Prophetic Literature by Very Rev. Peter Samuel Kucer, MSA

Prophetic Literature by Very Rev. Peter Samuel Kucer, MSA

Prophetic Literature

by Fr. Peter Samuel Kucer, MSA

This book engages the canonical prophetic literature of the Old Testament, demonstrating how it points to Christ and is fulfilled in Christ. Like Wisdom Literature, prophetic literature teaches perennial moral truths that reflect how God has created the universe, in particular how God created human beings as inherently social creatures in His image and likeness. Prophecy is, consequently, a gift that is given in all ages and time, that did not end with the Old Testament but continued in the New Testament and is still given today.

Paperback: $19.99 | Kindle: $9.99

TESTIMONIALS

The Very Rev. Peter Samuel Kucer, MSA, has produced quite a grand opus in his collection of works on Sacred Scripture, Marian Devotion, Catholic Church History, East and South East Asian History, Catholic Apologetics, God the Father and the Priesthood, Eastern and Western Civilization, and Political Science. Each of his books provides wisdom for the beginner and clarity for the educated. – Dr. Sebastian Mahfood, OP, Professor of Interdisciplinary Studies, Holy Apostles College & Seminary

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

The Very Rev. Peter Samuel Kucer, MSA, STD serves as President-Rector at Holy Apostles College and Seminary in Cromwell, CT. He received degrees from Middlebury College, Holy Apostles College and Seminary, the Dominican House of Studies, and the Catholic University of America. He is intent on putting his educational background at the service of the New Evangelization promoted by the recent popes.

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Returning Home: A Spirituality of the Christian Journey

Returning Home: A Spirituality of the Christian Journey

Returning Home: A Spirituality of the Christian Journey

The spiritual life has often been presented in terms of a journey because it is all about finding our way to God. For Christians, the spiritual journey has to do with following Christ into the mystery of the divine because he knows the way to the Father. We walk in his footsteps because we know that our happiness is intimately related to our journey into the mystery beyond the pale of death. We were made for God. Our happiness lies in him alone.

This book, which is about our spiritual journey, focuses specifically on our destination. We all long to go beyond ourselves. We all yearn for transcendence. What is more, we all want to be happy. We all wish to find rest in something greater than ourselves. Whether we believe in him or not, on some level, we also all long for God.

Paperback: $12.95 | Kindle: $9.99

INTERVIEWS

TESTIMONIALS

“Fr Dennis Billy, CSsR, brings together his extensive experience as a spiritual director and retreat master, erudition, impressive credentials in moral theology and spirituality, and his skills as a writer and poet in this wonderful book on the spiritual journey. As with any authentic spiritual journey, the pilgrimage in this book is told with generosity and simplicity unfolding profound truths of how God has called us to Himself and accompanies us along the way. It is a treasure for anyone no matter where they might be on the journey home.” — Dcn Peter Lovrick, Professor of Homiletics and Director of Diaconate Formation, St. Augustine’s Seminary, Toronto. Author of Proclaiming in a New Season: a Practical Guide to Catholic Preaching in the New Evangelization

“‘We were made for God. Our happiness lies in him alone. Life is a journey that should lead us into the Heart of God – ultimately culminating in sharing an eternity with Him in heaven.’ These are the basic themes that summarize the work of Fr. Dennis J. Billy, C.Ss.R. in his book, Returning Home: A Spirituality of the Christian Journey. Within this retreat, Fr. Billy does a splendid job in guiding the reader through a simple, yet profound, reflection on the meaning of life. He explains how each soul was created by God in love in order to reach an eternal destiny with Him in heaven. Beginning with basic principles, he extrapolates these tenets by applying them practically to the reader’s pilgrimage to God, regardless of where the reader is on his or her own faith journey. This retreat would be helpful both to beginners by outlining why God created them and how they can grow in their relationship with Him as well as by those more advanced in the spiritual life by offering many reflection points through which the Holy Spirit could powerfully guide them personally deeper into the heart of God.” – Mary Kloska, author of The Holiness of Womanhood

