Book details
Angels and Saints: Who They Are and Why They Matter - Engaging Catholicism Series

Angels and Saints: Who They Are and Why They Matter - Engaging Catholicism Series

Elizabeth Klein
9781646802371
Limited stock
10/11/2023


RRP $44.95

Your price $44.95

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We often pray with the saints in our Catholic practice or see paintings of angels by famous artists, but who are they really? What do they do? Can they really intercede for us?


Elizabeth Klein, assistant professor of theology at the Augustine Institute, leads us through a soul-inspiring exploration of Catholic teaching on angels and saints and why they matter to us as individuals and to the Church.


Throughout the book, Klein answers common questions about the angels and saints in order to give us a deeper understanding and appreciation of the role they play in our lives, the Mass, and in the life of the Church. She also equips us to better discuss with non-Catholics what we believe about angels and saints.


In Angels and Saints, Klein explains that these heavenly companions are gifts from God. They are our friends and are joined to us in the mystical Body of Christ. They invite us to love God and each other perfectly as they do.


In this book, you also will learn that



  • Angels appear throughout the Bible in many forms.

  • The Catechism of the Catholic Church says that angels are perfect, immortal, have souls, and are as individual as humans.

  • Both the Old and New Testaments provide strong evidence that each one of us has a guardian angel.

  • The Communion of Saints refers to the Church, the Body of Christ of which we are a part. This means we have true contact and unity with all members of the Church, both living and dead.

  • No matter your state in life, you can find a canonized saint very like you.

  • When we pray to saints, we are really asking them to pray to God on our behalf.

  • Relics are the remains of saints, including their body or parts of it, clothing or items they have used, or something put into contact with the saint’s body or one of its parts. Relics are mentioned in both the Old and New Testaments.

  • A saint’s feast day is the day of their death—the day they entered eternal life.


Books in the Engaging Catholicism series from the McGrath Institute for Church Life at the University of Notre Dame help readers discover the beauty and truth of the Catholic faith through a concise exploration of the Church’s most important but often difficult-to-grasp doctrines as well as crucial pastoral and spiritual practices.






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