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9780767905978

Growing Up Catholic: The Millennium Edition An Infinitely Funny Guide for the Faithful, the Fallen and Everyone In-Between

by ; ; ;
  • ISBN13:

    9780767905978

  • ISBN10:

    0767905970

  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2000-10-10
  • Publisher: Image
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Supplemental Materials

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Summary

The original edition of Growing Up Catholic, along with its sequels, struck a heavenly chord with a generation of Catholics of all persuasions. Now, to commemorate the Great Catholic Jubilee of the Year 2000, the authors bless us with an updated and expanded version of this beloved national bestseller. Filled with a witty, poignant, and downright hilarious potpourri of essays, lists, games, drawings, photos, and quizzes, it includes the best of all three Growing Up Catholic books, along with many all-new features, such as:

Jubilee 2000: Not Your Average Birthday Party
Father Phil: Confessor to the Sopranos
Who Will Be The Next Pope?: A Handicapper's Guide
Ansubstantiationtray: Can't Anybody Here Speak Latin Anymore?
www.holy.com

For Catholics of all ages -- from those who lived through Vatican II to those who've never seen a nun's habit except in a movie -- Growing Up Catholic celebrates in a lighthearted way the funny and sublime side of day-to-day Catholic life.

Author Biography

Mary Jane Frances Cavolina was born in 1954 and grew up in the Bayside section of Queens, New York, where she attended Sacred Heart School. A model student, Jane once received a prayer book for never turning her head during Mass. She attended St. Mary's Girls' High School, where she perfected her understanding of the concept of purgatory, and went on to receive a B.A. Honors degre from Hunter College. Jane is the coauthor, with her sister Ellen Cavolina, of How to Really Watch The Godfather. She lives in Lambertville, New Jersey.

Jeffrey Allen Joseph Stone was born in Providence, Rhode Island, in 1966 and grew up in Westbrook and Gorman, Maine. He was baptized at an Italian parish in Providence, despite the fact that an associate pastor contended that neither "Jeffrey" nor "Allen" was a saint's name. Among his coauthors, Jeff is the only "public"--a public school student who attended CCD classes at a Catholic school on Saturdays and was accused, along with his fellow CCDers, of messing up the parochial kids' desks. Jeff graduated magna cum laude from Brown University in 1977. Now living in New York City, he is a coauthor of Treasures of the Aquarians and What Color Is Your Toothbrush?

Maureen Anne Teresa Kelly was born in 1957 and was baptized at Most Precious Blood Church in Denver. Her first confession was said at St. Pius X Church in Dallas, and she received her first Holy Communion at Holy Ghost Church in Houston. In parochial school she won a glow-in-the-dark plastic Madonna for selling Holy Childhood Christmas Seals and was a member of the Junior Altar Rosary Society, an organization of young Catholic girls dedicated to straightening church pews and dusting kneelers. She went on to St. Agnes Academy in Houston and Randolph-Macon Woman's College in Lynchburg, Virginia. A coauthor of Working in France, she lives in Pittsburgh.

Richard Glen Michael Davis was born in 1953 and was baptized at St. Valentine's Church in Cicero, Illinois. After attending Sacred Heart, St. Elizabeth of Hungary, Mary Queen of Heaven, and Christ the King schools, he graduated from Montini High School--Montini being the surname of Pope Paul VI--and went on to receive a B.A. from the University of Illinois. Richard, who lives in Glendale, California, is a coauthor of Treasures of the Aquarians and What Color Is Your Toothbrush? He has written for the Los Angeles Times magazine, the Los Angeles Times and other publications.