“In this significant spiritual book, Fr. Billy explains that throughout life, every human being is on a spiritual journey to return home to Heaven, to be in the presence of God forever. As I read Fr. Billy’s book, I thought of every human being who has lived, is living, or will live, a virtual ocean of humanity, all traveling towards Heaven. Some limp and carry a heavy burden of sin; others skip along, overconfident in their spirituality; many want to go on their knees, on the roughest part of the road, to do penance for their mortal sins. Still others stroll along because they want to see where everyone is going; and some drag the things that mean the most to them in this life. And yet others try to forge a different path. In five chapters, Fr. Billy gives us the information we need to successfully navigate this journey. Although each and every person’s journey is unique in some ways, Fr. Billy clearly shows us the aspects we have in common. He gives us the signposts we must follow – and that makes this book an important spiritual aid.” — Dr. Cynthia Toolin-Wilson, STL, MFA, Chief Academic Officer, and Professor of Dogmatic and Moral Theology, at  Holy Apostles College and Seminary, Memoirist, Radio Show Host  

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Fr. Dennis J. Billy, C.Ss.R., is Professor Emeritus of the history of moral theology and Christian spirituality at the Alphonsian Academy of the Pontifical Lateran University in Rome and currently serves as The Robert F. Leavitt Distinguished Service Chair in Theology at St. Mary’s Seminary & University in Baltimore. An American Redemptorist of the Baltimore Province, Fr. Billy has advanced degrees from Harvard University, the Pontifical University of St. Thomas (Angelicum), and the Graduate Theological Foundation. The author of numerous books and articles on a variety of religious topics, he is also active in his order’s retreat apostolate and in the ministry of spiritual direction.

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Recent Catholic Philosophy: The Twentieth Century

Recent Catholic Philosophy: The Twentieth Century

Recent Catholic Philosophy: The Twentieth Century

by Alan Vincelette

This presentation of Catholic philosophy in the twentieth-century reveals a remarkable diversity of views. Dr. Vincelette presents this diversity in an expository manner without applying the kind of interpretive framework that is often used in critical commentaries to shape the reader’s judgment inside of a particular paradigm. This is Catholic thought expressed in its finest way, raw and unsaturated, across the intellectual fabric of forty-two important philosophers whose thought has shaped our current century.

Paperback: $39.95 | Kindle: $9.99

Chapter 1: Phenomenology

Max Scheler (1874-1928)
Dietrich Von Hildebrand (1889-1977)
Edith Stein (1891-1942)
Henry Duméry (1920-2012)
Michel Henry (1922-2002)
Enrique Dussel (1934- )
Emmanuel Falque (1963- )

Chapter 2: Neo-Thomism

Réginald Garrigou-Lagrange (1877-1964)
Étienne Gilson (1884-1978)
Jacques Maritain (1882-1973)
Karol Wojtyła [John Paul II] (1920-2005)
John Haldane (1954- )

3. Transcendental Thomism

Pierre Rousselot (1878-1915)
Joseph Maréchal (1878-1944)
Henri De Lubac (1896-1991)
Karl Rahner (1904-1984)
Bernard Lonergan (1904-1984)

4. Personalism

Ferdinand Ebner (1882-1931)
Emmanuel Mounier (1905-1950)
Maurice-Gustave Nédoncelle (1905-1976)
Robert Spaemann (1927-2018)
John Crosby (1944- )

5. Existentialism

Louis Lavelle (1883-1951)
Gabriel Marcel (1889-1973)
Xavier Zubiri y Apalátegui (1898-1983)
Leonardo Polo (1926-2013)
Ferdinand Ulrich (1931- )

6. Analytical Philosophy

Peter Geach (1916-2013)
Gertrude Elizabeth Margaret Anscombe (1919-2001)
Michael Dummett (1925-2011)
Nicholas Rescher (1928- )
Alasdair MacIntyre (1929- )
Charles Margrave Taylor (1931- )
Francis Jacques (1934- )
Bas Van Fraassen (1941- )

7. Postmodernism

Michel De Certeau (1925-1986)
John Caputo (1940- )
Jean-Luc Marion (1946- )
Jean-Yves Lacoste (1953- )
William Desmond (1951- )
Richard Kearney (1954- )
Claude Romano (1967- )

INTERVIEWS

REVIEW

Recent Catholic Philosophy:

The Twentieth Century
by Alan Vincelette
En Route Books & Media
 
What a wonderful resource this turned out to be, along with Dr. Vincelette’s accompanying work A Reader in Recent Catholic Philosophy. For the purposes of this review I will look at some of my own personal favourite recent Catholic philosophers.
 
