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A very true life history written by a chaplain. Father Tito is the writer of his life. He’s known by many different names yet I believe Father Tito best tells who he is. If there seems to be confusion in his life’s story, that’s because I don’t believe he never really knew who he was. He had been a compassionate chaplain. He was a merciless killer. He spoke out against many, not making him the most popular man at times. Thus he had many enemies. He especially spoke against the injustices of his own government. He went after the bullies of the Belt Way who created wars for just shear profit. His jangled life began without any control over his existence. It continued such until his later years. His chief controller was his own country, the United States of America. With all the covert acts of patriotic duty he was never recognized. He was a hidden secret in his country. He had been stripped of his existence. No awards, applauses, thank you or even “up yours.” This compassionate chaplain became a hit man for his country, not totally out of patriotic loyalty, but because his parents’ lives were threatened. Therefore he completed covert missions created for him especially, since he was a genius. If you have trouble following the contents of this true story it’s because you’re walking inside the brain of a genius, a tortured child prodigy. A mind that’s forever in movement. Twisted thoughts. Reminiscent events of the past. His mind full of real information. Terror inside because of the demons of the past pop up. Demonic confusion utters or screams from his mouth. He talks incessantly, not always in any type of the average chronological brain, the order of the average man Tito’s order is scrambled, dictated to him to speak by his overactive mind. So again, be patient and you will discover a man persecuted by the realms surrounding him-----family, friends, church, country and the world.
The spiritual journey of a young artist at mid-20th century, Since My Last Confession sensitively probes the faith and doubts of a pre-Vatican II cradle-born Roman Catholic. Luke at an early age is profoundly influenced by priests and nuns at school, later at work he pursues, in the army during World War II, and in post-war Europe while a graduate student in Florence. A wide circle of friends and experiences introduce him to other Christian denominations and other faiths, contributing to struggles he’s known with Catholic dogma since a teenager. Irrevocably bound to a Church which he questions and from which he’s alienated, Luke’s spiritual dilemma is heightened by professional setbacks, economic hardships, and rootlessness. When he falls in love with a privileged Jewish college student, Esther, he’s forced to face hard decisions about his faith, his work, commitments. A novel in which characters struggle with the persistent dichotomies of the sacred and the profane, Since My Last Confession confronts the challenges facing all of good faith during tumultuous eras of radical social change.
Scott Pomfret serves as a lector at St. Anthony Shrine in Boston. He also writes gay porn. His boyfriend is a flaming atheist, and his boyfriend's Protestant grandmother considers Catholicism a sin worse than sodomy. From Pentecost to Pride, from the books of the Bible to the articles of the Advocate, Pomfret's wry, hysterically funny memoir maps with matchless humor the full spectrum of the gay Catholic experience.
When she starts her new job as a parole officer, Krissie is happy and in love. Then she meets convicted murderer Jeremy, and begins to believe he may be innocent. Her growing obsession with his case threatens to jeopardise everything - her job, her relationship and her life. Perfect for fans of Julia Crouch, Sophie Hannah and Laura Lippman, My Last Confession is a dark and compelling psychological thriller that traces a young parole officer and her dangerous obsession with a convicted murderer. Helen FitzGerald is also the acclaimed author of The Cry, which was longlisted for the Theakstons Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year award. 'Thinking woman's noir.' Sunday Telegraph 'Cool, classy and sexy.' Daily Mirror 'A story that adeptly escalates to a satisfyingly shocking climax.' Big Issue
Mary Brown’s engaging book describes the ‘lifeline’ work of the prison chaplaincy. Written by a Quaker chaplain, it shows how important to prisoners this contact is and how it blends into the ever-pressing world of prison regimes. Among the topics covered are the ‘statutory duties’ of chaplains, forgiveness, ‘prison chapel goers’, Christmas in prison, delivering bad news, dealing with grief or anxiety, learning in prisonand restorative justice (which is in line with the teachings of many faiths: as old as religion itself). As the author insists, there is ‘that of God’ to be found in everyone no matter what their crime. Critical, perceptive and of particular interest to people working in or learning about crime and punishment, Confessions of a Prison Chaplain contains insights for people of all faiths (or none); looks at restorative justice and positive justice; and re-affirms the importance of pastoral support in the reform and rehabilitation of prisoners.
Reprint of the original, first published in 1873.