the Church from the world be thrown down.
The ensuing crisis has led to the emptying out of monasteries and seminaries, the destruction of the Church's liturgical heritage, and widespread dissent to its teachings.
The answer to such a crisis involves restoring the bastions that had been destroyed by the Modernist theologians.
To do this, however, it is necessary to regain some sense of the Church's traditional stand on a number of issues: inspiration of Scripture, the meaning of Tradition, the nature of the Mass, and Christ's relation to society and the family. These questions are discussed in a number of essays briefly treating of matters once universally accepted in the Catholic world.
Monday, 8 December 2014
Open Letter to Confused Catholics
On this holy Feast of the Immaculate Conception, 2006, at 3pm, went to Judgement our dear friend Fr. Michael Crowdy, friend, confident and counselor of many souls, both great and small, including Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre for whom he supplied the Preface for what was then "in English Archbishop Lefebvre's recently published book (his only one apart from some collections of addresses)".
"Fr Michael Crowdy was for many years a priest of the London Oratory & in some ways, juridically at least, stayed one all his life. He he kept in touch with a number of the fathers and remained devoted to St Philip. He died on 8th December, 2006, aged 92 after many years of devoted work to further the cause of Tradition in this country," read one of the notices of his death.
The book in question was Open Letter to Confused Catholics, an explanation and appeal as useful and relevant today as ever it was when first published in English nearly thirty years ago.
"Fr Michael Crowdy was for many years a priest of the London Oratory & in some ways, juridically at least, stayed one all his life. He he kept in touch with a number of the fathers and remained devoted to St Philip. He died on 8th December, 2006, aged 92 after many years of devoted work to further the cause of Tradition in this country," read one of the notices of his death.
The book in question was Open Letter to Confused Catholics, an explanation and appeal as useful and relevant today as ever it was when first published in English nearly thirty years ago.
Friday, 5 December 2014
First Friday
Promises of Our Lord in favour of those devoted to His Most Sacred Heart
1. I will grant them all the graces necessary for their state in life.
2. I will establish peace and union in their families.
3. I will console them in all their pains and trials.
4. I will be their assured refuge in life and more especially in death.
5. I will bestow the blessings of Heaven on all their undertakings.
6. Sinners will find in My Heart the fount and infinite sea of Mercy.
7. Tepid souls will become fervent.
8. Fervent souls will rise rapidly to greater perfection.
9. I will bless those homes wherein the image of My Sacred Heart is exposed and honoured. I will imprint My love on the hearts of those who wear this image. I will also destroy in them all disordered movements.
10. I will give to priests who are animated by a tender devotion to My Divine Heart the gift of moving even the most hardened of hearts.
11. Those who propagate this devotion will have their names inscribed
on My Heart, never to be effaced from it.
12. I promise thee, in the excess of the mercy of My Heart, that My all-powerful love will grant all those who communicate on the first Fridays of nine consecutive months the grace of final repentance: they will not die in My displeasure, nor without having received the Sacraments. My Heart will be their secure refuge in that last hour.
Sacred Heart Nightly Devotion
1. I will grant them all the graces necessary for their state in life.
2. I will establish peace and union in their families.
3. I will console them in all their pains and trials.
4. I will be their assured refuge in life and more especially in death.
5. I will bestow the blessings of Heaven on all their undertakings.
6. Sinners will find in My Heart the fount and infinite sea of Mercy.
7. Tepid souls will become fervent.
8. Fervent souls will rise rapidly to greater perfection.
9. I will bless those homes wherein the image of My Sacred Heart is exposed and honoured. I will imprint My love on the hearts of those who wear this image. I will also destroy in them all disordered movements.
10. I will give to priests who are animated by a tender devotion to My Divine Heart the gift of moving even the most hardened of hearts.
11. Those who propagate this devotion will have their names inscribed
on My Heart, never to be effaced from it.
12. I promise thee, in the excess of the mercy of My Heart, that My all-powerful love will grant all those who communicate on the first Fridays of nine consecutive months the grace of final repentance: they will not die in My displeasure, nor without having received the Sacraments. My Heart will be their secure refuge in that last hour.
Sacred Heart Nightly Devotion
Thursday, 4 December 2014
St. Francis Xavier
3rd December - The Life and Letters of Saint Francis Xavier is the classic life of the great Jesuit who renewed the labours and the miracles of the Apostles in the sixteenth century.
Weaving his text around 124 full-length original letters written by the saint, Father Henry James Coleridge brings him to life and allows us to know him intimately: the arm fatigued by so many baptisms, the gentle voice that converted, the heart that loved and was loved, the eye that penetrated the soul and the future: the miraculous cures, resurrections, deliverance from impending disaster, the bilocations, the gift of tongues, the burning zeal to spread the kingdom of Christ, the tender charity for every misfortune, the daily combat to rescue souls from damnation, the faith that saw the truths of the catechism as clearly as we see material objects, the terrible anathemas thundered against those who obstruct the Church's mission - and finally the death, alone, at Chan, yearning to win China but summoned to glory at just 46 years of age.
Weaving his text around 124 full-length original letters written by the saint, Father Henry James Coleridge brings him to life and allows us to know him intimately: the arm fatigued by so many baptisms, the gentle voice that converted, the heart that loved and was loved, the eye that penetrated the soul and the future: the miraculous cures, resurrections, deliverance from impending disaster, the bilocations, the gift of tongues, the burning zeal to spread the kingdom of Christ, the tender charity for every misfortune, the daily combat to rescue souls from damnation, the faith that saw the truths of the catechism as clearly as we see material objects, the terrible anathemas thundered against those who obstruct the Church's mission - and finally the death, alone, at Chan, yearning to win China but summoned to glory at just 46 years of age.
Wednesday, 3 December 2014
2015 Ordos in Stock
The Ordo Recitandi contains all the necessary directions for those who wish to sing the Office and Mass of any day in the Liturgical Year according to the classical Roman Rite.
