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Archived - October 2016

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Learning to be Disciples from Jesus' Questions

Jesus used questions throughout his ministry—not to find out something he didn’t know—but to probe into people’s deepest, most unsettled places. Catholic author, speaker, and educator Allan F. Wright identified 25 of those questions and organized them into five spiritual stages that will lead you on the road to discipleship. Ave Maria Press asked him about how people can relate both to the questions and the people Jesus questioned. Ave Maria Press: What is the most important thing you want people to come away with after reading 25 Life-Changing Questions from the Gospels? Allan Wright: “I love the quote attributed to Dorothy Day, ‘I want to comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable.’ It’s my hope that those who have been away from the Church or those who have never before seriously considered Jesus, spirituality, or the life of faith may come a step closer to a relationship with Jesus through reading this book and answering for themselves the questions of Jesus. For the committed believer, it’s my hope that the middle chapters will rattle them a bit and challenge them to go deeper in their faith.” Ave: How will readers relate to those Jesus is questioning? Wright: “These questions from Jesus are divine questions which I believe continue to resonate deep within each and every human being and call for a response. The reader can easily change places with the original audience to hear the question in the context Jesus posed it. However, the beauty and simplicity of how Jesus taught was very often straightforward. Even through the use of parables Jesus turns to us and asks us for a response. Jesus trusts that the questions he asks will stir something within us and He trusts that we can come to the proper conclusion." Ave: Can you talk about the five stages of spiritual development that you outline in the book? Wright: “In my work as a teacher and in evangelization, I have found that we encounter people who come to us from a myriad of starting points. Some people have never been exposed to anything religious through no fault of their own, others have had some exposure to the faith, Jesus and Christianity (for better or worse), and others are on the road of discipleship following Christ in the providence of their daily lives. “Due to these various starting points and considering the 100-plus questions Jesus asks throughout the four Gospels, I wanted this book to be accessible and meaningful to the seeker and to the committed disciple. I wanted to lead people through a natural progression—from A to Z if you will—using a selection of the questions Jesus asks. So for each of the five sections I choose five questions that would ask the reader to consider, reflect upon or ponder. These initial stages of spiritual development that I concentrated on were: spiritual curiosity, spiritual openness leading to deciding for Christ, interior spiritual discipline, moral discipline and union with Christ’s body . . . the Church.” Ave: How will these questions lead us on the road to discipleship?        Wright: “Maps and GPSes provide direction to destinations. The Church certainly has answers but I’ve found that great questions assist people in discovering the answers for themselves. The roadmap to discipleship gently leads us to God one step at a time for it can’t be forced. Through consideration of these questions of Jesus and answering them from the heart, the reader will be welcomed, encouraged, and challenged on the road which Jesus asks us to follow.”

Vogt Signs with Ave Maria Press for 'Why I Am Catholic'

Bestselling author, popular blogger, and Catholic keynote speaker Brandon Vogt will release his new book, Why I Am Catholic (And You Should Be Too), with Ave Maria Press in the fall of 2017. Ave Executive Editor Jon M. Sweeney acquired and will edit the title. Vogt, content director for Word on Fire Catholic Ministries, was one of the millennial “nones” when it came to religion—that is until he began a passionate search for truth as a college student, a truth that led him unexpectedly to the Catholic Church in 2008. Why I Am Catholic traces Vogt’s journey and makes a refreshing, twenty-first-century case for Catholicism. “For most people in our culture, Catholicism isn't on their radar. They're absorbed with other things—work, family, entertainment,” he said. “Millions have fled organized religion, and many more have rejected God altogether (atheists and agnostics are among the fastest growing religious groups). What we need is a fresh, reasonable case for Catholicism, one that leads people to consider it anew or perhaps for the first time.” Written especially with atheists, agnostics, and religious “nones” in mind, Vogt will present the evidence of how Catholicism is good, beautiful, and true and help any seeker discover why they should be Catholic as well. Vogt also will provide examples from the work of G. K. Chesterton, C. S. Lewis, Bishop Robert Barron, Michelangelo, and the saints to reinforce his arguments. “My hope for this book is that it will serve as a compelling re-proposal of the Catholic Church to many jaded people who are disenchanted with religion, while offering current Catholics a much-needed dose of confidence and clarity to firm their faith against an increasingly skeptical culture,” said Vogt, who established the website Strange Notions, the central place for dialogue between Catholics and atheists. Ave Maria Press is pleased to work with Vogt to make the case for Catholicism to a growing number of people who have left religion behind. “Brandon Vogt brings passion, energy, intelligence, and an entrepreneurial spirit to every project he undertakes,” said Ave publisher Thomas Grady. “From the very first moment that we began talking about Why I Am Catholic, I knew that its message would resonate with broad audience of both seekers and believers.” Vogt, was named one of the “Top 30 Catholics Under 30,” and is the author of six books, including Return: How to Draw Your Child Back to the Church and Catholicism: The New Evangelization.  His work has been featured by media outlets including NPR, Fox News, CBS, EWTN, Vatican Radio, Our Sunday Visitor, National Review, and Christianity Today. He is a regular guest on Catholic radio. Vogt and his wife, Kathleen, live in Oviedo, Florida, with their five children.

Tools for Your Spiritual Battle with Fear

What are the sources of anxiety, stress, and fear you experience in your life? Popular Catholic speaker and author Sonja Corbitt believes that these often-paralyzing emotions are the direct result of our everyday battles against sin and temptation. In her new book Fearless, Corbitt equips us with the spiritual tools we need to restore our spiritual well-being. She talked with Ave Maria Press about the goals of the book. Ave Maria Press: How is Fearless different from Unleashed? Sonja Corbitt: The process of allowing the Holy Spirit to unleash us from toxic relationships, self-medicating and other bad habits, repeating circumstances, and overwhelming desires begins painfully. We assume things are going to get better right away since we’re truly trying to follow God, but instead they seem to get worse! Why is that? That’s when we become fearful and are tempted to all sorts of giving up and acting out and anxiety and depression. Fearless shines the light of God’s Word on our discouragement and anxiety in the process of following God and helps dissipate the fear of it. Unleashed helps us identify where we’re stuck in patterns. Fearless offers tools for the battles we are facing and will face in following God out of our destructive patterns, especially in our time in history. Ave: What’s the most important thing you want readers to come away with after reading Fearless? Corbitt: Freedom from fear through a more complete abandonment to God. I show my readers how to risk big, and pray they do, that they leap the chasm of fear straight into His arms. Ave: Explain what “spiritual warfare” means in the context of our everyday lives. It seems like a frightening concept. Corbitt: Fear is a deficit of love. C. S. Lewis said we are always tempted simultaneously in opposite extremes. We can be afraid of spiritual warfare, or we can deny it completely. At its most basic, biblical spiritual warfare is fighting fear, because fear motivates sin. God, ourselves, the other—we sin against those we fear; we do not sin against those we truly love. Satan’s only real power is deceiving us into sin. And even in sin, there is no place dark enough that the Light of the World cannot penetrate. Spiritual warfare, then, is discerning and fighting temptation with the Word of God. In Fearless, I arm my readers to the hilt with truth so they can grow out of fear into a deeper love and awareness. Ave: If someone has not been a regular reader of the Bible but wants to start, what’s a good way to begin? Corbitt: The saints tell us we should always begin with daily lectio divina in the daily readings of the Church. If there is little time, just read, meditate, pray, and rest in the Gospel. But there’s more on that in the book!