ONLINE TIPS FOR PARENTS & GUARDIANS
safekidslist.pdf | |
File Size: | 31 kb |
File Type: |
guidetoonlinecommuncationtools.pdf | |
File Size: | 1906 kb |
File Type: |
sexting_ncpc-factsheet2.pdf | |
File Size: | 90 kb |
File Type: |
An International Work Of Reference On The Constitution, Doctrine, Discipline, And History Of The Catholic Church
WELCOME to the home of the largest, most authoritative Catholic Encyclopedia resource on the web. The Catholic Encyclopedia (TCE) was published in 15 volumes between 1907 and 1912 by the Robert Appleton Company. In 1913 the publisher, renamed as Encyclopedia Press, Inc., released a new edition. A year later (1914) a comprehensive Index was released as Volume 16. This Original Catholic Encyclopedia (OCE) site holds the complete 16 volume set with the original text of all articles (~11,500) faithfully preserved. Catholic Answers began the process of creating an authoritative reproduction of this classic, world-renowned reference by scanning 14,000+ pages from the original volumes and processing the scans with OCR software. Issues that arose from the scanning/OCR process were addressed by a team of Catholic editors and technicians. All TCE content on this site was produced by Catholic Answers directly from original Catholic Encyclopedia print volumes. http://oce.catholic.com/index.php?title=Home |
The Story of a Soul (l'Histoire d'une Âme) is the autobiography of Thérèse of Lisieux. It was first published on September 30, 1898, a year to the day after her death from tuberculosis at the age of 24, on September 30, 1897. The book was a single volume formed from three distinct manuscripts - manuscripts of different length, written at different times, addressed to different people, and differing from one another in character. The work of unifying these disparate manuscripts was carried out by Pauline, the sister of Thérèse. It was initially published with a limited audience in mind, the Carmelite convents and certain religious personalities, and just 2000 copies of the 475 page book were printed.[1] It quickly became a publishing phenomenon however and Sister Thérèse of the Child Jesus was canonised in 1925.
Thérèse Martin was the youngest of nine children, of whom four entered the Carmelite convent in the Normandy town of Lisieux. She was known as the Little Flower, and her autobiography is also known as The Springtime History of a Little White Flower. Marina Warner: "Anyone growing up a Catholic before the reforms of Vatican Two, would have known the sickly and sentimental cult surrounding this young nun - but the pious and rather repellent excesses she inspired shouldn't blind one to the radical affirmation of ordinary lives her sainthood also stands for. She was young, modest, private and obscure, and did nothing remarkable, except struggle to be good."https://archive.org/details/StorySoul Catechism of the Catholic Church
http://www.usccb.org/beliefs-and-teachings/what-we-believe/catechism/catechism-of-the-catholic-church/epub/ |
|
|
|
|
|
|