Age Range: 8 and up Fear drives me forward as I rush down a rocky path in Jerusalem, trying to sort things out even as dusk makes it harder to hurry. Am I really an American girl, cast back to the time of Jesus? Or a delusional Jewish teen, plagued with visions of a place called America, thousands of years in the future? I don't know anymore. But I do know that something awful is about to happen to my Jesus: they're going to arrest him tonight, and kill him. No one believes me; they think I'm crazy. So it's up to me to save him, hurrying down this dark path toward Gethsemane, toward the turning point of all history, the attempt to kill Jesus . . . toward the uncertainty of whether I can actually manage to change the future.
Discover the world of Francesca Cabrini in this moving book that not only educates children about a remarkable person in American history, but inspires them with stories of her compassion, courage, vision, and miracles. The first American citizen to be canonized, St. Frances Xavier Cabrini rescued forgotten children, even from the dark, damp sewers of New York City, and provided them with safe havens, loving comfort, and a quality education. Within these endearing pages, children will encounter characters much like themselves--little heroes who joined Mother Cabrini in her mission to establish orphanages, hospitals, and schools across the United States, Central and Latin America, Europe, and beyond. Through captivating storytelling, this book introduces young minds to the incredible journeys of a woman who, despite her frailty, overcomes countless challenges to bring God's love to the poor and forgotten. Even though Mother Cabrini was afraid of water, she received the strength to sail across the ocean more than two dozen times! Featuring the vibrant artwork of Richard Cowdrey, Mother Cabrini's work comes to life on every page. Cowdrey is a New York Times bestselling children's book illustrator, fine artist, author, speaker, and educator. Richard lives in the heart of Ohio's Amish community and enjoys traveling across the country to speak at schools and encourage students to find and refine their gifts. As children journey through the beautifully illustrated pages, they'll be inspired to develop the compassion, bravery, and faith in God to empower their own adventures ahead. Like Francesca Cabrini, author Claudia Cangilla McAdam is a five-foot-tall Italian American Catholic woman. Her award-winning books for children and teens invite them to explore the virtues, build character, and deepen faith. She lives in Colorado, not far from the mountain where Mother Cabrini established a summer camp for girls in the early 1900s. Cabrini's compassion, commitment, and creativity inspire Claudia to strive to become a saint, too. Visit her and request a free Discussion and Activities Guide for this book at www.ClaudiaMcAdam.com. Angel Studios is proud to produce this children's book. Committed to delivering stories that are more than entertainment, Angel Studios' films and television series amplify light in the world around us. Its free streaming platform on the Angel Studios app and angel.com offers exceptional family-friendly films and TV shows, including The Wingfeather Saga, Tuttle Twins, and Jungle Beat. The studio's box-office hit Sound of Freedom shed light on the issue of human trafficking. The major motion picture, Cabrini, is the powerful true story of Francesca Cabrini, an Italian immigrant religious sister who arrived in New York City in 1889 to battle disease, crime, and corruption on behalf of impoverished children. Mother Cabrini built an empire of hope unlike anything the world had ever seen. Share her legacy and inspiration with Cabrini gifts, available at shop.angel.com.
Cold, cranky, and restless one winter's night, the young daughter of a Bethlehem innkeeper is bothered to wakefulness by the crowded, comfortless condition of her family's sleeping loft. Recalling the young couple staying in the stable out back, she arises to bring them some fire for warmth. There she approaches the newborn Babe asleep in the manger and has an encounter that changes her mood and alters her life forever. Claudia McAdams's marvelous retelling of the Christmas story demonstrates to children how an encounter with Christ can change their lives ... eternally.
Eighth-grader Ronni's Catholic faith has been sorely tested in the year since her father and brother were killed, but during a critical illness she is transported to Jerusalem at the end of Christ's life and gains insight into His sacrifice and what it means for her.
The beauty of the Texas landscape is illustrated through the photography of Richard Reynolds and the poems of Claudia Cangilla-McAdam. Die-cut pages help the reader discover the hidden wonders of the photographs as he/she guesses the bigger picture on the next page.
Tabby Long is a non-Christian girl in a Catholic school whose world gets turned upside down when her dad, who has never been a man of faith, experiences a miraculous healing on Good Friday. Her father’s dramatic religious conversion alienates her mother, who deserts the family. In her struggle to understand what has happened to her family, Tabby follows the suggestion of her school’s religion teacher, and she begins spending time reading Scripture while in Eucharistic Adoration. Following the practice taught by Saint Ignatius of Loyola, she inserts herself into the biblical stories she reads. Through this process, she “time travels” to first-century Jerusalem, where she is Tabitha Longinus, the daughter of the centurion Gaius Cassius Longinus, who pierces the side of the crucified Jesus, incurs a spontaneous healing, and undergoes immediate conversion. Tabitha is a Gentile girl with Jewish friends and a mother who can’t accept her husband’s newfound (and dangerous) faith. When her mother flees to Rome and her father retires from the army and leaves Jerusalem, Tabitha finds herself alone in the holy city, her life in jeopardy for having entered a part of the Temple that is off-limits to Gentiles. She is drawn into belief in Jesus through her friends who are close to the Apostles, even as she struggles to devise a way to save and reunite her family — a duty that consumes her in her modern-day life as well. Tabitha’s experiences are rooted in the stories found in the first ten chapters of the Acts of the Apostles. On the last of several days of her Scripture meditations, Tabby emerges from Adoration with a newfound faith and clarity about how her family can be reunited and healed, all with the help of the Lord.
Maria, a homesick llama from South America, begins to love her new home in the Rocky Mountains after carrying a mysterious package for John the photographer.
Age Range: 8 and up Fear drives me forward as I rush down a rocky path in Jerusalem, trying to sort things out even as dusk makes it harder to hurry. Am I really an American girl, cast back to the time of Jesus? Or a delusional Jewish teen, plagued with visions of a place called America, thousands of years in the future? I don't know anymore. But I do know that something awful is about to happen to my Jesus: they're going to arrest him tonight, and kill him. No one believes me; they think I'm crazy. So it's up to me to save him, hurrying down this dark path toward Gethsemane, toward the turning point of all history, the attempt to kill Jesus . . . toward the uncertainty of whether I can actually manage to change the future.
The beauty of the Texas landscape is illustrated through the photography of Richard Reynolds and the poems of Claudia Cangilla-McAdam. Die-cut pages help the reader discover the hidden wonders of the photographs as he/she guesses the bigger picture on the next page.
Children get two guesses as to the subjects of the photographs in this book - first by viewing a small section of the picture, and then viewing the whole.
When thirteen-year-old Kirsten Camarata and her cousins visit a town at rodeo time, she investigates a teen bull rider's missing championship buckle, supported by her Catholic faith, and even gets a chance to take part in one of the events.
Maria, a homesick llama from South America, begins to love her new home in the Rocky Mountains after carrying a mysterious package for John the photographer.
A giant conifer desires noting so much as to be someone's Christmas tree. When it is finally felled, the tree finds itself as the centerpiece of the country's most important home.
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