Spiritual reading (Catholic/Christian)?

Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:The Shack.

NO NO NO! The Shack is full of heresy. If you're a cafeteria "Catholic" ( ie, fake Catholic) then read it. If you're a Traditional Catholic, and want areal book on Catholic spirituality, then the best book for you is The Three Ages of the Interior Life, by Reginald Garrigou-Lagrange.


Explain why you don't like The Shack? I thought it was amazing. But then, I'm open-minded and don't mind if there are ethnic depictions of God, etc.

This documentary proves The Shack is heresy.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=epEQv6-5u0U
God the FATHER being portrayed as a woman should tell you all you need to know. The man who wrote The Shack is a heretic.


Eh. Plenty of Catholics have read and benefited from the Shack, and I personally don't think the Trinity needs to be thought of in gendered roles. Theology evolves.

Nonsense. Theology evolves for the cafeteria Catholic. Traditional Catholic theology has been pretty much the same since the Council of Trent. Trad Catholics reject Vatican 2 of course.

Nonsense

Vatican two is traditional catholism - straight from the Vatican -- and sort of proof that theology evolves, though some may deny it and stay stuck in their own dark ages.
linearme
Member Offline
http://www.sacredspace.ie/

Make sure to click on the "Need Inspiration?" link when you get to the Word of God page.

Anonymous
Living Buddha, Living Christ by Thich Nhat Hanh. One of my favorites.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Please recommend some books. I am a Catholic convert in a fallow period looking for inspiration to help me refocus. Thanks.


Check out Dynamic Catholic. They have some really great books. Rediscover Jesus would be a good one.
Anonymous
Three novels given to me years ago by an a friend who converted who said they spurred his conversion:

The End of the Affair--Graham Greene

The Devil's Advocate--Morris West

Brideshead Revisited--Evelyn Waugh

Orthodoxy by G.K. Chesterton is very good, and then there are always his Father Brown books for lighter reading. Of Greene's later books, you may also enjoy Monsignor Quixote; the Power and the Glory and A Burnt Out Case, earlier books, are heavier reads but still highly recommended, as is most of the Greene oeuvre. Would second the C.S. Lewis recommendation.
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