It details those changes which arise due to the interaction of the Temporal and Sanctoral cycles. In addition the Ordo contains detailed information concerning the celebration of the various classes of Votive Masses e.g. Masses of External Solemnities, rubrics for the Forty Hours.
We also have copies in stock of the 2015 edition of the Ordo ou Calendrier Liturgique, produced in the French language, which follows the 1962 Liturgical Calendar.
It details those changes which arise due to the interaction of the Temporal and Sanctoral cycles. In addition the Ordo contains detailed information concerning the celebration of the various classes of Votive Masses e.g. Masses of External Solemnities, rubrics for the Forty Hours.
The Ordo follows the format of the Roman Ordo that was produced for the Universal Calendar in the late 1930s following the fifth editio post typicam of the Roman Missal that was promulgated by SRC in 1939. The Ordo is written entirely in Latin.
We also have copies in stock of the 2015 edition of the Ordo ou Calendrier Liturgique, produced in the French language, which follows the 1962 Liturgical Calendar.
Sunday, 30 November 2014
James Robinson Collection Christmas Cards
Carmel Books is pleased to be able to offer this year a selection of Christmas cards from young Catholic artist James Robinson.
Cards are individually wrapped and come with envelope.
We also have some boxed sets of Christmas cards for sale as well as individual cards from the Madeleine Beard Collection.
Cards are individually wrapped and come with envelope.
We also have some boxed sets of Christmas cards for sale as well as individual cards from the Madeleine Beard Collection.
Wednesday, 26 November 2014
The Little Children's Prayer Book
This beautiful, newly illustrated hardcover edition of the classic 1911 title by Mother Mary Loyola is the perfect gift for a First Communicant!
This little 4" x 6" pocket gem contains more than just daily prayers: Two different sets of meditations for the Mass are accompanied by illustrations showing what the priest is doing at each stage.
Add Mother Loyola's excellent examination of conscience, geared especially for children, devotional stories that foster a loving obedience, and the gorgeous full-colour illustrations, and you'll be wishing you had such a book as a child!
This little 4" x 6" pocket gem contains more than just daily prayers: Two different sets of meditations for the Mass are accompanied by illustrations showing what the priest is doing at each stage.
Add Mother Loyola's excellent examination of conscience, geared especially for children, devotional stories that foster a loving obedience, and the gorgeous full-colour illustrations, and you'll be wishing you had such a book as a child!
The Soldier of Christ
Any book on the sacrament of Confirmation can explain what Confirmation is, but this is the only book that explains, in the most original and engaging manner, what Confirmation does.
It is both a dialogue and a travelogue, taking the reader on a journey from the Crusades to the Crimea; from medieval ceremonies of Knighthood to early modern methods of warfare.
What does it mean to be a Soldier of Christ? For the true child of God, life is a daily battle against a well-concealed foe - that is, our own flaws and failings - and Mother Mary Loyola proposes to arm young recruits adequately for this task, leaving no stone unturned in her quest to root out this 'enemy at home'. This is the sort of basic training no young Catholic should be without.
It is both a dialogue and a travelogue, taking the reader on a journey from the Crusades to the Crimea; from medieval ceremonies of Knighthood to early modern methods of warfare.
What does it mean to be a Soldier of Christ? For the true child of God, life is a daily battle against a well-concealed foe - that is, our own flaws and failings - and Mother Mary Loyola proposes to arm young recruits adequately for this task, leaving no stone unturned in her quest to root out this 'enemy at home'. This is the sort of basic training no young Catholic should be without.
Jesus of Nazareth: The Story of His Life Written for Children
James Cardinal Gibbons was Archbishop of Baltimore when he asked Mother Mary Loyola to write this story of the Life of Our Lord.
As a revered author himself, and considering the number of such stories available even then, we can only imagine the admiration he must have held for Mother Loyola's rare talent for narrative.
She does not disappoint in this story, for as always, she brings to life the most vivid images of Our Lord, such that the children who read it will feel almost as if they were following the dusty paths Our Saviour trod.
Now enhanced with an abundance of contemporary engravings and lithographs, this newly typeset edition is an invaluable means of impressing upon the minds of young children the reality of God become Man.
As a revered author himself, and considering the number of such stories available even then, we can only imagine the admiration he must have held for Mother Loyola's rare talent for narrative.
She does not disappoint in this story, for as always, she brings to life the most vivid images of Our Lord, such that the children who read it will feel almost as if they were following the dusty paths Our Saviour trod.
Now enhanced with an abundance of contemporary engravings and lithographs, this newly typeset edition is an invaluable means of impressing upon the minds of young children the reality of God become Man.
Home For Good
The unassuming title Home for Good and the original motivation Mother Mary Loyola had in writing this book - that is, to help young ladies who were finishing boarding school to make the right choices in life - both utterly belie the groundbreaking significance of its content.
While Mother Loyola's King of the Golden City is charming and entertaining; while her catechesis books are both informative and inspiring; and while her devotional works are unparalleled in their ability to reach the hearts of their readers, Home for Good is a rock on which an unshakable faith can be built amidst the storms and calms of everyday life.
Having spent most of her adult life in educating young ladies, Mother Loyola was intimately familiar with the character of youth as well as the challenges young people face when confronted with the temptations of worldliness.
Though this book was written with her young charges in mind, it is no less relevant to young men, who endure the same enticements - and in our own culture, perhaps even greater ones. It is a clarion call to young Catholics to hold fast to their faith and morals in a world that seeks to destroy that faith at every opportunity.
Readers of all ages, both male and female, have equally to gain by reading from this book regularly.
While Mother Loyola's King of the Golden City is charming and entertaining; while her catechesis books are both informative and inspiring; and while her devotional works are unparalleled in their ability to reach the hearts of their readers, Home for Good is a rock on which an unshakable faith can be built amidst the storms and calms of everyday life.
