Wednesday, July 08, 2009

Posted on Pope St. Nicholas V today

If you are not a member of Pope St Nicholas V Yahoo group yet, consider joining! Maureen Wittman and I post suggestions for good books you can request from your local library! You will just receive emails sporadically, that's it!

Title: Credo for Today: What Christians Believe
Author: Joseph Ratzinger
Publisher: Ignatius Press
Date Published: April 2009
ISBN: 1586172476
Price: $19.95
Amazon link: http://www.amazon.com/Credo-Today-What-Christians-Believe/dp/1586172476

Product Description
What do Christians believe? What gives meaning to our life? What is the purpose of life? The Christian answer to these questions is found in the Creed, in the profession of faith. But what do the articles of this confession actually mean? And how to they affect our lives?
Joseph Ratzinger, now Pope Benedict XVI, takes a fresh look at these timeless questions. This work is a reflection of the profound, personal insights of Benedict XVI, but also of the great foundations of Christianity: faith, hope, and charity.

Ratzinger writes eloquently and persuasively about the importance for followers of Christ to understand well what they believe so one can live as a serious Christian in today's secular world. He talks in depth about the true meaning of faith, hope, and love-the love of God and the love of neighbor. He also discusses the crucial importance of a lived faith, for the believer himself as well as being a witness for our age, and striving to bring faith in line with the present age that has veered off into rampant secularism and materialism.

In our generation the Christian Faith finds itself in a much deeper crisis than at any other time in the past. In this situation it is no solution to shut our eyes in fear in the face of pressing problems, or to simply pass over them. If faith is to survive this age, then it must be lived, and above all, lived in this age. And this is possible only if a manifestation of faith is shown to have value for our present day, by growing to knowledge and fulfillment.
-Pope Benedict XVI

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