To begin with, Dr. Dietrich Von Hildebrand. Humanly speaking, I owe him so much. I read his books in the eighties and it made so much sense, especially with regard to the current crisis in the Church. Some might accuse him of an undue pessimism. I think he was right in his analysis. He is surely one of the great defenders of the Catholic Faith in our age. His book Ethics is an attack on moral relativism. Dr. Vincelette notes that the phenomenology adopted by Von Hildebrand is a suitable means to demonstrate the error of relativism, as phenomenology rejects any explanation which fails to do justice to our experiences. We are not limited by the senses as we can also reflect on mental experience. To claim that only what is physically experienced by the senses, as Hume and the Positivists do, is to limit what we mean by experience.
 
For Von Hildebrand, something has value independent of our need for pleasure. To delight in a value is a sort of added extra. A value has intrinsic goodness. It calls us to transcend self-centeredness. Our response to value means being called to reverently submit to something greater than ourselves. We are obliged to give it an adequate response, to do good and avoid evil. Thus morality comes to a fundamental choice which is above the subjectively satisfying. Von Hildebrand is thus a moral realist.
 
I had the privilege of listening to Peter Geach a few years before he died. When I asked him a question after his talk, he responded by quoting from Dr. Faustus! He was one of the earliest Catholic analytical philosophers. He challenged the views of many of his predecessors, including Bertrand Russell. It was Geach who invented the problem of the “stuck potholer.” Is it wrong to intentionally kill a rotund individual blocking the entrance to a cave in order to save other lives? Yes, it is. Geach also wrote a philosophical explanation of why God does not change in himself when he hears our prayers and acts accordingly.
 
Geach was married to Elizabeth Anscombe, one of the most outstanding philosophers of the twentieth century. I attended some of her lectures in the eighties, when she was suitably attired in a manly suit. She was a student of Wittgenstein and his literary executer. She was a courageous defender of the unborn. Her great work Modern Moral Philosophy helped to launch contemporary virtue ethics. Dr. Vincelette notes that the work is often misunderstood by those who claim it rejects natural law theory. Actually, she argues that if you reject the existence of God, you should also give up on concepts like moral obligation. The main problem with modern moral philosophy, according to Anscombe, is in its embrace of a utilitarian point of view that rejects the principle of intrinsically evil acts.
 
Etienne Gilson was an outstanding historian of philosophy in the Thomist tradition, although he did not consider himself a Neo-Thomist. He was critical of the subjectivism of Descartes. If we proceed from thought to the world, we are unable to avoid being trapped in our own minds. We must begin with being. There is no need to make the existence of the world a postulate that needs to be proven. The realist  knows.
 
Like Anscombe, Alasdair MacIntyre is highly critical of modern moral philosophy as it has focused on utility. Morality must return to the Aristotelian idea of virtue. True virtue requires acting for the sake of a genuine human end. Such a virtue-based ethic requires being situated in a social setting and in a narrative tradition.
Dr. Vincelette has given us a splendid overview of some of the great recent Catholic philosophers. A work to return to again and again.
 
– Pravin Thevathasan, Editor, Catholic Medical Quarterly

ABOUT THE AUTHOR 

Dr. Alan Vincelette is the Wilfred L. and Mary Jane Von der Ahe Chair of Philosophy at St. John’s Seminary in Camarillo, California. In addition, he serves as an Adjunct Professor of Philosophy at Holy Apostles College and Seminary in Cromwell, Connecticut.

Dr. Vincelette specializes in ethics and the philosophy of love as well as the history of Catholic philosophy, having written on such topics for the New Catholic Encyclopedia, the Continuum Encyclopedia of British Philosophy, and the Bloomsbury Encyclopedia of Philosophers, among other works, and he continues to teach in these areas for seminarians and laity of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles, the Diocese of Norwich, and nearby dioceses.

