You are currently viewing the old catholic.com which has been temporarily archived. Please visit the new www.catholic.com

ON THE FORUMS


"; document.write(HotScript); //-->

 View Forums

 FREE Membership

 FREE Newsletters

OUR SPONSORS




Please support our sponsors

CATHOLIC QUOTES


 Encyclopedia RSS

 Catholic Encyclopedia

SPECIAL OFFERS


Catholic Answers Live - Special Offers


U  p    F  r  o  n  t



By Karl Keating



This Rock
Volume 4, Number 3
  March 1993  

 Up Front
By Karl Keating
 Letters
 Dragnet
 JAVERT'S PROGENY
By JACK TAYLOR
 Classic Apologetics
The formation of "Guildesmen"
By Walter Jewell
 Verse by Verse
 Old Testament Guide
Wisdom
By Antonio Fuentes
 Iron Sharpens Iron
Infallibility
By Canon Francis J. Ripley
 Fathers Know Best
Is Christ inferior to the Father?
 Quick Questions

  Subscribe
  Permissions

Once I came across a deacon who explained that he didn't read books written before Vatican II. I suppose his homilies established that beyond doubt. I had to empathize with the people who had to listen to him Sunday mornings. After all, what is less useful than a speaker with no feel for the day before yesterday?

A far better attitude was shown by Cardinal James Gibbons (1834-1921), certainly one of the brightest ecclesiastics in American history. He claimed that in his whole life he had read only one hundred books, but they were the world's best books, and he read them over and over again. He wasn't afraid of old books, because he knew that in them lay wisdom and comfort and plain sense.

If that's true of old books, it's also true of old booklets. From time to time we republish in these pages long-forgotten booklets. Their original publication may predate most of our readers, but we think they still speak to us, over the decades, with power and clarity.

In this issue we reprint the first half of a booklet issued for the Catholic Evidence Guild, a society of laymen who stood on street corners and explained and defended the faith. Some of the terms may seem old-fashioned, and the deference accorded to priests as apologists might strike some as quaint (apologetics is almost exclusively a lay task today), but we think you will find in this booklet much to rejoice in.


This Rock -- Free Offer


Home | Seminars | Library | Radio | This Rock Magazine | Shop | Donate | Chastity | Advertise | Search