Having spent most of her adult life in educating young ladies, Mother Loyola was intimately familiar with the character of youth as well as the challenges young people face when confronted with the temptations of worldliness.
Though this book was written with her young charges in mind, it is no less relevant to young men, who endure the same enticements - and in our own culture, perhaps even greater ones. It is a clarion call to young Catholics to hold fast to their faith and morals in a world that seeks to destroy that faith at every opportunity.
Readers of all ages, both male and female, have equally to gain by reading from this book regularly.
First Confession
The greatest challenge in preparing young children for the Sacrament of Penance is in making confession a habit to which they will be voluntarily attracted. We can require their presence at catechism class, and compel them to go to confession, but without this crucial ingredient, we cannot hope to dispel the all-too-common view that it is an onerous task to be studiously avoided.
It is precisely this difficulty that Mother Mary Loyola addresses with this book. She knew children's minds so well - how they crave being treated like adults - and thus she avoids all that is oversimplified or saccharine, a quality which gives all of her work such broad appeal, even to adults. Her vivid storytelling brings to life an irresistible feeling of the comfort and joy the child will find in the forgiveness of their loving father. Who, then, would dream of ever avoiding such sweet medicine?
It is precisely this difficulty that Mother Mary Loyola addresses with this book. She knew children's minds so well - how they crave being treated like adults - and thus she avoids all that is oversimplified or saccharine, a quality which gives all of her work such broad appeal, even to adults. Her vivid storytelling brings to life an irresistible feeling of the comfort and joy the child will find in the forgiveness of their loving father. Who, then, would dream of ever avoiding such sweet medicine?
Questions on First Communion
By itself, Mother Mary Loyola's first book, First Communion, stands as a monumental achievement in catechesis, in that it teaches children the crucial truths of the Faith in a way that is equally understandable and appealing, despite the fact that more than a century has passed since it was written.
This book of questions, written by Mother Loyola as a supplement to First Communion, takes this achievement one step further, by facilitating home and classroom discussion of the material found in each chapter. Each lesson provides discussion questions, tied to page references in the source material, as well as additional stories designed to reinforce the concepts learned.
Both catechists and parents alike will find this volume helpful in preparing children to receive the Blessed Sacrament.
This book of questions, written by Mother Loyola as a supplement to First Communion, takes this achievement one step further, by facilitating home and classroom discussion of the material found in each chapter. Each lesson provides discussion questions, tied to page references in the source material, as well as additional stories designed to reinforce the concepts learned.
Both catechists and parents alike will find this volume helpful in preparing children to receive the Blessed Sacrament.
First Communion
Around the year 1890, a rather extraordinary nun began writing a very extraordinary book: one that would help children prepare for the Sacrament of Holy Eucharist. It would revolutionise children's catechism by making the teachings of the Catholic Church both accessible and appealing, and in just over 10 years, its popularity would make her one of the best-known and best-loved Catholic authors of her time, with over two dozen works for both children and adults to her name.
Mother Mary Loyola's work has been reintroduced to a new generation through her book The King of the Golden City, and now modern readers can access the brilliant and engaging works upon which she drew to write that book, especially the one that started it all: First Communion.
This brand new, newly typeset version is dedicated to Mother Loyola in gratitude for her tireless efforts and the fruit they have borne in the lives of countless Catholics the world over.
Mother Mary Loyola's work has been reintroduced to a new generation through her book The King of the Golden City, and now modern readers can access the brilliant and engaging works upon which she drew to write that book, especially the one that started it all: First Communion.
This brand new, newly typeset version is dedicated to Mother Loyola in gratitude for her tireless efforts and the fruit they have borne in the lives of countless Catholics the world over.
The Children's Charter
The Children's Charter was Mother Mary Loyola's response to Pope Pius X's 1910 decree Quam Singulari, which lowered the age for reception of First Communion to seven.
Addressed directly to the parents and teachers of children, this is a rare peek into the classroom as Mother Loyola would have it.
Here the author of The King of the Golden City gives sage advice for how best to capture and maintain the interest of little ones in preparing them for Confession and Communion.
Despite the century that has passed since this book was first published, Mother Loyola's advice remains just as relevant, a testament to how well she knew how to reach the hearts and minds of children.
Addressed directly to the parents and teachers of children, this is a rare peek into the classroom as Mother Loyola would have it.
Here the author of The King of the Golden City gives sage advice for how best to capture and maintain the interest of little ones in preparing them for Confession and Communion.
Despite the century that has passed since this book was first published, Mother Loyola's advice remains just as relevant, a testament to how well she knew how to reach the hearts and minds of children.
Trust
This last of Mother Mary Loyola's full-length works is an object lesson in learning to trust implicitly in God for all things, especially when it is most difficult to do so.
Who better than she to lead us on this path - having begun her long life as an orphan, and now patiently awaiting eternity, bedridden with a broken hip for 5 years?
Her first-hand experience tells in this intimate portrait, as she extols the rewards inherent in the very struggle in which she found herself enmeshed. Amidst her trials, she holds up for us the examples of the saints and the martyrs, the faith of the Patriarchs, and the solicitousness of Our Father in Heaven, Whose gifts to us are without number, and in return asks of us what any loving parent longs for: the unconditional love and trust of His child.
Who better than she to lead us on this path - having begun her long life as an orphan, and now patiently awaiting eternity, bedridden with a broken hip for 5 years?
Her first-hand experience tells in this intimate portrait, as she extols the rewards inherent in the very struggle in which she found herself enmeshed. Amidst her trials, she holds up for us the examples of the saints and the martyrs, the faith of the Patriarchs, and the solicitousness of Our Father in Heaven, Whose gifts to us are without number, and in return asks of us what any loving parent longs for: the unconditional love and trust of His child.