Table of Contents

Introduction to the Jubilee Edition xv
I am a Catholic in Case of Accident Please Call a Priest
The Baltimore Catechism: Basic Training for Young Catholics
3(2)
The Differences Between God and Us
4(1)
Through My Fault, Through My Fault: The Problem of Sin
5(2)
Bless Me, Father
7(3)
The Near Occasion of Sin: How Near Is Near?
7(1)
Sin/Indulgence Balance Sheet
8(1)
True Confessions
9(1)
O My God, I Am Hardly Sorry
10(3)
Prayer A Pop Quiz
12(1)
Patron Saints Matching Column
13(1)
The Family That Prays Together
13(2)
Beyond the Vows
14(1)
A Catholic Woman's Rhythm Diary
14(1)
Acceptable Catholic Swears
14(1)
Take Me to the River
15(6)
Appropriate Names for Catholic Children
17(1)
Totally Unacceptable Names for Catholic Children
17(4)
Good Morning, Sister
Lesson 3. Sister Says: Nine to Three in Holier Than Thou
21(6)
What Is Wrong with This Picture?
23(2)
Soldiers of Christ: The Required Uniform
25(2)
Nuns
27(2)
What's in a Name?: A Nun's Own Story
27(1)
A Nun's Story
28(1)
Questions We Didn't Have the Nerve to Ask
28(1)
What to Give Nuns for Christmas
28(1)
The May Procession
29(1)
First Holy Communion
30(2)
Do-It-Yourself Play Mass Kit
32(1)
Soldiers of Christ
33(3)
If the Name Fits
34(1)
Is It a Bird?
35(1)
Father What-a-Waste
36(1)
Vocation Day: Getting the Calling
37(2)
Going My Way? A Visit to the Seminary
38(1)
CCD versus Parochial School: Point-Counterpoint
39(2)
St. Scholastica High School
41(1)
A Uniformed Girl's Guide to Fashion
42(3)
The Girls of St. Scholastica
43(2)
Sex Education
45(1)
The Retreat
46(2)
Four More Years
48(1)
Meeting Your Mate---Catholic Style
48(4)
Some Things to Look for When Selecting a Catholic College
49(1)
Best Catholic Colleges for Sports
50(1)
Catholic Colleges That Don't Sound Catholic
51(1)
Holy Rollo University
52(4)
Our Parochial Lives
The Parish as Family
56(1)
We Gather in His Name
57(4)
What's in a Name? The Most Popular Parish Names
57(4)
The Assembled Multitude: Where to Sit in Church
61(5)
How to Use Holy Water
63(2)
Genuflecting
65(1)
Holier Than Thou Parish Bulletin
66(4)
Suffer the Little Children
70(1)
What Every Catholic Lady Carries in Her Pocketbook
70(1)
``All Praise We Now Our God''
71(2)
The Mass Ordinary and Proper
73(1)
Proclaim the Good News unto the People
73(3)
Lord, I Am Not Worthy to Receive You
76(3)
An Altar Boy's Prayer
77(1)
How to Avoid Interfaith Faux Pas---At Communion and Otherwise
78(1)
Seek and Ye Shall Find---Getting Back to Your Seat After Communion
79(2)
Fasting Time Line
80(1)
The Mass Is Ended Go in Peace
81(1)
Idle Hands Are the Devil's Playthings
82(1)
The Parish Bazaar
83(2)
The Great Bingo Scandal
84(1)
The Catholic Getaway
85(5)
A Note from the Tour Director
86(4)
Items from His Catalog
90(4)
Dear Abbey
94(4)
Catholic Fun Facts---The Numbers Game
96(2)
One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church
The Hat Game
98(1)
Religious Fashion
99(2)
Force of Habit
99(1)
Brothers
100(1)
What Ever Happened to Father Brown? Profiles of Failed Priests
101(3)
Nun of the Above
104(1)
How to Encourage Religious Vocations
104(1)
Miracles
105(2)
When Mother Mary Comes to Visit
106(1)
Relics
107(1)
The Sacramentals
108(1)
Holy Days of Obligation
109(1)
The Holidays
109(1)
Easter
110(2)
Giving Up
111(1)
Christmas
112(2)
Catholic Fun Days
114(1)
The Fallibility of Infallibility---Changes in Church Rules and Regulations
114(4)
What's In/What's Out
117(1)
Who's Hot/Who's Not
117(1)
Mysteries of Faith
118(1)
A Profile of Pope John Paul II
119(1)
How They Elect the Pope
120(1)
Kevin Kelly
Catholic Fun Facts---Popes in History
120(1)
How to Be a Lapsed Catholic
121(3)
The Latin Test
122(2)
Catholics at Large
Saracens, Moors, Druids and Other Non-Catholics
124(2)
The Great Guilt Contest: The Catholics and the Jews
126(1)
My Turn: Non-Catholics and What They Think of Us
127(3)
Famous Catholics
128(1)
Famous Converts
129(1)
People We Wish Were Catholic
129(1)
People We're Glad Aren't Catholic
129(1)
A Few Occupations
129(1)
See No Evil
130(2)
Clean Entertainment: The Legion of Decency Hit Parade
132(1)
Catholicism Plays a Part
132(4)
The Greatest Stories Ever Told: Famous Catholic Writers
133(3)
Infinite Thy Vast Domain
Judgment Day
136(1)
Heaven
136(2)
Questions We'd Like Answered Be fore It's Too Late
137(1)
The Loss of Heaven and the Pains of Hell
138(2)
Who's Sorry Now?
139(1)
Purgatory
140(2)
Limbo
142(2)
Your Guardian Angel
144(2)
Catholic Fun Facts-The Trouble with Angels
144(1)
Martyrs Matching Column
145(1)
Saints
146(6)
Saints on the Map Matching Column
147(5)
Nun Sequitur
Nuns We Have Known
152(2)
True Confessions: Believe-It-or Not Nun Stories
154(2)
``I Had This Nun...''
156(3)
Eyes in the Back of Her Head: The Nun's Point of View
159(2)
These Foolish Things Remind Me of You: What We Miss About Nuns
161(2)
Holy Appellations! The Most Colorful Orders of Nuns and Priests
162(1)
Nuns Say the Darndest Things
163(1)
Priests We Have Known
163(3)
In God's House
166(2)
A Day in the Life of a Parochial School Child
168(6)
Am I Still a Catholic?
The First Holy Communion Class of 1965: Where Are They Now?
174(2)
The Way We Were
176(4)
What Goes Around, Comes Around
179(1)
Reasons to Rejoin the Church
180(2)
The Guardian Angel: ``A Top Catholic Magazine''
182(3)
Hollywood's Heavenly Hits: Movies About Catholics
185(2)
Church Latin: It's All Greek to Me
187(3)
Name That Hymn
189(1)
Our Parent, Who Art in Heaven: How to Be Liturgically Correct
190(1)
Gonna Take a Miracle: How Saints Are Made
191(2)
The Devil's Advocate: Certifying Sainthood
193(5)
Excerpts from the Notebook of a Devil's Advocate
196(1)
Climbing the Stairway to Heaven: Steps to Sainthood
197(1)
Mr Christopher: The Un-Saint
198(1)
An Unofficial Who's Who of Popes
199(5)
Quo Vadis?
Jubilee 2000: Not Your Average Birthday Party
204(1)
Whose Millennium Is It Anyway?
204(1)
You Know Ecumenism Has Gone Too Far When
205(1)
The Name Game
206(1)
Things We Expect the Roman Catholic Church to Do in the New Millennium
207(1)
www.holy.com
208(1)
Ansubstantiation-Tray: Can't Anybody Here Speak Latin Anymore?
209(2)
Who Will Be the Next Catholic President?
210(1)
Who Will Be the Next Pope?: A Handicapper's Take
211(2)
How We're Doing: Catholic Facts and Figures
213(1)
Letter to God from an Old Priest
214(1)
Nun-Pareil
215(1)
Don't Even Go There: Father Phil, Confessor to the Sopranos
216(1)
Are You Searching for the Answer?
217(1)
God Redux
218

