Saints G-J


Saint Hyacinth of Poland
by Mary Fabyan Windeatt

$11.00 - 189 pages - Soft Cover 
Tan Books and Publishers

     "The Tartars, Farther!  They've come!"

     A shiver ran through the other friars as they heard these words from a terrified novice.  Then, moments later, came blood-curdling screams not far off in the distance.  The long-dreaded attack had finally come. 

     Father Hyacinth calmly took from the tabernacle the ciborium containing the Consecrated Hosts.  "All will be well," he said.  "Just follow me."  Then he picked up the miraculous statue of Our Lady with his other arm and headed for the street.

     "Christians!" screamed the Tartars as they caught sight of the little band.  "Burn them!  Kill them!" 

     But somehow the barbarians were unable to carry out their bloody intentions.  By some unseen force, their swords clattered to the ground, their torches sputtered out.  What was happening?  Fear was stamped on every pagan face.

     Then Hyacinth spoke again: "Come, my sons.  Down to the water!"

     There were no boats on the river.  What did Father Hyacinth have in mind now?

Patron Saint of 1st Communicants
by Mary Fabyan Windeatt

$8.00 - 82 pages - Soft Cover 
Tan Books and Publishers

     A birthday dinner was being given for little Imelda Lambertini.  She was 5 years old.  Imelda's wealthy father and mother had given her toys, pictures, jewelry, perfumes, and beautiful silks to be made into dresses.  It was a wonderful sight, and Imelda was very pleased.  But presently she grew thoughtful.

     "I was wondering if I could have just one more present Mother?"
     "Greedy girl!" laughed her father.  "What more do you want than this?"
     Imelda looked up.  "I'd like to receive Our Lord in Holy Communion," she whispered.

     This was one present that Imelda's parents could not give her.  Back in the year 1327, Holy Communion was not given until age 14.  It seemed that no one would grant Imelda's great desire.  But Imelda knew that Our Lord can do anything.  She would beg Him everyday to come to her. 

     Would Our Lord hear Imelda's prayer?  What answer would He give?  And would He have to perform a miracle in order to answer her?

     This book gives the answers and tells the wonderful story of how little Imelda came to be the Patroness of First Communicants.

The Cure of Ars
by Father Bartolomew O' Brien

$5.50 - 110 pages - Soft Cover 
Tan Books and Publishers

    At the time of his death in 1859, over 100,000 people a year visited the little village of Ars, northwest of Lyons, France, and its beloved Cure, St. John Vianney – known everywhere as “the Cure of Ars.” Today over 500,000 people visit this simple farming town in the middle of France, where they come to see the incorrupt body of one of the greatest saints in the history of the Church, and to visit in prayerful meditation the simple church where the holy Cure converted thousands and reconciled to Jesus Christ and His Church tens of thousands of souls.

      Yet, this is a most improbable story, for here is the story of a saint who, with only two years’ formal education before entering upon his priestly studies, had the greatest difficulty passing his examinations and becoming a priest. And even when he did, he was given one of the poorest, most remote and most run-down parishes in all of France. But within a few short years, he reformed his parish and his town, and in the process established such a reputation, that the world began to seek him out and finally beat a path to his door. The Devil himself once revealed to St. John Vianney that if there were three such men as he alive at one time, his kingdom (the Devil’s) would be destroyed. Just four years after his canonization in 1925, Pope Pius XI named him Patron Saint of Parish Priest.” 

The Cure D'Ars Today
by George William Rutler

$11.95 - 273 pages - Soft Cover 
Ignatius Press

 THE CURÉ D’ARS TODAY -  St. John Vianney



“In the Cure of Ars, we have an incomparable guide. He remains for all an unequalled model both of the carrying out of the ministry and of the holiness of the minister.” - Pope John Paul II
 

“Everyone who thinks Vianney already well known will find not simply new information, but what has new meaning for each discoverer. That meaning may differ for each reader. The descriptions of the Cure’s encounters with Satan and “his lesser angels” and of the hours in the confessional were my own personal crucial rediscoveries. The retreat by Pope John Paul II given at Ars is an extraordinary bonus in this extraordinary work… An important fascinating work by an important, fascinating author.” - John Cardinal O’Conner From the Foreword


 

The Cure of Ars
by Mary Fabyan Windeatt

$12.00 - 211 pages - Soft Cover 
Tan Books and Publishers

     "So you've decided to give in to the Devil," said the priest.  John started back in dismay.
     "Oh no, Father!"
     "But you just told me you were giving up your studies for the priesthood," responded Father Balley.
     What was poor John Vianney to do?  Having begun his schooling much older than the other boys, he had found it impossible to keep up with them, and a couple of days ago he had been sent home from the seminary!  It looked as if it were all over for his cherished hope of becoming a priest.
     But Fr. Balley was not going to give up.  He was sure that John had a vocation, and now a plan had just occurred to him.  "Listen, John," he began...
     This book tells what took place next.  It also tells about the time John Vianney hid in a hayloft to escape the police, about the terrible sins he discovered when he became the cure or parish priest in the town of Ars, as well as his strategy for loosening the Devil's grip on souls there.  It also describes what the Devil did back to Fr. Vianney, as well as what happened when Fr. Vianney tried to run away from his parish.