Hail! Full of Grace: Simple Thoughts on the Rosary
Mother Loyola brings her full talent for storytelling to bear on the fifteen mysteries of the Rosary, in Hail! Full of Grace.
Like a tour guide to the Holy Land, she brings the reader along on a journey through the lives of Our Lord and of His Blessed Mother.
We experience, through her vivid illustration, the breathless anticipation, the drudgery and hardship, the depths of sorrow and despair, and the heights of joy unimaginable.
Like a tour guide to the Holy Land, she brings the reader along on a journey through the lives of Our Lord and of His Blessed Mother.
We experience, through her vivid illustration, the breathless anticipation, the drudgery and hardship, the depths of sorrow and despair, and the heights of joy unimaginable.
No detail escapes her notice as she travels on, until her readers feel less that they have meditated upon the mysteries of the Rosary, and rather more that they have experienced them first-hand.
Forgive Us Our Trespasses
Mother Mary Loyola's work on the subject of Confession is not merely groundbreaking, but seems to form one of the most crucial of her strengths, given that the Sacrament of Penance has always been the most avoidable and avoided of all; many Catholics express a distaste for it akin to torment.
For her readers, however, such angst is inconceivable, as she does not merely help to remove all fear and discomfort associated with the Confessional; she also enkindles a deep sense of appreciation for the gift of the sacrament. This, in turn, fosters an eager anticipation of the grace it confers.
For her readers, however, such angst is inconceivable, as she does not merely help to remove all fear and discomfort associated with the Confessional; she also enkindles a deep sense of appreciation for the gift of the sacrament. This, in turn, fosters an eager anticipation of the grace it confers.
Those who make use of Forgive Us Our Trespasses - whether children or adults - will find themselves seeking this healing sacrament with regularity.
Coram Sanctissimo: Before The Most Holy
In these meditations before the Blessed Sacrament, Mother Mary Loyola's distinctive style skillfully guides the reader toward prayerfulness without supplying any formulated prayers.
From Catholic World, May 1901: "There is nothing exaggerated, artificial, or impossible in the pages before us; they contain merely a collection of musings and devotional monologues written with a directness and spontaneity that will appeal strongly to many who can get little profit out of less natural and more fervent writing".
From The Irish Ecclesiastical Record, January 1902: "...Mother M. Loyola is as much at home when depicting the trials, the aspirations, and the consolations of adults as in leading little children along the road of true penance. Each visit seizes, generally with thrilling vivacity, one idea; the subject is weighed in the presence of our Lord, the conclusions are always practical".
From The Irish Ecclesiastical Record, January 1902: "...Mother M. Loyola is as much at home when depicting the trials, the aspirations, and the consolations of adults as in leading little children along the road of true penance. Each visit seizes, generally with thrilling vivacity, one idea; the subject is weighed in the presence of our Lord, the conclusions are always practical".
Blessed Are They That Mourn
By the early years of the twentieth century, Mother Mary Loyola had cemented her reputation as one of the best Catholic writers of her generation, but the First World War prompted her to write a book of consolation for the innumerable mothers, wives and others who had lost loved ones to its ravages.
Her intimate knowledge of the subject matter gave her unique insight, for she had lost so many in the course of her long life, beginning with both of her parents and two siblings when she was just nine years old, and recently including several of her own beloved students who were fighting in the trenches of the Great War.
She knew only too well the need for a strong faith in these times of intense suffering and loss, and this she amply illustrates in Blessed Are They That Mourn.
Thursday, 13 November 2014
Mother Mary Loyola
Carmel Books is pleased to announce that we will soon have in stock several of the works of Mother Mary Loyola. We will offer short summaries of these books on the blog next week.
Mother Mary Loyola was a household name among Catholics of her time. Her writing earned her the love and praise of generations, as evidenced by the comments found in contemporary Catholic journals. For example:
"Catholic literature, doctrinal and devotional, owes a great deal to Mother Mary Loyola. There is a certain wholesomeness, naturalness, geniality about her spirituality that at once wins a place in the Catholic heart for whatever she writes".
The Ecclesiastical Review, January 1918
"The writings of Mother Mary Loyola have carried the Bar Convent beyond all barriers. She has been beyond doubt the greatest benefactress of the pen known to the present growing generation of Catholics in these islands, and her readers are counted by tens of thousands overseas".
The Tablet, November 1912
Mother Mary Loyola was born Elizabeth Giles in London in 1845, the second of 6 children in a family of strict Protestants. Her father was a grain dealer on the London Stock Exchange, and they lived a comfortable life. But 1850's London - the London of Dickens - was dirty, overcrowded and rife with infectious disease. When she was just nine years old, her baby brother fell ill, and within weeks, Scarlet Fever had claimed not only his life, but those of her elder sister and both her parents.
Still ill and reeling from the shock of the loss, Elizabeth and her remaining siblings were taken in by an uncle, Samuel Giles, who had converted to the Catholic Faith. The Oxford Movement had recently brought many distinguished converts to the Church, and in the company of her uncle, Elizabeth profited from the sermons of Cardinal Manning and the hymns of Father Faber. After entering the Church in 1854, she attended the Bar Convent School in York, one of the finest in England.
When she had finished her studies there, she felt called to the religious life, and in 1866 decided to return to the Bar Convent, this time as a Sister. For many years she taught in the convent school, even serving as Headmistress and Mother Superior for a time.
Because of her exceptional teaching ability, she was encouraged by Father John Morris, S.J. to write a book for children preparing for First Communion. It was issued anonymously in 1896 as part of the Jesuit Quarterly Series, but it quickly became so popular that she was persuaded to publish it, and all her subsequent books, in her own name.
