Category Archives: Books

How to become a theologian by Karl Rahner

Biblioteca de Autores Cristianos / Sacrae Theologiae Summa
B.A.C. (Biblioteca de Autores Cristianos) aka Sacrae Theologiae Summa original Latin edition published 1955

When Karl Rahner came to the United States in the 1960s, he gave a talk to some Jesuit seminarians. One of them asked him, “Fr. Rahner, what must one do to become a theologian?” He answered immediately, “The first thing you have to do is master the four volumes of B.A.C.* Then you can begin to become a theologian.”

He added that those four volumes are the best summary of scholastic theology available. Needless to say, the young Jesuit seminarians at the time were rather shocked to hear the famous theologian praise a summary of scholastic and Thomistic theology.

Fr. Kenneth Baker, S.J.

*B.A.C. = Biblioteca de Autores Cristianos, literally “Library of Christian Authors,” the original publisher

The Sacrae Theologiae Summa (The Complete Sacred Theology) is being translated into English for the first time by Fr. Kenneth Baker, S.J.  Split into 8 volumes, to date six of them have been completed.  The planned 8 volumes are:

  • IA Introduction to Theology.  On the True Religion.
  • IB On the Church of Christ.  On Holy Scripture.
  • IIA On the One and Triune God
  • IIB On God the Creator and Sanctifier.  On Sins.
  • IIIA On the Incarnate Word.  Mariology.
  • IIIB On Grace.  On the Infused Virtues.
  • IVA On Baptism, Confirmation, Eucharist, Penance and Anointing.
  • IVB On Holy Orders and Matrimony.  On the Last Things.

The currently available volumes are available by mail order only (not by online order) from www.keepthefaith.org.

Mary Immaculate of Lourdes Bulletin for June 14, 2015

Third Sunday after Pentecost and the Eleventh of the Year – This week’s bulletin for Mary Immaculate of Lourdes, Newton:

Mary Immaculate of Lourdes Bulletin for the week of June 14, 2015
Mary Immaculate of Lourdes Bulletin for the week of June 14, 2015

MaryImmaculate-2015-06-14

Front cover: The Parish Corpus Christi Procession from last Sunday, June 7th, 2015.  The banner preceding the Eucharistic canopy reads: AT THE NAME OF JESUS EVERY KNEE SHOULD BEND.

Parish Directory Information ............ Page 2
Parish Mass Schedule .................... Page 2
Parish Announcements .................... Page 3
Scripture Study ......................... Page 4
Music Program for this Sunday ........... Page 5
“Dear Heart of Jesus” (Recessional Hymn) Pp. 6-7
First Friday Promises ................... Page 8
Health of the Sick ...................... Page 8
Military Prayer List..................... Page 8
Requiescant in Pace...................... Page 8
Latin Mass Propers in English ........... Page 9
Calendar of Masses for the Week ......... Page 10

*Summer Book Study*

David Allen, our Pastoral Associate, will be leading a five week study on the book, When the Church Was Young: Voices of the Early Fathers, by Dr. Marcellino D’Ambrosio. This book is an exciting and rewarding study of the Fathers of the Church. If you have ever wanted to know more about these men, and why their teaching is so critically important to our Catholic faith, this is the study for you! Please join us!

Please visit the Mary Immaculate of Lourdes website and
facebook page for more information.

Mary Immaculate bulletins are available at miol.nu.

Spiritual Reading

(Pastor’s Note from the Mary Immaculate of Lourdes Bulletin for March 18, 2012)

Recently one of our parishioner’s came across a book for spiritual reading entitled: Rediscover Catholicism: A Spiritual Guide to Living with Passion and Purpose, by Matthew Kelly. This parishioner liked it so much that she made a donation of several hundred copies of the book to our parish of Mary Immaculate of Lourdes. (I would have
liked to acknowledge this parishioner by name for her generosity but she has asked to remain anonymous.)

The books are set up in the front vestibule of the church and are offered gratis. The only stipulation is that you take a copy with the intention of actually reading it or with the intention at least of passing it on to somebody who might benefit from it and who would not take it amiss. The book is written in an engaging popular style and is quite solid in its representation of the Catholic faith to our contemporary American society.