Supplemental Materials

What is included with this book?

The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

Excerpts

I Am a Catholic.  In Case of  Accident,  Please Call a Priest

THE BALTIMORE CATECHISM: Basic Training for Young Catholics

THE PROBLEM

How to educate young Catholic minds in the teachings of the Church and give them a solid grounding--a rock, so to speak--on which to build their faith.

THE SOLUTION

Design a book that puts together the most complex theological issues, the greatest mysteries of the faith and the ways and means of performing Catholic ritual, and make it understandable to a seven-year-old, even though most of the greatest thinkers of the ages haven't quite figured it all out. Call it the Baltimore Catechism and make everyone memorize it.

Why is this book called the Baltimore Catechism?

This book is called the Baltimore Catechism because the catechism written in it was discussed in Baltimore.

Where can you get a copy of the Baltimore Catechism?

You can get one free while attending a Catholic grade school, or you can buy a copy in a religious articles store.

How many editions has the Baltimore Catechism had?

The Baltimore Catechism has had many editions, all of which are right and true.

How can you use the Baltimore Catechism?

You can and should use the Baltimore Catechism to lead a good Catholic life and attain Heaven.

What will happen if you do not use what you learn in the Baltimore Catechism?

You will go to Hell.

THROUGH MY FAULT,  THROUGH MY FAULT:

The Problem of Sin

Catholicism has more rules and regulations which enable you to sin than any other religion. Our preoccupation with sin is the central difference between us and everyone else. We are consumed with it; and why not? These blemishes on our souls can keep us out of Heaven, put us in Purgatory for aeons, or, God forbid, hurl us into Hell for ever and ever amen. Catholic life, then, is filled with high drama; moral tension is injected into every act.

