The Catholic Hipster Handbook: Rediscovering Cool Saints, Forgotten Prayers, and Other Weird but Sacred Stuff
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.98 (714 Votes) |
Asin | : | B072HVZR6L |
Format Type | : | |
Number of Pages | : | 474 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2015-10-06 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
"The Catholic Hipster Handbook is an alt-culture journey into the mysticism, joy, and general weirdness of some new, and some too-often-forgotten and unconventional Catholic practices of faith." --From the foreword by Jeannie Gaffigan, Comedienne, actress, and writer "The voices in The Catholic Hipster Handbook put Catholicism firmly in touch with our present world. It is also downright hilarious, painfully honest, and appropriately weird at times, too." --Sam Rocha, Editor of the Patheos Catholic channel "Tommy Tighe strikes gold with The Catholic Hipster Handbook. The book speaks to the real need for a Church culture that is not only fully Catholic but also culturally authentic. Funny, pro
. He records The Catholic Hipster Podcast with cohost Sarah Vablulas. Tommy Tighe is a licensed marriage and family therapist who has worked in community mental health since 2006. He has appeared on Relevant Radio, EWTN Radio, and The Catholic Channel on SiriusXM Radio, which runs his podcast The Chimney. He earned a bachelor's deg
Discover what’s awesome about:Wearing a scapularApplying Laudato Si’ at your local farmer’s marketHanging with priests, monks, and nunsLearning to see Christ in making beerPraying the Rosary everywhere you goLoving the Latin MassMaking the Liturgy of the Hours a daily part of your routine The Catholic Hipster Handbook will help readers realize the only way to go against what’s normal and accepted in the culture is to be authentically Catholic.. The Catholic Hipster podcaster Tommy Tighe will help readers rediscover everything awesome about the Catholic faith. She said what drew her to the feed was that Tighe was “an embarrassingly Catholic dude who knew he was embarrassingly Catholic and was not embarrassed by it” and that he was “not preachy or judgey or divisive.” Catholic hipsters in a nutshell. They share their love for extraordinary saints, offer up obscure prayers, provide short reflections on something quirky and Catholic they’ve rediscovered, and dare readers to put their faith into action with some cool and challenging practices they can do on their own. But Twitter is wher