To give an example, I quote from the beginning of the chapter on Spiritual Reading:

Books change our lives. Most people can identify a book that has marked a life-changing period for them. It was probably a book that said just the right thing at just the right time. They may have been just words on a page, but they came to life for you and in you, and because of them you will never again be the same. Books really do change our lives, because what we read today walks and talks with us tomorrow. Earlier in our discussion of prayer and contemplation, we spoke of the cause-and-effect relationship between thought and action. Thought determines action, and one of the most powerful influences on thought is the material we choose to read. Reading is to the mind what exercise is to the body and prayer is to the soul… The goal of spiritual reading is to ignite the soul with a desire to grow in virtue and thus become the best-version-of-oneself. Like all other spiritual exercises and activities, spiritual reading seeks to encourage us to live a life of holiness.

Matthew Kelly is making a basic but important point. The habit of Spiritual Reading is one of the building blocks of the moral and spiritual life. It is something every Catholic over the age of 14 has to take responsibility for. We are responsible both for what’s in our minds— and for what’s not in our minds, but should be. We need to continually refresh our thinking and inform ourselves by good, solid reading material that helps us to think about God and the things of God, and that in turn helps us when we seek to pray to God. Ten to fifteen minutes a day is not too hard to find in even the busiest life. If you are making spiritual reading part of your Lenten observance, well and good. But make sure that it becomes a good habit to carry over in your every-day life once the Lenten Season is done.

Fr. Higgins
(Fr. Higgins)

RediscoverCatholicismCover

The Peace of Christ

One of the Messianic titles of Our Lord is “Prince of Peace”.  Wherever Christ’s spirit reigns there is an atmosphere of true peace.  This should be especially true of an individual Christian’s own inner state.  No matter what his circumstances he finds himself with peace of heart.

Unfortunately, as we know, this is often not the case.  A person can have faith and be staying out of mortal sin, and still be experiencing anxiety, sadness, and various other morbid preoccupations.  Partly this is due to the weakness of our human nature.  In other part it is aggravated by the inhumanly fast-paced, technology-driven life we lead.

In the “Providence of books” there is one book, in particular, I can highly recommend to people who are seeking to learn how to recover or maintain their peace of heart under adverse conditions.  This book was written by a Spanish Jesuit priest, Fr. Narciso Irala, in 1944. Its title in English translation is: Achieving Peace of Heart.  It has been recently reprinted by Roman Catholic Books in a hardcover edition and it is also readily available on the used books market.

Fr. Irala himself had experienced a nervous breakdown in his youth and was helped back to mental health by the Jesuit psychologist Fr. Laburu.  Not only did he personally benefit from Fr. Laburu’s skill and insight, but he also developed a deep interest in how to devise methods for dealing with human problems.  Later on in his life, he spent ten years as a Catholic missionary priest in China and gained an extensive knowledge of Oriental psychology.

One of his key insights is that so much of our mental stress problems come from an imbalance between our subjective inner world and the objective world of reality.  The practice of simple, straightforward methods to direct our thoughts to concrete outer reality (for example, focusing the mind on what our senses are perceiving in our immediate environment) has a marvelous effect of relieving us of obsessive thoughts and that tearing-ourselves-apart-inside. He writes:

Although intellectual error brings many to the precipice of evil and disgrace, wanton feelings and emotions are responsible for many more physical tragedies.

To my knowledge this is the best and most generally suitable self-help book that is out there for people who are striving to realize that peace which Christ promises in their personal emotional lives.

Your thoughts are the limit of your activities.  No one takes a single step further than his convictions.  If you imagine to yourself that you cannot do this or that, you will never do it.  “Posse quia posse videntur,” the old Romans used to say.  “They can because they think they can.”  Aside from the times when you need the ministrations or advice of a professional physician, your six best doctors are sun, water, air, exercise, diet and joy.  They are always there waiting for you. They cure your ills and do not cost you a cent.

Sacred Heart
Meditations
(link added by webmaster)

Fr. Higgins
(Fr. Higgins)

Pastor’s Note from the Mary Immaculate of Lourdes Bulletin for December 6, 2009

Splendid Romanesque Edifice

Mary Immaculate of Lourdes
Mary Immaculate of Lourdes’ Splendid Romanesque Edifice

“The city of Newton wellnigh doubled its population during the period 1907-1940, having by 1940 about seventy thousand inhabitants. In its oldest parish, St. Mary’s, Newton Upper Falls, Father Timothy J. Danahy replaced the old wooden church on Chestnut Street with the present splendid Romanesque edifice on Elliot Street, which was dedicated by Archbishop O’Connell on November 24, 1910.  The new Church of Mary Immaculate of Lourdes, as it was called, with its impressive exterior, its graceful campanile, and its unusually fine interior decorations, represented an immense achievement for a congregation of only fifteen hundred people.”

— Excerpted from The History of the Archdiocese of Boston, vol. III: 1866-1943, p. 698  © February 29, 1944