Four More Witnesses
Here is the long-awaited sequel to Rod Bennett's Four Witnesses: The Early Church in Her Own Words, a page-turning spiritual adventure following the lives and words of
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Here is the long-awaited sequel to Rod Bennett's Four Witnesses: The Early Church in Her Own Words, a page-turning spiritual adventure following the lives and words of
English author Evelyn Waugh, most famous for his novel Brideshead Revisited, became a Roman Catholic in 1930. For the last decade of his life, however, Waugh experienced the ch
With contributions by Sohrab Ahmari, James Bogle, Charles Coulombe, Peter Day-Milne, Sebastian Morello, and Joseph Shaw
This book is a short introduction to the development of the Roman Rite of Mass, the most widely used of the Church’s liturgical rites, from its origins in early Christianity unt
Archeology, History, and Scripture Unveil What Life Was Really Like During the Apostolic Age.
Truth is stranger than fiction. And nowhere in literature is it so apparent as in this classic work, the Autobiography of a Hunted Priest.
The fates of two young people caught in a conflict of ideals is the theme of this stirring and tragic novel, set in the England of Elizabeth I.
This Council spanned the pontificates of five popes and shone as a beacon to all the world, condemning errors of the Protestant Reformation and making pronouncements on a vast n
A History of the Catholic Faith in Norfolk, Suffolk, Cambridgeshire and Peterborough.
Explore the rich history and influence of Christian art from Antiquity to the present day.
Here, the father of the great work of religious restoration in the century following the French Revolution — that of the Order of St Benedict in France — turns his eye to the st
For every half-dozen heroes antiquity could muster, Christendom produced thousands; and often from the strangest holes and corners.
Church Vestments: Their Origin and Development represents the most comprehensive and meticulously researched study of the development of Christian ecclesiastical garments.
In the first section of this fascinating study, ‘Cistercian Chronicles and the Events of Nature’, David Williams reveals the wealth of information to be gleaned from medieval an
With tens of millions killed and thousands of Catholics incarcerated because of rigged trials, China under Mao’s dictatorship was the Asian version of the Nazi concentration cam
The First Vatican Council solemnly defined that the pope is infallible when he speaks ex cathedra, that is, from the chair of St Peter, which is the chair of truth.
Adrian Fortescue, a British apologist for the Catholic faith in the early part of the 20th century, wrote this classic of clear exposition on the faith of the early Church in th
Assaults on the dignity and rights of the human person have been central to the ongoing crisis of the modern era in the last hundred years.
John Henry Newman’s Essays Critical and Historical are articles he originally wrote between 1829 and 1846 and later collected together and republished in 1871.
This book examines the life, thought and work of Martin Luther (1483-1546) to correct the misperceptions that many have of him and his work.
Catholic churches are among the great architectural treasures of England and Wales yet hardly known and rarely explored.
First published in 1910, Dom Bede Cam, was a significant figure in the late Victorian and Edwardian rediscovery of ‘Heritage’ which showed itself in the appearance of many simil
The Protestant Reformation began five hundred years ago, accompanied by an age of turmoil and secularism we can recognize even in our own time.
England is full of reminders of its deeply Christian roots. Some are obvious, like the great medieval cathedrals or the shrine of Our Lady at Walsingham.
The Letters of Pope John Paul I
For 33 days in 1975 the infectious smile of John Paul I lit up the world.
It is 1967, a mere two years after the close of Vatican II. The atmosphere in the Church is already one of anarchy. Liturgical “experimentation” is rife. Confusion reigns.
In this book, Roberto de Mattei steers us perceptively through centuries of Church history concerning both the wise, and the disastrous, decisions of popes and councils: from th
500 Years of Protestantism and Its Consequences for Church, State, and Society.
For the first time a noted historian of Christianity explores the full story of the emergence and development of the Marian cult in the early Christian centuries.
The strong and continuing interest in John Henry Newman, particularly following his beatification by Pope Benedict XVI on his visit to Britain in 2010, brought the thought that
The Principles of Liturgical Reform and Their Relation to the Twentieth-Century Liturgical Movement Prior to the Second Vatican Council
History and Interpretation in Bede’s Account of the Early Kings of Northumbria
The Jews usually burned the crosses used by the Romans after executions but following Jesus' crucifixion they quickly threw the Cross in a ditch to get it out of sight before th
Enter into the shadows of the Roman catacombs where early Christians attended Mass and hid in fear from Roman soldiers seeking their death for refusing to renounce the Christian
French priests enter a war zone where captured Westerners are paraded before their captors, tortured, and then beheaded. Their desecrated bodies get dumped by the roadside.
Priest-holes and other secret hiding places add a touch of mystery to many novels and hold an almost mythical status in English country house lore—alongside ancestral ghosts and
This is the most comprehensive book to date on the techniques of icon and wall painting.
Here are the saints and sinners, popes and kings that God used to shape his Church and change the world.
The Bishops of Rome have been Christianity's most powerful leaders for nearly two millennia, and their influence has extended far beyond the purely spiritual.
John Henry Newman's controversial The Church of the Fathers is published here for the first time in more than a century.
The Douai Martyrs are a group of one hundred and fifty-nine men who were martyred for the Catholic Faith in England and Wales between 1577 and 1680.
When London born, John Henry Newman, was canonised in Rome in October, 2019, he became the first English saint since Reformation times.
One of the most coldly calculated acts of Henry VIII during the Reformations was the dissolution of the monasteries.
James Pereiro proves convincingly that the Oxford Movement and the theory of development of doctrine cannot be properly understood without a contextual analysis of the Movement’
As Stephen Long steps ashore in England one gray dawn in May 1581, he wonders how many more Catholics will have to die to make Queen Elizabeth feel secure.
A new edition of Fr Michael Rear’s definitive book, originally published to celebrate the 950th anniversary of the foundation of the Shrine of Our Lady in Walsingham.
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