The Little Catechism of Cure
by St. John Vianney

$6.00 - 139 pages - Soft Cover 
Tan Books and Publishers

The Little Catechism of The Cure of Ars

     The Little Catechism of the Cure of Ars is an incomparable analysis of the spiritual battle we all face to save our souls and is probably the simplest and most persuasive exhortation ever written admonishing us to renounce our sins and to lead a pure and holy life.
     Divided into 36 short chapters, The Little Catechism covers every basic aspect of our spiritual struggle and the means Jesus Christ has provided through His Church to overcome our spiritual problems.  But more than this, The Little Catechism reflects the wisdom of a lifetime of labor spent in the vineyard of the Lord, wisdom stated in a profound yet simple and direct way that the reader will find nowhere else but in the writing of the Cure of Ars.  For here we find many of the Cure's memorable and epigrammitic sayings, so expressive of spiritual truths, such as, "I know two very certain ways of becoming poor: they are working on Sunday and taking other people's property."  "The Christian lives in the midst of crosses, as the fish lives in the sea."  "We are like little mirrors in which God contemplates Himself.  How can you expect that God should recognize His likeness in an impure soul?"

St. Joan Of Arc
by John Beevers

$13.50 - 190 pages - Soft Cover 
Tan Books and Publishers

     "This is the story of a young girl who died when she was nineteen.  She was no beauty and no scholar.  She could neither read nor write.  She came from the obscurity of a small, remote hamlet and in less than fifteen months had crowned a king, set in motion events that were to save her country from foreign domination, defeated the forces of a great nation, and changed the history of western Europe.  She was burned to death as a heretic. 

       Nearly five hundred years later she was canonized and became the patron saint of the country she saved.  It is one of the most astonishing stories in history.  This is an attempt to tell it simply but accurately and to peel away the smothering husk in which some historians have enclosed it.  It is a task I have enjoyed and I hope that what I have done will enable others to feel the magic of those far-off summer days when this young girl, astride her charger, rode conquering through the fields and woods of France.  But it is far more than the story of a conquest, far more than a medieval pageant.  It is the story of a great saint - Joan of Arc."   -  John Beevers

40 Dreams of St. John Bosco
by St. John Bosco

$15.00 - 224 pages - Soft Cover 
Tan Books and Publishers

     For 60 years St. John Bosco experienced remarkable vision-like dreams, which were so lively and vivid that he would often awaken exhausted the next morning.  The dreams frequently featured the actual boys at the Oratory; however, their value goes far beyond this, since they bring to life the realities of the Catholic Faith in a way that is absolutely unique!
     In these dreams St. John Bosco saw his boys facing fearsome and disgusting animals or involved in battles, banquets, journeys, etc. - which would reveal to him the state of their souls.  The boys (and priests) of the Oratory eagerly anticipated the narration of new dreams, and for many boys the dreams resulted in the rectifying of bad Confessions, recovery of Sanctifying Grace, preservation from sin and even holy deaths.  Cahtolics who may not be inspired by abstract spiritual writings will be able to see in these dreams the evil of impurity, disobedience, gluttony, pride, bad Confessions, sacrilegious Communions, etc. - as well as the reality of Hell and the danger of flirting with temptations.  They also will see the great power of good Confessions and devout Holy Communions, as well as the rewards in store for those who practice purity, obedience, temperance and humility, but especially for those who preserve their baptismal innocence - a precious gem far too little regarded by most Catholics.

Saint Joseph of Copertino
by Fr. Angelo Pastrovicchi

$8.00 - 135 pages - Soft Cover 
Tan Books and Publishers

     St. Joseph of Copertino (Cupertino in Spanish), who lived from 1603-1663, is one of the truly unusual saints of the Church.  He was born in a stable and was so poor in school that he passed his exam for the priesthood only because the bishop asked the one question he was prepared for.  Nonetheless, he developed great wisdom and knowledge of holy things.  He performed severe penances, such as wearing a heavy chain around his waist and fasting seven times a year for forty days each!  But he was most famous for his ecstatic flights or levitations, of which seventy are recorded in the acts of his beatification.  He levitated almost daily at Mass - sometimes for two hours.  People flocked to him because of his kindness, and so many attended his Masses that the church could not contain them.  St. Joseph worked numerous miracles and, like St. Francis of Assisi, even spoke with animals.  On one occasion he raised to life a flock of sheep that had been killed by enormous hailstones.  Although he could smell the stench of sin in wrongdoers, he himself exuded a lovely bodily perfume.  He performed exorcisms by reciting the Litany of Loreto.  And the devil even said of him:  "Friar Joseph is the worst foe we have."  This biography, portraying one of the great saints of the Franciscan Order, was written in 1753, at the time of his beatification.  It is based on the Acta Sanctorum and the official documentation from the process for his beatification.  Canonized in 1767, St. Joseph of Copertino is the Patron of Students and of those who fly.

Saint John Masias
by Mary Fabyan Windeatt

$8.00 - 156 pages - Soft Cover 
Tan Books and Publishers

     St. John Masias

     "I'm going to see Father Prior about this!" sputtered old Father Francis, as the little group of priests and brothers peered into the chapel at Brother John.  Brother John was praying ardently - several feet off the floor!  "There is no need to have these...these acrobatics!  And right in the sanctuary, too!"
     The others did not know what to say.  "Brother John is a saint," ventured on brother.
     Father Francis, however, dismissed the wonder with a wave of his hand.  "I'm quite sure that Brother John is a saint," he declared, "but I still see no reason for him to float about in the air!  Some of our younger brothers may think they should be able to float in the air too!" 
     "Oh, no!" exclaimed one young priest.  "That won't happen!"
     "That's what you think!" came the reply.  "I shall speak to Father Prior and ask him to put a stop to all such exhibitions.  Brother John will have to obey him!"
     What would the Prior say?  Would he agree with Father Francis?