This volume pairs two great books from the illustrious Cardinal Henry Edward Manning.
Grounded in dogma and poignantly reflective, The Glories of the Sacred Heart is an illuminating work that invites readers to deeper knowledge and devotion. The Sacred Heart of Jesus is described as the compendium of divine science, the whole way of salvation, and the gospel of eternal life. Manning declares that the essential glory of the Sacred Heart is that uncreated charity dwells there in infinite perfection from which God’s love for us pours forth in fullness without measure.
The Blessed Sacrament: Centre of Immutable Truth, a sermon delivered on the Octave Day of Corpus Christi, sets forth the Eucharist as the abiding presence of the Incarnation, the pledge of the Resurrection, and the very core of the supernatural order.
“Very handsome new hardcover editions” – Joseph Pearce, The Imaginative Conservative
“Very beautifully printed” – Dr Peter Kwasniewski, Tradition & Sanity
“Highly recommended” – Stephanie Mann, Supremacy and Survival: The English Reformation
This volume pairs two great books from the illustrious Cardinal Henry Edward Manning.
Grounded in dogma and poignantly reflective, The Glories of the Sacred Heart is an illuminating work that invites readers to deeper knowledge and devotion. The Sacred Heart of Jesus is described as the compendium of divine science, the whole way of salvation, and the gospel of eternal life. Manning declares that the essential glory of the Sacred Heart is that uncreated charity dwells there in infinite perfection from which God’s love for us pours forth in fullness without measure.
The Blessed Sacrament: Centre of Immutable Truth, a sermon delivered on the Octave Day of Corpus Christi, sets forth the Eucharist as the abiding presence of the Incarnation, the pledge of the Resurrection, and the very core of the supernatural order.
“Very handsome new hardcover editions” – Joseph Pearce, The Imaginative Conservative
“Very beautifully printed” – Dr Peter Kwasniewski, Tradition & Sanity
“Highly recommended” – Stephanie Mann, Supremacy and Survival: The English Reformation