Books on Catholic Parenting

Lately, we have given a number of talks on the responsibility of parents to be the primary educators of their children in the Faith.  In addition to our Raising Catholic Kids for Their Vocations (TAN, 2019), we have begun recommending a great new book by our friend Fr. Carter Griffin, Forming Families, Forming Saints (Emmaus Road, 2024).

Drawing on his own experience as a seminary rector and the wisdom of the Church concerning Christian formation contained in the Program for Priestly Formation, Fr. Griffin examines the four basic areas that the Program outlines: human, spiritual, intellectual, and apostolic.  In each area he examines relevant virtues and illustrates them with examples from the lives of the saints and his own pastoral experience.

This book helps parents understand more concretely their task to form their children in the Faith and provides practical examples and inspiration for doing so.  Our task as parents is to help our children get to heaven.  Of course, it’s only by God’s grace that  we can do so, but it helps to have a clear picture of what growing in holiness as a family looks like.  Fr. Griffin gives us that picture with his book.

Post: Faith Everywhere

Faith Everywhere

Faith Everywhere

As we finish up our third week in Poland I am contemplating  all we have seen and done in this truly  Catholic country.  It has been an amazing trip as we experience so many different parts of the country, churches and cathedrals, universities and seminaries, deserts and salt mines, cities and small villages, medieval castles and palaces. What really stands out the most to me is how the faith of the people is evident everywhere. Of course you see it in the churches and in the homes, but it is also so visible in public places. There are pictures and statues of the Blessed Mother and of Jesus on buildings and even on street corners, not just in the small villages but in the cities. There are statues of Saints all over the place. We see St John Paul II and St Faustina  everywhere as well as the Divine Mercy image of Jesus and the icon of Our Lady of Czestochowa. Little girls and boys wear their white first communion outfits everywhere. The people of Poland are proud of their history and their faith in God and are not afraid to show it.