My Top Catholic Resources



Want to know more about what the Catholic Church actually teaches? Here are some of the sites and books that have helped me with my conversion back to the Church.

When I started searching for ways to refute Catholic teachings, I wanted actual Catholic resources to grab a hold of and prove wrong. If you want to prove something is wrong, you always go to the source. It is the only way I could prove their beliefs and traditions were anti biblical. Here are some resources I found very useful and explain all Catholic teachings clearly:


Online Resources


My go to online resource for all Catholic questions is Catholic Answers. They have live Q&As on Facebook, YouTube and their app. Both Catholic and non Catholics can call in with their questions and Theologians answer them clearly and directly.

www.catholic.com

www.facebook.com/catholicanswers

www.instagram.com/catholicanswers

www.youtube.com/user/catholiccom


United States Conference of Catholic Bishops has all the information on Beliefs and Teachings of the Catholic Church. Included but not limited to The Mass, The Sacraments, Prayers and Devotions, Catholic Living, The Bible and more.


www.usccb.org/beliefs-and-teachings/index.cfm

New Advent Catholic Library has resources on all topics and official Church documents. On the top left menu you can also access the Catholic Encyclopedia and information on the Church Fathers.


www.newadvent.org/library


Church Fathers is a website that is meant to serve as a tool to help people educate themselves on what the Church Fathers have taught.


www.churchfathers.org


These are the free online resource of the Early Church Fathers writings.


www.ccel.org/fathers.html


Books + Bibles

Here is a list of books I have read which has a lot of to the point teachings, history and Biblical evidence. I have also listed some Bibles approved by the Catholic Church.

Bibles


Some people mistakenly think the King James Version of the Bible (KJV), with its eloquent thee’s and thou’s, is the original version. But the Bible was not written in seventeenth-century Old English. More than 1,500 years earlier, the New Testament was written in ancient Greek; and long before that the Old Testament was written in ancient Hebrew, along with some Aramaic and Greek (the Old Testament was later translated into the Greek Septuagint). Reference from catholic.com.


The New American Bible—Revised Edition (NABRE) The New American Bible was the first Catholic translation made directly from the original biblical languages (rather than from the Latin Vulgate). When the Old Testament was revised, it was officially replaced by the New American Bible Revised Edition. The NABRE is a “formal equivalent” translation, which means it is not a literal word-for-word rendering of the original text but not a paraphrase either.


The Revised Standard Version (RSV2CE) The Revised Standard Version is a 1950s-era revision of the King James Version(theRSV Catholic Second Edition includes the deuterocanonical books). Itis a literal, word-for-word translation that uses “King James English” (“thee” and “thou”) when addressing God, but is otherwise translated into today’s English.

New Revised Standard Version (RSV2CE) (my favorite is The Great Adventure Bible by Ascension Press) is the RSV’s modern revision. The RSV is both a common choice among scholars and one of the most beautiful English translation of the Bible available today.


The New Jerusalem Bible is the 1985 update to the 1966 Jerusalem Bible. The original translation was mixed bag: literal in some respects, but with a loosely translated Old Testament text made up of a combination of various textual traditions. The New Jerusalem Bible, however, is not based on this French translation but on the original biblical languages.


The Catholic Study Bible [NABRE] The Catholic Study Bible adds a whopping 525-page introduction to Scripture consisting of general Bible information and mini-commentary “Reading Guides” for all the books. These are written by many prominent biblical scholars, featuring the same kind of modern-higher-critical opinions that the NABRE notes do. Additional materials include several in-text essays, a glossary, biblical weights and measures, lectionary, index, concordance, and maps.


The Didache Study Bible [RSV2CE] (love this Bible) The Ignatius Catholic Study Bible is based on the RSV translation with notes written by renowned Bible scholar Scott Hahn and his student Curtis Mitch. The notes present a refreshingly fair and unique balance of traditional-orthodox and modern-critical viewpoints. In addition, topical essays and word studies include interpretations from the Fathers of the Church, the Catholic Magisterium, and faithful Catholic scholars. Each book is outlined and introduced with an essay covering authorship, date of writing, original audience, and general themes. It also includes a doctrinal index, concordance, cross-reference system, and various maps and charts. Unfortunately, only the New Testament is currently available as a single volume (don’t let the size fool you!). The Old Testament books can each be purchased separately.

