In Behold Your Mother, Tim Staples takes you through the Church's teachings about the Blessed Virgin Mary, showing their firm Scriptural and historical roots and dismantling the objections of those who mistakenly believe that Mary competes ...
In Handed Down: The Catholic Faith of the Early Christians, James L. Papandrea examines that most crucial era in the transmission of Christian truth: the time of the early Church, when the brilliant and holy teachers known as the Church ...
In The Drama of Salvation, Jimmy Akin uses his expertise in Scripture and Church teaching to cut through the confusion and provide clear answers on important issues like: What we need to do to be saved--Whether salvation is a one-time event ...
How can you believe all this stuff? This is the number-one question Catholics get asked--and, sometimes, we ask ourselves.
Don't worry. As Trent Horn (Answering Atheism) explains in Hard Sayings, God's revelation in the Bible is not something Catholics need to be ashamed of or read with a mental reservation.
" - St. Francis of Assisi? Sayings like these are such a part of modern pious tradition that we assume they come from the Bible, the mouths of saints, or the pens of famous Christian writers.
In Real Religion, How to Avoid False Faith and Worship God in Spirit and Truth, popular preacher and professor Fr. Jeffrey Kirby cuts through misguided modern notions--idols, really--about God and religion and takes you back to the ...
Trent Horn can help. In Hard Sayings, Trent looks at dozens of the most confounding passages in Scripture and offers clear, reasonable, and Catholic keys to unlocking their true meaning.
So, how can you be sure the Catholic Church has it right? You'll get your answer from Joe Heschmeyer (Pope Peter, A Man Called Joseph), who deftly joins the Catholic past and present in The Early Church Was the Catholic Church.
But then you no longer have the Lord, says Trent Horn (Why We're Catholic). You have an impostor. In Counterfeit Christs, Trent looks at eighteen phony versions of Jesus that we encounter today.
These nine inspiring stories of crisis and reform should give all Catholics today reason for hope-and a model to follow as we deal with the trials that God has permitted in our own time. Book jacket.
How can we recognize when and how they are influencing us? And most importantly, how do we fight back? In Demons, Deliverance, and Discernment, Fr. Mike Driscoll answers all these questions and more.
"Catholic applogist Karlo Broussard definitively tackles this most misunderstood teaching, giving you the evidence and arguments to see (and explain to others) that purgatory is neither contrary to Scripture nor some fantastical dogma that ...
This can lead not only to personal confusion but--increasingly in our day--conflict and disagreement among Catholics. In Teaching with Authority, Jimmy Akin shows you how to get it all straight.
In Secrets from Heaven, Fr. Sebastian Walshe helps you break free from stale and familiar takes on the Gospel, giving you new eyes to see and new ears to hear the inexhaustible depths of Christ's wisdom.
Amid imperial intrigue, military menace, and bitter theological debate, a hero arises in the form of a homely little monk named Athanasius, who stands against the world to prove that there could never be a Great Apostasybecause Jesus ...
In The Apostasy that Wasn't, Rod Bennett follows up his bestseller Four Witnesses with an account of the historical events that led him out of his own belief in apostasy theory and into the Catholic Church.
In Pope Peter, Joe Heschmeyer says that papal flaws are an opportunity to understand what the papacy really means, not to abandon it (or the Church).
"Whatever I have learned," writes Karl Keating, "I have learned from masters of the craft.
The author draws from his own experience as a convert and Catholic apologist to help you guide your Protestant friends and family members on the voyage.