It was her ability to draw in her listeners with story after story - and not just any stories, but ones that incorporated current events and brand new inventions of the time - that made her writing so innovative. Despite the fact that those events are no longer current, and those inventions no longer brand new, her books scintillate with the appeal of an active mind that could find a moral in the most unusual places.
There were no limits to her missionary zeal - she was known to employ her skill with anyone who would listen, even including the furnace repairman toiling away in the cellar of the convent. She started up a branch of the Boy’s Brigade in York, running it herself for ten years, and its popularity was a testament to her exceptional ability to incorporate elements of faith and morality into the most unexpected activities. Many of her beloved boys would later serve in the First World War, and sadly, some did not return.
Her correspondence was extensive, but it was one particular letter that prompted what would become perhaps her most popular work. A young boy asked her to write him a story that would sum up what he had learned in his Catechism. With characteristic aplomb, she obliged him with The King of the Golden City in 1921. It was a crowning pinnacle to her decades of writing, incorporating the bulk of her prior insight and weaving it all deftly together in allegorical fashion.
But she was far from finished with her writing career. A serious fall in 1923 resulted in a hip fracture, and confined her to bed. She bore the pain with grace, using the time to write more books and a profusion of pamphlets for organizations such as the Catholic Truth Society. It was just before Christmas in 1930 when she passed peacefully from this world to the next, bringing an end to her suffering and to a life spent in the service of our Lord.
Mother Mary Loyola was a household name among Catholics of her time. Her writing earned her the love and praise of generations, as evidenced by the comments found in contemporary Catholic journals. For example:
"Catholic literature, doctrinal and devotional, owes a great deal to Mother Mary Loyola. There is a certain wholesomeness, naturalness, geniality about her spirituality that at once wins a place in the Catholic heart for whatever she writes".
The Ecclesiastical Review, January 1918
"The writings of Mother Mary Loyola have carried the Bar Convent beyond all barriers. She has been beyond doubt the greatest benefactress of the pen known to the present growing generation of Catholics in these islands, and her readers are counted by tens of thousands overseas".
The Tablet, November 1912
Mother Mary Loyola was born Elizabeth Giles in London in 1845, the second of 6 children in a family of strict Protestants. Her father was a grain dealer on the London Stock Exchange, and they lived a comfortable life. But 1850's London - the London of Dickens - was dirty, overcrowded and rife with infectious disease. When she was just nine years old, her baby brother fell ill, and within weeks, Scarlet Fever had claimed not only his life, but those of her elder sister and both her parents.
Still ill and reeling from the shock of the loss, Elizabeth and her remaining siblings were taken in by an uncle, Samuel Giles, who had converted to the Catholic Faith. The Oxford Movement had recently brought many distinguished converts to the Church, and in the company of her uncle, Elizabeth profited from the sermons of Cardinal Manning and the hymns of Father Faber. After entering the Church in 1854, she attended the Bar Convent School in York, one of the finest in England.
When she had finished her studies there, she felt called to the religious life, and in 1866 decided to return to the Bar Convent, this time as a Sister. For many years she taught in the convent school, even serving as Headmistress and Mother Superior for a time.
Because of her exceptional teaching ability, she was encouraged by Father John Morris, S.J. to write a book for children preparing for First Communion. It was issued anonymously in 1896 as part of the Jesuit Quarterly Series, but it quickly became so popular that she was persuaded to publish it, and all her subsequent books, in her own name.
It was her ability to draw in her listeners with story after story - and not just any stories, but ones that incorporated current events and brand new inventions of the time - that made her writing so innovative. Despite the fact that those events are no longer current, and those inventions no longer brand new, her books scintillate with the appeal of an active mind that could find a moral in the most unusual places.
There were no limits to her missionary zeal - she was known to employ her skill with anyone who would listen, even including the furnace repairman toiling away in the cellar of the convent. She started up a branch of the Boy’s Brigade in York, running it herself for ten years, and its popularity was a testament to her exceptional ability to incorporate elements of faith and morality into the most unexpected activities. Many of her beloved boys would later serve in the First World War, and sadly, some did not return.
Her correspondence was extensive, but it was one particular letter that prompted what would become perhaps her most popular work. A young boy asked her to write him a story that would sum up what he had learned in his Catechism. With characteristic aplomb, she obliged him with The King of the Golden City in 1921. It was a crowning pinnacle to her decades of writing, incorporating the bulk of her prior insight and weaving it all deftly together in allegorical fashion.
But she was far from finished with her writing career. A serious fall in 1923 resulted in a hip fracture, and confined her to bed. She bore the pain with grace, using the time to write more books and a profusion of pamphlets for organizations such as the Catholic Truth Society. It was just before Christmas in 1930 when she passed peacefully from this world to the next, bringing an end to her suffering and to a life spent in the service of our Lord.
Wednesday, 12 November 2014
Treasure and Tradition: The Ultimate Guide to The Latin Mass
Available now from Carmel Books:
Have you ever:
- Considered attending a Latin Mass, but found it too intimidating?
- Struggled to jump back and forth between the pages of a Latin-English Missal?
- Wondered what all those people are doing at the altar during High Mass?
- Wished for an effective way to help children to understand and follow along with the Mass?
- Wanted to know more about the history of the Mass and how it came to be the way it is?
- Been puzzled by things like Septuagesima, Rogation Days, and other unfamiliar terms, feasts and practices?
This Guide is just what you’ve been waiting for!
Addressed primarily towards poor souls stuck in a Novus Ordo wasteland and nominal Catholics who may wish to learn something about the Faith into which they were baptised, this book is also very useful for children and even for those who have held on to the Mass for years. It not only does a wonderful job explaining the Mass but also delves into the history of the Mass and explains the meaning of traditional feasts, unfamiliar terms and practices.