Your choice of a Catholic study Bible will best be made by considering what each one offers and weighing the strengths and weaknesses of each.


The Interlinear Hebrew/Greek-English Bible, 4 Volumes Although this collection does not include the original Deuterocanonical Books that are in the Catholic Bible, this is a very good source for literal translation from Hebrew to English and Greek to English. I use this because a lot can be lost in translation and the best way to read things in context is by reading it in its original language. If you don't want 4 different volumes, I recommend this Bible.


If you wish to have the best traditional, orthodox study notes, the Ignatius Catholic Study Bible is hard to beat. The Didache Bible is a close second. Both feature the top-notch RSV translation and their notes are generally faithful to Church tradition.


Whichever you choose, be glad that these good choices exist, and remember that the best Catholic study Bible is the one you read!


Protestant Conversions to Catholicism


Rome Sweet Home: Our Journey to Catholicism

Crossing the Tiber: Evangelical Protestants Discover the Historical Church

From Atheism to Catholicism

The Convert's Guide to Roman Catholicism: Your First Year in the Church

From the Kippah to the Cross: A Jew's Conversion to Catholicism

Faith and Reason: Philosophers Explain Their Turn to Catholicism

From Fire, by Water: My Journey to the Catholic Faith

Surprised by Truth 2: 15 Men and Women Give the Biblical and Historical Reasons For Becoming Catholic

My Name is Lazarus: 34 Stories of Converts Whose Path to Rome Was Paved


References + Historical + Theological Books


Catechism of the Catholic Church - Second Edition

Code of Canon Law: Latin-English Edition

Catholic Traditions and Treasures: An Illustrated Encyclopedia

Catholicism and Fundamentalism: The Attack on "Romanism" by "Bible Christians"

The Faith Understood: An Introduction to Catholic Theology

The Papacy: What the Pope Does and Why It Matters

Catholic Theology: An Introduction 1st Edition

Handbook of Christian Apologetics

The Real Story of Catholic History: Answering Twenty Centuries of Anti-Catholic Myths

The Bible is a Catholic Book

The Didache: The Teaching of the Twelve Apostles

Early Christian Writings: The Apostolic Fathers

The Fathers Know Best: Your Essential Guide to the Teachings of the Early Church

Fundamentals of Catholic Dogma

The Great Heresies

Against Heresies

Counterfeit Christs - Finding the Real Jesus Among the Impostors

Teaching with Authority: How to Cut Through Doctrinal Confusion & Understand What the Church Really Says

The Spirit and Forms of Protestantism

An Essay on the Development of Christian Doctrine

The Incredible Catholic Mass: An Explanation of the Catholic Mass

Why Do Catholics Do That?: A Guide to the Teachings and Practices of the Catholic Church

Meeting the Protestant Challenge: How to Answer 50 Biblical Objections to Catholic Beliefs

St. John's Gospel: A Bible Study Guide and Commentary for Individuals and Groups

The Apostasy That Wasn't: The Extraordinary Story of the Unbreakable Early Church

The Complete Works of the Church Fathers: A total of 64 authors, and over 2,500 works of the Early Christian Church

Jesus and the Dead Sea Scrolls: Revealing the Jewish Roots of Christianity

Jesus and the Jewish Roots of the Eucharist: Unlocking the Secrets of the Last Supper

Jesus and the Jewish Roots of Mary: Unveiling the Mother of the Messiah

Jesus the Bridegroom: The Greatest Love Story Ever Told

Jesus and the Last Supper

Upon This Rock: St. Peter and the Primacy of Rome in Scripture and the Early Church

Hail, Holy Queen: The Mother of God in the Word of God

Behold Your Mother: A Biblical and Historical Defense of the Marian Doctrines

A Biblical Walk Through the Mass (Book): Understanding What We Say and Do In The Liturgy


There you go. That is everything I can give you for now. I will be updating this list as I read or come across more content.


Ut Benedicat Tibi Deus

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Christian Denominations and their Founders

My Conversion Story

Part V Mariology Series: MARY AS THE PERPETUAL VIRGIN

Part IV Mariology Series: MARY AS THE QUEEN MOTHER

Mortal vs Venial Sins: Are all sins equal?

PART III: Peter and the CHAIR: All you need to know on the Papacy

Part II Mariology Series: MARY AS THE NEW ARK

Introduction to the 5 Part Mariology Series

Sabbath or The Lord’s Day (Sunday)?