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Solidarity and Salvation in Christ in the Light of “Gaudium et Spes”: An Anthropologico-Theological Study

Solidarity and Salvation in Christ in the Light of “Gaudium et Spes”: An Anthropologico-Theological Study

Solidarity and Salvation in Christ in the Light of “Gaudium et Spes”: An Anthropologico-Theological Study

by Msgr. Albert Kuuire

Deep within himself, man longs for a better and longer-lasting life. This deep longing reveals both the ephemeral nature of our material existence and the eternal nature of our spiritual existence, which Jesus Christ has both confirmed and demonstrated. Such an eternal life does truly exist, and Jesus has the power to lead man to it. In fact, it is to this that Jesus invites all of humanity, without distinction, without exception. He offers it to all human beings as SALVATION that comes through him, and in virtue of which all human beings become brothers and sisters to one another through him. This book is an attempt to examine how essential the brotherhood of all humankind is to the achievement of the better life that Christ promises and actually demonstrates in himself.

Paperback: $19.95 | Kindle: $9.99

TESTIMONIALS

“In this epic encounter with West African Dagara culture, Msgr. Albert Kuuire opens a window into our understanding of human solidarity in light of magisterial teaching.” – Dr. Sebastian Mahfood, OP, co-author with Bishop Richard Henning of Missionary Priests in the Homeland: Our Call to Receive

ABOUT THE AUTHOR 

Msgr. Albert Kuuire has served as Vice-Rector and Director of Spiritual Formation at Holy Apostles College & Seminary in Cromwell, CT, USA.

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Coda

Coda

Coda: American Politics, Personal Loss, and Recovery

A Novel by Dick Bishirjian

Senator Bob Hill (R-PA) is sentenced for involuntary manslaughter for an accident in which he was driving under the influence. Prior to completing his sentence in jail, the Senator is ordered to enter a substance abuse treatment program. His personal life and his political ambitions shattered, Sen. Hill is little aware that during treatment at the Betty Ford Clinic he will be surprised by the miracle of a statue that comes to life and challenges his recovery.

Paperback $14.95 | Kindle $9.99

CODA Gallery, which provides one of the scenes for this book, was founded by Connie and David Katz in 1987. For a virtual tour, click here. Special thanks to Samuel Heaton, its current owner, for his providing the photograph (shown here on this page and included in the book) of David Katz.

CODA Gallery
73400 El Paseo, Suite B1
Palm Desert, CA 92260
760.346.4661
800.700.4661
760.776.4010 fax

INTERVIEWS

Kevin Derby, “Conservative Leader, Educator Richard Bishirjian Focuses on Politics, Redemption in New Novel,” Florida Daily, read the interview here.

TESTIMONIALS

In Coda, Dick Bishirjian writes with unique insight into behind-the-scenes political maneuvering. His main character, U.S. Senator Robert “Bob” Hill (R-PA), an educated Catholic conservative nationalist, is not worried about his upcoming re-election; indeed, he is looking beyond it to a possible run for the Presidency in 2024. But, as Bob Hill’s wife, Mary, tells him, he drinks too much. It is this weakness that threatens to destroy any future he might have in politics. CODA is the dramatic story of his struggle to deal with his grief and alcoholism.  A mystical experience of a beautiful dancing lady in blue offers a promise of redemption and a new life.— Joyce Corrington is author of five screenplays for theaters and a television film, The Killer Bees.

Dick Bishirjian nails it in CODA – Those familiar with the inner workings of Washington, D.C. will recognize the settings, issues, personalities, and argot of American politics. The fascinating characters Bishirjian creates in Coda are tested against a DC cauldron of special interests, back biting, and good intentions gone awry.  Bishirjian’s first novel is a splendid mixture of well-researched political science, and a dash of sagacious commentary all bound by an enthralling storyline of gripping literary imagination.”  — Bob Schaffer, Colorado State Senator, 1987-1996 and Member of Congress, R-CO, 1997-2003

Coda! What a novel! Bishirjian, who worked for Nixon, Goldwater and Reagan, succeeds in redeeming politics of its tawdriness to bring out the inherent drama of the power struggle of 21st Century America! At the same time, the personal story of addiction reveals how even powerful men can be surprised by Grace. Bravo, Dick Bishirjian!” — Ronda Chervin, Ph.D., Professor Emerita of Philosophy, Holy Apostles College and Seminary.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Dick Bishirjian’s career was shaped by the influence of William F. Buckley, Jr. Dr. Russell Kirk and Libertarian economist, Friedrich Hayek. That led him to work on three Presidential campaigns, the staff of a U.S. Senator and service in the Reagan Administration.  He earned a Ph.D. in Government at Notre Dame.

 

 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
Other Books by Dick Bishirjian

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