To begin with, we are born with Original Sin--like factory seconds, slightly imperfect. Baptism wipes Original Sin away, and from then on it's up to us to get our own sins and to get rid of them.

There are two kinds of sin, mortal (the more serious kind) and venial. Committing a mortal sin means knowing that what you are about to do, think, want or say is really bad, but doing, thinking, wanting or saying it anyway. Most of the things we do wrong fall into the somewhat less offensive category of venial sin. Committing a venial sin means doing something that is not really so bad, or doing something really bad that you don't think is really bad or that your heart isn't really into doing. If your little brother is being a pest and you tell him to drop dead, you've committed a venial sin. If you shoot him dead, you've committed a mortal sin.

While on the surface the differences between mortal and venial sin seem obvious, don't be fooled. There is more to this than meets the eye. What is "really bad" and what isn't? And more to the point, who decides?

Let's take a routine situation and note all the possible pitfalls:

You are at a baseball game on a Friday night. You are not supposed to eat meat on Friday. You want a hot dog.

Now, just considering eating meat on Friday is a venial sin; wanting to is another one. You have not moved in your seat and you have already sinned twice. What if you actually ate one? Aside from the risk of choking on forbidden food and receiving your temporal punishment on the spot, have you committed a mortal sin or a venial sin? Well, if you think it's mortal, it may be mortal; and if you think it's venial, it still may be mortal. After much thought, you decide it's venial. You call the hot-dog vendor, you take the money out of your pocket and you buy a hot dog. This is clearly an act of free will. You figure you can go to Confession on Saturday. But wait! Does a venial sin become mortal when you commit it deliberately? That's a chance you take. What if you've forgotten it's Friday? In that case, eating the hot dog may not be a sin, but forgetting it's Friday is. What if you remember it's Friday halfway through the hot dog? Is it a venial sin to finish it? If you throw it away, is wasting food a sin? Within five minutes you have committed enough sins to land you in Purgatory for a million years. The simplest course is just not to take any chances. Avoid the near occasion of sin. Stay out of the ball park on Fridays.

Being a Catholic means fighting a lifelong struggle to avoid sin, mortal or venial. While you don't want to go to Hell, you definitely don't want to rot in Purgatory either. Play it safe. Think about every thought, word, action, desire and omission. Figure that everything you want to do is a sin.

BLESS ME,  FATHER

As was to be expected, sometime between last Saturday's confession and this Saturday, you've sinned. You know because you feel guilty. It is time to go to Confession once again. Even though you won't go to Hell if you die with only venial sins on your soul, and you don't think you did anything that bad, it's not worth the risk. Sins are easy to get, but they're just as easy to get rid of.

EXAMINATION OF  CONSCIENCE

It is a good idea to examine your conscience before going to Confession. Even if you think the only thing you did wrong this week was to cheat on Mrs. Rostik's science test, confessing only one sin will make the priest doubt your sincerity and will sound like you think you're some kind of saint. Also, as insurance against those sins you may have forgotten or not realized you committed, it can't hurt to throw in a few extra. If you really think about it, you will come up with more.

Although you can examine your conscience in advance, it is better to do it in church before getting in line for Confession. The holy surroundings will make every little thing you did that week seem far worse than they really were, and will assure you of having a good list of things to tell the priest.

When you enter the church, bless yourself with somewhat more piety than usual. You are about to receive a sacrament. Select an empty pew, genuflect solemnly and enter. Go directly into the kneeling position and bury your face in your hands for maximum concentration. Think hard about the past week.

Did you tell your mother to shut up? Yes. Did you hit your dog? Yes. Were you mean to your brothers and sisters? Yes. Did you make a face at Sister behind her back? Yes. If you're really stumped for sins, remember that omission is also a sin. Did you share your lunch with Nicholas when he forgot his? No. Did you help Mrs. Thomas carry her packages home from the store when she passed you playing baseball? No. There is a whole range of "I didn'ts" to choose from. The priest will know that you are very holy for even thinking of these things.

Once you know exactly what you have and haven't done, memorize the list so you won't forget in the confessional. Now go and get in line. Be sure to go to the priest who gives the most lenient penances--look for the longest line.

Excerpted from Growing up Catholic: An Infinitely Funny Guide for the Faithful, the Fallen and Everyone In-Between by Mary Jane Frances Cavolina, Jeffrey Allen Joseph Stone, Maureen Anne Teresa Kelly, Richard Glen Michael Davis
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

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