Robert Barron
Author profile
born
in The United States
November 19, 1959
gender
male
website
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Catholicism: A Journey to the Heart of the Faith
— published 2011 — 2 editions |
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The Strangest Way: Walking the Christian Path
— published 2002 |
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And Now I See . . .: A Theology of Transformation
— published 1998 |
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The Priority of Christ: Toward a Postliberal Catholicism
— published 2007 — 2 editions |
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Thomas Aquinas: Spiritual Master
— published 1996 — 2 editions |
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Heaven in Stone and Glass: Experiencing the Spirituality of the Great Cathedrals
— published 2000 — 2 editions |
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Word on Fire: Proclaiming the Power of Christ
— published 2008 |
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Bridging the Great Divide: Musings Of a Post-Liberal, Post Conservative Evangelical Catholic
— published 2004 — 2 editions |
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Catholicism: A Journey to the Heart of the Faith
— published 2012 |
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John Henry Newman: A Prophet for Our Times
— published 2010 |
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“One of the most fundamental problems in the spiritual order is that we sense within ourselves the hunger for God, but we attempt to satisfy it with some created good that is less than God. Thomas Aquinas said that the four typical substitutes for God are wealth, pleasure, power, and honor. Sensing the void within, we attempt to fill it up with some combination of these four things, but only by emptying out the self in love can we make the space for God to fill us. The classical tradition referred to this errant desire as "concupiscence," but I believe that we could neatly express the same idea with the more contemporary term "addiction." When we try to satisfy the hunger for God with something less than God, we will naturally be frustrated, and then in our frustration, we will convince ourselves that we need more of that finite good, so we will struggle to achieve it, only to find ourselves again, necessarily, dissatisfied. At this point, a sort of spiritual panic sets in, and we can find ourselves turning obsessively around this creaturely good that can never in principle make us happy.”
― Robert Barron
― Robert Barron
“Adam, we hear, walked in easy fellowship with God in the cool of the evening and spoke to him as to a friend. This ordering of Adam to God meant that our first parent was effortlessly caught up in adoration. The term "adoration" comes from the Latin ado ratio, which in turn is derived from "ad ora" (to the mouth). To adore, therefore, is to be mouth to mouth with God, properly aligned to the divine source, breathing in God's life. When one is in the stance of adoration, the whole of one's life - mind, will, emotions, imagination, sexuality - becomes ordered and harmonized, much as the elements of a rose window arrange themselves musically around a central point.”
― Robert Barron
― Robert Barron
“But the true emperor, Luke insists, is not the one who feeds himself but who is willing to offer his life as food for the other. At the climax of his life, this child, come of age, would say to his friends, "This is my body, which will be given for you' do this in memory of me" (Lk 22:19).”
― Robert Barron
― Robert Barron
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