One Ordinary Sunday

A Meditation on the Mystery of the Mass
Author: Paula Huston
$16.95

Table of Contents

Read a Sample

Format: Paperback

Publication date: March 11, 2016

Also available from

Description

Winner of the 2017 Association of Catholic Publishers Excellence in Publishing Award: General Interest Books (First Place) and the Catholic Press Association Book Award: Popular Presentation of the Catholic Faith (First Place).

In One Ordinary Sunday the popular, award-winning writer Paula Huston draws on her spiritual wisdom and her talent as a novelist to provide both a moment-by-moment record of her experience of one particular Mass on one particular Sunday in her home parish in California and a theologically and historically rich exploration of the origin and meaning of the liturgy.

For Catholics, the Mass is the “source and summit of the Christian life,” as the documents of the Church put it. Yet many Catholics might confess to not understanding in any depth what goes on in an “ordinary” celebration of the Eucharist. In perhaps her most compelling and original book to date, novelist and spiritual writer Paula Huston guides us through a Mass on the Fourteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time at her home parish in Arroyo Grande, California. Huston’s personal and spiritual reflections offer fresh and often unexpected insights into the profound mystery at the heart of the Catholic faith.

A natural storyteller, Huston deftly illuminates what might seem either mysterious to those unfamiliar with the Mass or overly familiar to those who have lost an appreciation of its mystery. In the Mass “we are healed and restored and spiritually fed,” she writes. “We are handed strong armor against evil. We are unified and made whole as a people and as a Church. We get a little taste of heaven.”

Readers of this book will learn

  • how our confession of sins at the beginning of the Mass differs from the sacrament of Penance;
  • what it means to say that the Mass is a sacrifice;
  • why the prayers of the Mass, especially the Gloria, are full of scriptural allusions;
  • what the purpose of the Eucharistic Prayer is; and
  • what happens at the consecration of bread and wine and how it is the most profound mystery and miracle of the Mass.

One Ordinary Sunday is for all Catholics, especially those who have questions about the basic practices of their faith, who are new to the Church and still somewhat baffled about its rituals of worship, or who have left the Church behind but still feel like part of the family.

Product Details

Pages: 256

Trim size: 5.5 x 8.5 inches

ISBN: 9781594715952

Imprint: Ave Maria Press

Videos
  • “To say I loved this book would be an understatement.”

     

    “To say I loved this book would be an understatement. Paula Huston caught me up in her writing about the ordinary in Ordinary time and she sun-laced the quotidian again and again and again with that sense of kairos.”

    Paul Mariani
    Biographer, poet, and author of Thirty Days

  • “This book will do much good.”

     

    “Paula Huston does for us in the twenty-first century what Ambrose and Cyril did for Christians in the fourth. She wants us to know that an extraordinary thing happens at Mass on every ordinary Sunday. To her task of opening up the mysteries she brings a novelist’s sense of drama and descriptive power as well as a convert’s sense of discovery and wonder. She has made something beautiful for God and for us. This book will do much good.”

    Mike Aquilina
    Author of The Mass of the Early Christians

  • “An unusual form of autobiography.”

     

    “Paula Huston has written an unusual form of autobiography: a story of her soul, narrated while she and her family are in attendance at an ordinary Sunday Mass. This is a ‘convert story,’ but one very different from The Seven Storey Mountain of Thomas Merton or The Golden String of Bede Griffiths.”

    Rev. Thomas Matus, O.S.B. Cam.
    Author of The Mystery of Romuald and the Five Brothers

Related Products

Additional Resources

Englewood Review of Books
Link Follow Link
Ruminate Book Review
Link Follow Link