Sacred Heart Radio Bookclub

1 hour radio broadcasts of the Bookclub
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  • Sacred Heart Radio — Bookclub Bookclub Bookclub

    Posted on December 9th, 2009 admin No comments

    Welcome to the Sacred Heart Radio Bookclub page. These are previously aired programs from the popular Sound Insight program with hosts Dr. Tom Curran, Fr. Kurt Nagel, Fr. Jim Northrop, & Pam Gunderson (not a Dr. or Fr. but she’s sharp as a tack).

    To save the mp3 audio program right click the link and Save As to a folder on your computer. Remember the folder location that you are putting the file into. ie “My Document, etc.”

    • note each recorded mp3 file is about 25megs in size and will play in your selected player.
  • “Born to Love” by Fr Waiss aired 11/23/09

    Posted on December 6th, 2009 admin No comments

     Born To Love by Fr Waiss 11-23-09      Right Click to download audio file

    Born to Love is a clear, solid presentation of Catholic teaching on homosexuality and related topics. Fr. John Waiss’ presentation is well grounded in John Paul II’s personalist philosophy and Theology of the Body, making convincing arguments that are accessible to all. He focuses on the intrinsic good of the person and on the true meaning of sexuality as created by God. This is much more helpful than a list of “do’s and don’ts.”

  • “The Rite: Making of a Modern Exorcist” by Matt Baglio 11-02-09

    Posted on December 6th, 2009 admin No comments

    The Rite by Matt Baglio aired on 11-02-09    Right Click to download audio file

    In The Rite, journalist Matt Baglio uses the astonishing story of one American priest’s training as an exorcist to reveal that the phenomena of possession, demons, the Devil, and exorcism are not merely a remnant of the archaic past, but remain a fearsome power in many people’s lives even today.

  • “Fr Brown Mysteries” by GK Chesterton aired 09/28/09

    Posted on September 29th, 2009 admin No comments

    Fr Brown Mysteries  by GK Chesterton aired 09-28-09    right click to download audio file

    Immortalized in these famous stories, G.K. Chesterton’s endearing amateur sleuth has entertained countless generations of readers. For, as his admirers know, Father Brown’s cherubic face and unworldly simplicity, his glasses and his huge umbrella, disguise a quite uncanny understanding of the criminal mind at work.

  • “The Cure of Ars” by Abbe Frances Trochu aired 08/24/09

    Posted on August 25th, 2009 admin No comments

    The Cure D’Ars - Trochu. The definitive life, based on the official “Process of Beatification and Canonization,” and thus totally factual and documented. Of humble education and assigned to a forgotten farmers’ village, he attracted the whole world to Ars and was proclaimed “Patron Saint of Parish Priests” in 1929. He ate one meal a day, slept only a few hours a night, heard confessions up to 17 hours a day, converted thousands. His body remains incorrupt. A grace-filled story of total love of God!

  • “How Catholic Church Built Western Civilization” by Thomas Woods aired 07-20-09

    Posted on June 20th, 2009 admin No comments

    How Catholic Church Built Western Civilization by Thomas Woods aired 07-20-09

    Ask a college student today what he knows about the Catholic Church and his answer might come down to one word: “corruption.” But that one word should be “civilization.” Western civilization has given us the miracles of modern science, the wealth of free-market economics, the security of the rule of law, a unique sense of human rights and freedom, charity as a virtue, splendid art and music, a philosophy grounded in reason, and innumerable other gifts that we take for granted as the wealthiest and most powerful civilization in history. But what is the ultimate source of these gifts? Bestselling author and professor Thomas E. Woods, Jr. provides the long neglected answer: the Catholic Church.  In How the Catholic Church Built Western Civilization, you’ll learn: · Why modern science was born in the Catholic Church · How Catholic priests developed the idea of free-market economics five hundred years before Adam Smith · How the Catholic Church invented the university · Why what you know about the Galileo affair is wrong · How Western law grew out of Church canon law · How the Church humanized the West by insisting on the sacredness of all human life No institution has done more to shape Western civilization than the two-thousand-year-old Catholic Church—and in ways that many of us have forgotten or never known. How the Catholic Church Built Western Civilization is essential reading for recovering this lost truth.

  • “Come Creator Spirit” by Fr Cantalamessa aired 06/01/09

    Posted on June 3rd, 2009 admin No comments

    Come Creator Spirit aired 06-01-09   right click to download audio file

    Written particularly for the Charismatic Renewal in the English-speaking world, Come, Creator Spirit is a helpful guide for a better understanding of the Holy Spirit. In this detailed commentary on the famous hymn Veni Creator, sung at the beginning of every new year, ecumenical council, and priestly ordination, Father Raniero Cantalamessa describes the Paraclete and gives praise to its glory. Progressing through the hymn line by line, he provides insights, reflections, hymnography of Christian traditions, and testimonies of the saints.

    This book describes the Church’s experience of the Spirit of today, as well as the past. The biblical and theological base of the hymn opens the reader to the perspectives and inspirations in this book. Its vision of the Holy Spirit in the history of salvation emerges as the reader progresses through the reading. In the celebration of the ecumenical character of Veni Creator, this book draws from Orthodox, Protestant, and Catholic traditions for all those who wish to seek a better understanding of the Holy Spirit.

  • “Death of a Pope” by Piers Paul Read aired 05/15/09

    Posted on May 16th, 2009 admin 1 comment

    Death of a Pope aired 05-15-09   right click download audio file

    In The Death of a Pope, the versatile Piers Paul Read, who has distinguished himself in many genres, returns to what can be called the ecclesiastical thriller. If the mystery looks to the past to explain a crime already committed, the thriller aims to prevent something from happening. When that something is a terrorist act, planned for the Vatican, drama is assured, and Read, writing in the present tense but in multiple viewpoint, takes us from character to character, from city to city, from continent to continent, with everything converging on the Vatican during the conclave following the death of John Paul II. To say more would rob the reader of his pleasure. The Death of a Pope is a great Read - in every sense of the term.
    - Ralph McInerny

  • “Abuse of Language - Abuse of Power” by Josef Pieper aired 05/04/09

    Posted on May 6th, 2009 admin No comments

    Abuse of Language - Abuse of Power aired 05-04-09   right click here to download audio file

    One of the great Catholic philosophers of our day reflects on the way language has been abused so that, instead of being a means of communicating the truth and entering more deeply into it, and of the acquisition of wisdom, it is being used to control people and manipulate them to achieve practical ends. Reality becomes intelligible through words. Man speaks so that through naming things, what is real may become intelligible. This mediating character of language, however, is being increasingly corrupted. Tyranny, propaganda, mass-media destroy and distort words. They offer us apparent realities whose fictive character threatens to become opaque. Josef Pieper shows with energetic zeal, but also with ascetical restraint, the path out of this dangerous situation. We are constrained to see things again as they are and from the truth thus grasped, to live and to work.

  • “My Name is Asher Lev” by Chaim Potok aired 04/06/09

    Posted on April 7th, 2009 admin No comments

    My Name is Asher Lev aired 04-06-09   right click here to download audio file 

         Asher Lev introduces himself in the opening lines of his story. He is an observant Jew, he is the talk of the town following the exhibiting of his painting Brooklyn Crucifixion - not only do observant Jews not paint crucifixions, they do not paint at all - he is viewed as a traitor.
         The still very young Asher Lev then begins to recount his life that lead to this predicament. He starts from when he was about four years old, an ordinary Brooklyn lad the only son born to a scholarly Hasidic family. But it is soon evident that he has a remarkable talent fro drawing. The story follows the difficult realisation of the talent which leads him to great critical acclaim, but ostracism from is family and home.