Signs of Life by Scott Hahn feels like being welcomed home - incense in the air, candlelight flickering, Scripture open on the table. Hahn writes with that unmistakable warmth and joy that makes even the most ordinary Catholic customs shimmer with divine meaning.
This is a book about the sacred in the everyday. About holy water on your fingertips, the sign of the cross whispered before a meal, the rhythm of the rosary beads slipping through your hands. Hahn doesn’t just explain these practices - he breathes life into them. He shows how each gesture, each feast, each prayer is a signpost pointing us back to Christ and the Church that guards His mysteries.
What I love most is Hahn’s tone - scholarly but never dry, deeply theological yet brimming with heart. His chapters on the sacraments and the saints are especially luminous: rooted in Scripture, steeped in history, and alive with joy. There’s a tenderness here, a love for the Church that feels contagious. You finish each section wanting to pray, to kneel, to participate more fully in the ancient beauty of our faith.
If The Lamb’s Supper unveiled the Mass as heaven on earth, Signs of Life reveals the daily liturgy of being Catholic - the gestures, the seasons, the blessings we often take for granted. It’s catechesis wrapped in poetry, theology offered like bread and wine.
A book to read slowly, with a pen in hand and a heart open to grace.
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ - reverent, radiant, and full of the joy of belonging to something eternal.