Inside Treasure and Tradition is found a word-for-word English translation of the ordinary text of the Mass, together with photos, diagrams, notes and explanations that help to not only to follow along, but also to understand the history and significance of the ceremonies. In addition, there are sections explaining the main differences between the Catholic Mass and the Novus Ordo Missae, a discussion comparing the development of the Mass with that of its sister liturgy, the Divine Office, an exploration of the English translations of the Bible, a full glossary, and finally, recommended prayers intended to help you prepare when receiving the sacraments of Penance and the Holy Eucharist.
Hardback. 8.5" x 11". 120 pages.
Tuesday, 11 November 2014
For a War Memorial - Father William Doyle, S.J.
For a War Memorial
The Irish military chaplain Father William Doyle, S.J., (1873 - 1917) combined humour, holiness and courage in an outstanding degree.
His death during the third battle of Ypres left intact for posterity the detailed spiritual diaries in which he had recorded for private use his methodical and gruelling path of self-conquest and the growth of his passionate love of Christ.
providence furnished him as biographer the most learned Irishman of his generation: his friend Professor Alfred O'Rahilly.
The resulting biography is a compulsively readable and revealing examination of sanctity under the microscope, by an author whose calm judgement never falters.
Father Doyle had devoted his life to the preaching of parish missions and had received the extraordinary grace of never once failing to obtain the conversion of the straying sheep he sought out, even the most hardened sinners.
But the grace he most yearned for was martyrdom, and he finally won his palm on the bloodiest battlefield of history.
The Irish military chaplain Father William Doyle, S.J., (1873 - 1917) combined humour, holiness and courage in an outstanding degree.
His death during the third battle of Ypres left intact for posterity the detailed spiritual diaries in which he had recorded for private use his methodical and gruelling path of self-conquest and the growth of his passionate love of Christ.
providence furnished him as biographer the most learned Irishman of his generation: his friend Professor Alfred O'Rahilly.
The resulting biography is a compulsively readable and revealing examination of sanctity under the microscope, by an author whose calm judgement never falters.
Father Doyle had devoted his life to the preaching of parish missions and had received the extraordinary grace of never once failing to obtain the conversion of the straying sheep he sought out, even the most hardened sinners.
But the grace he most yearned for was martyrdom, and he finally won his palm on the bloodiest battlefield of history.
Monday, 10 November 2014
Merry In God: A Life of Father William Doyle, S.J.
This book is mainly for young people, or for old people who are young.
In simple words it tells of one whose story has already gone forth and gone straight to many hearts in many lands, and won their admiration and affection.
It makes little attempt to analyse or explain the spiritual ideals and practices of its hero. All this has been done scientifically and splendidly by Professor Alfred O'Rahilly in Father William Doyle, S.J., from which much of this Life has been taken.
It is the inspiring story of a youth who set out to make himself a saint; who in his search after holiness arouses admiration, amazement, smiles and laughter, kept a most human kindliness, tolerance, and whimsical humour towards others; who all his days longed to die a martyr, and whose body, mangled by a shell, as he ministered to a wounded man, lies in an unknown grave in Flanders.
Friday, 7 November 2014
The Feast of the Holy Relics
8th November- "Protestantism pretends to regard the veneration which the Church pays to the relics of the saints as a sin, and contends that this pious practice is a remnant of paganism.
The Council of Trent, on the contrary, has decided that the bodies of the martyrs and other saints, who were living members of Jesus Christ and temples of the Holy Ghost, are to be honoured by the faithful. This decision was based upon the established usage of the earliest days of the Church, and upon the teachings of the Fathers and of the Councils".
One important relic to English Catholics, particularly, is that of St. Cuthbert Mayne's crown. Cuthbert Mayne, whose feast day is celebrated later this month, was martyred for the Faith in 1577, aged 33 years, and his precious relic is guarded and treasured at Lanherne Convent in Cornwall.
The Council of Trent, on the contrary, has decided that the bodies of the martyrs and other saints, who were living members of Jesus Christ and temples of the Holy Ghost, are to be honoured by the faithful. This decision was based upon the established usage of the earliest days of the Church, and upon the teachings of the Fathers and of the Councils".
One important relic to English Catholics, particularly, is that of St. Cuthbert Mayne's crown. Cuthbert Mayne, whose feast day is celebrated later this month, was martyred for the Faith in 1577, aged 33 years, and his precious relic is guarded and treasured at Lanherne Convent in Cornwall.
Thursday, 6 November 2014
Saint Martin de Porres - Meet Brother Martin!
5th November - "That the truth is stranger than fiction is verified in the life of this holy man who was born on 9th December, 1579, and died on 3rd November, 1639.
He was the son of Don Juan de Porres, a Spanish adventurer and nobleman, and Ann Velasquez, a freed Negro woman of Panama.
Martin's father arranged for some sort of schooling and then had him apprenticed to a barber-surgeon from whom he learned the rudiments of medical practice. This elementary study of the healing arts enabled him to set bones, dress wounds, give doses for the cure of fever and be the good Samaritan for years in Lima, Peru.
Wishing to dedicate himself entirely and freely to the service of others, he became a Tertiary of the Dominican Order. Whilst never a professed religious, he lived as a Third Order member of their convent at Lima, and from it as headquarters went forth to a daily life of utter self-sacrifice for the needy.
The stories of his marvels of healing and the countless works of wonder that he did remind one of the early days of Christianity. Incredible though they sound, they are attested to by reliable witnesses and account, in some way, for the constant devotion to him in South America and the more recent cult to him in North America.
All the works of mercy found him their ready minister. Such practical acts of kindness as getting marriage dowries for young girls and establishing orphanages and shelter for bereaved children were part of his beneficent programme.
His father, who in time, became Governor of Panama never aided him but, in fact, attempted to prevent his ambition to lead the religious life.
Behind these self-effacing and charitable enterprises was a life of profound prayer, furthered by heroic penances".
He was the son of Don Juan de Porres, a Spanish adventurer and nobleman, and Ann Velasquez, a freed Negro woman of Panama.
