Behold Your Mother: A Biblical and Historical Defense of the Marian Doctrines
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.24 (570 Votes) |
Asin | : | 1938983912 |
Format Type | : | paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 375 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2015-01-30 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
Relevant and essential -- Mary matters. Combining the best recent scholarship with a convert's in-depth knowledge of the arguments, Staples has assembled the most thorough and useful Marian apologetic you'll find anywhere. From the cross Jesus gave us his mother to be our mother, too: a singularly holy model, consoler, and intercessor for our spiritual journey. Read Behold Your Mother and find out just how much.. In Behold Your Mother, Tim Staples takes you through the Church's teachings about the Blessed Virgin Mary, showing their firm Scriptural and historical roots and dismantling the objections of those who mistakenly believe that Mary competes for the attention due Christ alone. Yet most Protestants, and to
Great, truly great, piece of apologetics. --Al Kresta- Host of Kresta in the AfternoonTim Staples presents a remarkable defense of the six major Marian doctrines, including a veritable compendium of source material from the Bible, Fathers, and Church documents. He addresses objections I haven t seen addressed elsewhere. He gives clear presentations of the controversial issues surrounding each doctrine, makes careful definitions and distinctions, and thinks his way through each issue as if he were having a conversation with th
Best defense of Marian doctrine so far Bobby Bambino I remember when I first started listening to Catholic Answers, I didn't really know who was who. Then one day, I heard someone who was just on fire for Our Lady. This guy had me fist pumping, not only at his biblical and compelling arguments, but at the clear personal love he clearly communicated for Our Lady. That man was of course Tim Staples, and I can think of no one more appropriate to write a Cathol. "he does a beautiful job of explaining and providing proof texts for Marian teachings" according to ARG. Tim Staples is a convert from Southern Baptist background now an apologist for Catholic Answers. To my eyes, he does a good job leveraging this into raising Protestant objections to Marian doctrines of the Church. However, he seems to be writing for a mixed audience based on some of his prose saying things like my Catholic readers will find this unobjectionable (implying he has other readers) or saying th. krakus said Awesome. Just one comment. Awesome. Just one comment. Discussing the word "blessed", the author brings a question from James White: "Does [this] mean that all Christians are sinlessly perfect because they are called blessed in Matt "Awesome. Just one comment" according to krakus. Awesome. Just one comment. Discussing the word "blessed", the author brings a question from James White: "Does [this] mean that all Christians are sinlessly perfect because they are called blessed in Matt 25:Awesome. Just one comment krakus Awesome. Just one comment. Discussing the word "blessed", the author brings a question from James White: "Does [this] mean that all Christians are sinlessly perfect because they are called blessed in Matt 25:43?" Then the author answers: "The answer, of course, is no". If I am not mistaken the asnwer should be: 'of course, yes'.Not all Christians are sinlessly perfect, but here we have the scene of the La. Awesome. Just one comment Awesome. Just one comment. Discussing the word "blessed", the author brings a question from James White: "Does [this] mean that all Christians are sinlessly perfect because they are called blessed in Matt 25:Awesome. Just one comment krakus Awesome. Just one comment. Discussing the word "blessed", the author brings a question from James White: "Does [this] mean that all Christians are sinlessly perfect because they are called blessed in Matt 25:43?" Then the author answers: "The answer, of course, is no". If I am not mistaken the asnwer should be: 'of course, yes'.Not all Christians are sinlessly perfect, but here we have the scene of the La. 3?" Then the author answers: "The answer, of course, is no". If I am not mistaken the asnwer should be: 'of course, yes'.Not all Christians are sinlessly perfect, but here we have the scene of the La. ?" Then the author answers: "The answer, of course, is no". If I am not mistaken the asnwer should be: 'of course, yes'.Not all Christians are sinlessly perfect, but here we have the scene of the La. 5:Awesome. Just one comment krakus Awesome. Just one comment. Discussing the word "blessed", the author brings a question from James White: "Does [this] mean that all Christians are sinlessly perfect because they are called blessed in Matt 25:43?" Then the author answers: "The answer, of course, is no". If I am not mistaken the asnwer should be: 'of course, yes'.Not all Christians are sinlessly perfect, but here we have the scene of the La. Awesome. Just one comment Awesome. Just one comment. Discussing the word "blessed", the author brings a question from James White: "Does [this] mean that all Christians are sinlessly perfect because they are called blessed in Matt 25:Awesome. Just one comment krakus Awesome. Just one comment. Discussing the word "blessed", the author brings a question from James White: "Does [this] mean that all Christians are sinlessly perfect because they are called blessed in Matt 25:43?" Then the author answers: "The answer, of course, is no". If I am not mistaken the asnwer should be: 'of course, yes'.Not all Christians are sinlessly perfect, but here we have the scene of the La. 3?" Then the author answers: "The answer, of course, is no". If I am not mistaken the asnwer should be: 'of course, yes'.Not all Christians are sinlessly perfect, but here we have the scene of the La. ?" Then the author answers: "The answer, of course, is no". If I am not mistaken the asnwer should be: 'of course, yes'.Not all Christians are sinlessly perfect, but here we have the scene of the La
That encounter sparked a two-year search for the truth. Tim was determined to prove Catholicism wrong, but he ended up studying his way to the last place he thought he would ever end up: the Catholic Church! He converted to Catholicism in 1988 and spent the following six years in formation for the priesthood, earning a degree in philosophy from St. Tim Staples is Director of Apologetics and Evangelization here at C