Martin's father arranged for some sort of schooling and then had him apprenticed to a barber-surgeon from whom he learned the rudiments of medical practice. This elementary study of the healing arts enabled him to set bones, dress wounds, give doses for the cure of fever and be the good Samaritan for years in Lima, Peru.
Wishing to dedicate himself entirely and freely to the service of others, he became a Tertiary of the Dominican Order. Whilst never a professed religious, he lived as a Third Order member of their convent at Lima, and from it as headquarters went forth to a daily life of utter self-sacrifice for the needy.
The stories of his marvels of healing and the countless works of wonder that he did remind one of the early days of Christianity. Incredible though they sound, they are attested to by reliable witnesses and account, in some way, for the constant devotion to him in South America and the more recent cult to him in North America.
All the works of mercy found him their ready minister. Such practical acts of kindness as getting marriage dowries for young girls and establishing orphanages and shelter for bereaved children were part of his beneficent programme.
His father, who in time, became Governor of Panama never aided him but, in fact, attempted to prevent his ambition to lead the religious life.
Behind these self-effacing and charitable enterprises was a life of profound prayer, furthered by heroic penances".
Monday, 3 November 2014
Remembering the Holy Souls
Please remember in your prayers today and during the Octave the souls of our good friend Fr. Michael Crowdy who was called to his eternal reward at 3pm on the Feast of the Immaculate Conception, 2006, and of Carmel Books' founder Robin Masterman Pannell and his successor Maurice Marshal, MBE.
Robin, pictured left, founded Carmel Books about 40 years ago to supply solid traditional Catholic materials in a post-Vatican II wasteland.
He was called to his eternal reward on 22nd January, 2008.
Robin was succeeded by Maurice Marshal, pictured below right, who heroically took on the management of the Carmel Books apostolate whilst well into his 70's!
Maurice was called to his eternal reward on 10th July, 2010.
De profundis clamavi ad te, Domine: * Domine, exaudi vocem meam.
Fiant aures tuae intendentes: * in vocem deprecationis meae.
Si iniquitates observaveris, Domine: * Domine, quis sustinebit?
Quia apud te propitiatio est: * propter legem tuam sustinui te, Domine.
Sustinuit anima mea in verbum ejus: * speravit anima mea in Domino.
A custodia matutina usque ad noctem: * speret Israel in Domino.
Quia apud Dominum misericordia: * et copiosa apud eum redemptio.
Et ipse redimet Israel: * ex omnibus iniquitatibus ejus.
Requiem aeternam * dona eis, Domine.
Et lux perpetna luceat eis.
Requiescant in pace.
Amen.
V. Domine, exaudi orationem meam,
R. Et clamor meus ad te veniat.
Oremus.
Fidelium Deus omnium conditor et redemptor, animabus famulorum famularumque tuarum remissionem cunctorum tribue peccatorum: ut iudulgentiam, quam semper optaverunt, piis supplicationibus consequantur. Qui vivis et regnas in saecula saeculorum. R. Amen.
V. Requiem aeternam dona eis, Domine.
R. Et lux perpetua luceat eis.
V. Requiescant in pace.
R. Amen.
Friday, 31 October 2014
The Purgatorian Manual... and Read Me or Rue It
The Purgatorian Manual is a little handbook measuring only 3.75" x 5.75" and less than 3/4 inch thick, yet it contains over 300 pages.
Printed on inexpensive paper with a beautiful full colour cover, this book contains every prayer, meditation, novena, and Mass for the Holy Souls that you could imagine.
Printed on inexpensive paper with a beautiful full colour cover, this book contains every prayer, meditation, novena, and Mass for the Holy Souls that you could imagine.
It is a treasure for those who love the Holy Souls.
Read Me or Rue It... How To Avoid Purgatory is a stirring little book by Father Paul O'Sullivan, O.P., explaining why we are obliged to intercede for the Holy Souls in Purgatory, and the benefits of doing so.
This excellent little book is unfortunately no longer in print, and we only have a limited stock left.
Thursday, 30 October 2014
Mary In Her Scapular Promise
"Mr. [John] Haffert has in a masterly way laid bare the solid foundations upon which this [Brown Scapular] devotion reposes. His case is so strikingly presented that to challenge this devotion is to challenge to some extent, the tradition and authority of the Church".
The Scapular Promise of Our Lady is: "Whosoever dies clothed in this shall never suffer eternal fire". Pope Pius IX said, "this extraordinary gift of the Scapular brings its great usefulness not only to the Carmelite Family of Mary but also to all the rest of the faithful who wish, affiliated to that Family, to follow Mary with a very special devotion".
The book contains 15 chapters, including, The Origin of the Promise, Meaning of the Promise, Historicity of the Promise, How the Promise is Kept, Scapular Prayer and Communication of Benefits, and much more.
This is the most complete book on the subject we have seen. It gives many examples of the powerful protection one gets from the Scapular and that protection is in great need today.
Originally printed in 1940.
Wednesday, 29 October 2014
2015 Devotional Calendar - British and Irish Shrines
Some supplies of a worthy 2015 devotional calendar - Traditional Shrines of the British Isles & Ireland - have just arrived.
Produced to raise funds for St. Michael's School in Burghclere - which is situated just a few miles up the road from Carmel Books - the calendar illustrations are provided courtesy of the junior school pupils (with great artistic skill, it has to be said).
It follows the liturgical calendar of 1962 with special emphasis upon the particular saints and feast days of Britain and Ireland.
There is an edition of the calendar for the British Isles and an edition for Ireland. The two editions are identical apart from a change in emphasis on some of the featured saints' feasts.
Stocks of these calendars are limited at Carmel Books, so first come, first served.
Produced to raise funds for St. Michael's School in Burghclere - which is situated just a few miles up the road from Carmel Books - the calendar illustrations are provided courtesy of the junior school pupils (with great artistic skill, it has to be said).
It follows the liturgical calendar of 1962 with special emphasis upon the particular saints and feast days of Britain and Ireland.
There is an edition of the calendar for the British Isles and an edition for Ireland. The two editions are identical apart from a change in emphasis on some of the featured saints' feasts.
Stocks of these calendars are limited at Carmel Books, so first come, first served.
The Spiritual Life of Cardinal Merry del Val
In the early part of the 21st century, because of the incessant and often strident media attention to the doings and mis-doings of many highly placed Churchmen, it is good to reflect upon how much good can be accomplished for the greater glory of God and the advancement of religion by even one man of deep holiness who has been placed in a position of great authority and responsibility in the Church.
Such a man was Raphael Cardinal Merry del Val. He was born into an aristocratic family of Irish, English, and Spanish parentage in the city of London. His parents were the Marquis Raphael Merry del Val and the Countess Josephine de Zuletta. Among the family of his forebears was a martyr of the Church, St. Domenguito del Val, a child of barely seven who was crucified to a wall in the Cathedral of Saragossa in 1250 by enemies of Christianity.
He is of course best known as the architect and executor of St. Pius X’s war against Modernism, in which great service to God he acquired numerous enemies in his lifetime, and for which we can be sure that he gained many friends in Heaven. But his life was not one of merely temporal greatness. He was a profoundly humble and virtuous man as well.
Saint Pius X had right by his side, as Secretary of State, a man who was eminently worth of his holy pontificate, as this biography of Cardinal Merry del Val by Reverend Jerome DalGal easily proves.
In 1931, a year after the death of this illustrious Cardinal, the famous French scholar René Bazin made the following observation: "Judgment was passed in many different ways on Cardinal Merry del Val while he was living. This was due largely to the part he played in the political and religious affairs of his time. But now that he is dead people are getting to know him better, for with death has come the unveiling of the well-guarded secret of his extraordinary spiritual life".
Tuesday, 28 October 2014
Social Wellsprings
Few Catholics truly understand the Social Doctrines of the Catholic Church. This may be in part because many of the best papal teachings on this subject have either been ignored or not widely read.
Father Joseph Husslein, S.J., tried very hard to remedy this situation with the publication of two books in 1940 dedicated to solving this problem. He gathered together all of the encyclicals by two popes, Leo XIII and Pius XI, who wrote much on the topic and made certain that the English translations were well organized, accurate, easily understandable and readable in translation.
He also made many notes that are helpful to the reader. The service he performed is treasured by all students of the Church's Social Doctrine and these two books, so long out of print, are now available again exactly as they were originally published.
If you have not read many of the encyclicals that were published before the Kantian and existentialist modernising of encyclical writing that took place after the Second Vatican Council you are in for a real treat! The brevity and clarity of the language will surprise you. Pope Leo XIII and Pope Pius XI are no phenomenological exegetes. They speak the way one would expect a Vicar of Christ to speak, in clear, unambiguous, and manly language that is full of charity, pious unction and truth.
No one who reads these most important social encyclicals will come away confused. Be warned however; their brevity is deceptive. They are overflowing with profound insights and exhortations, therefore, small doses properly savored and meditated upon is the best way to imbibe the true wisdom and sound doctrine found within these two volumes.
Monday, 27 October 2014
Christ the King
As far as we know the DVD of High Mass for the Feast of Christ the King, celebrated on Sunday 28th October, 1990, at the Church of St. Nicolas du Chardonnet, in Paris, is the last public recording of the saintly Archbishop Lefebvre celebrating the Holy Sacrifice before he went to his eternal reward.
Disc 1 ends with the Archbishop's sermon - with English subtitles.
Disc 2 contains the addition of six photo galleries.
DVD - 2 discs, 1 hour and 35 minutes.
Friday, 24 October 2014
The War in La Vendée and the Little Chouannerie
Few histories grip the heart and stir the soul like tales of faithful Catholics rising up in arms to throw off the tyranny of anti-Catholic oppressors.
A drama telling the tale of The War of The Vendee is also available on DVD.
This film is a multi-award-winning historical drama telling the story of the rising of the Vendean Martyrs against the military forces of the French Revolution.
In 1793, after enduring three and a half years of mounting persecution of the Church by the architects of the French Revolution, a small band of faithful peasants and nobles began a Catholic counter-revolution.
This is the largely unknown story of the valiant, six year struggle of the people of a small section of western France, to restore their Holy Religion and their King to the throne. Steeped in the influence of St. Louis de Montfort, and wearing their rosaries and emblems of the Sacred Heart, their sacrifices resulted in countless souls winning their martyrdom to Heaven.
Full Colour. Dolby Audio. 90 minutes
Such is the story of The War in La Vendee and such is the courage of youth displayed by the teenage scholars of Vannes in the tale of the Little Chouannerie.
The satanic explosion of hatred of Christ, of His Church, and of what remained decent in decaying Catholic France - an explosion known to history as The French Revolution - was valiantly opposed in the west of France by a peasant army in both Brittany and in La Vendee.
George J. Hill, M.A., tells their story.
A drama telling the tale of The War of The Vendee is also available on DVD.
This film is a multi-award-winning historical drama telling the story of the rising of the Vendean Martyrs against the military forces of the French Revolution.
In 1793, after enduring three and a half years of mounting persecution of the Church by the architects of the French Revolution, a small band of faithful peasants and nobles began a Catholic counter-revolution.
This is the largely unknown story of the valiant, six year struggle of the people of a small section of western France, to restore their Holy Religion and their King to the throne. Steeped in the influence of St. Louis de Montfort, and wearing their rosaries and emblems of the Sacred Heart, their sacrifices resulted in countless souls winning their martyrdom to Heaven.
Full Colour. Dolby Audio. 90 minutes
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