Below you'll find lots of Catholic supplements for medieval and modern history, which is what we'll be studying the coming year with the CMEC. As usual, I have also included some Bible and religion resources I'll be using and links to recommendations from years past.
This post is organized into the following categories: Bible for all Forms, Catholic Historical Supplements for Forms 1-3, Religion for Forms 1-3, and Catholic Historical Supplements and Religion for Forms 4 & 5 (High School).
Previous' years plans:
- 2020-21 School Year (1450-1600 and Ancient Near East/Egypt)
- 2021-22 School Year (1600-1780 and Ancient Greece)
- 2022-23 School Year (1780-1900 and Ancient Rome)
This is my LAST post in the four years' history rotation. Soon I'm planning to create separate pages on the site to house these resources for future years -- and to be a place I can update as I come across great new books!
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BIBLE
Lower FormsFor Old Testament, my students in Form 1-3 will be reading through parts of Samuel and Kings. For New Testament, my students in Forms 1 and 2 will read the Gospel of Matthew. As I have explained before, the CMEC follows the PNEU in scheduling Paterson-Smyth's books as a resource for Bible lessons, so I will be using his volumes on these sections for my preparation as well (Prophets and Kings and Saint Matthew). I don't agree with everything he writes, but he offers good "captain ideas" for Bible lessons that get at the over-arching themes of the assigned Bible texts.
I like to take his suggestions in light of Catholic resources; for this, I often rely on Knecht's A Practical Commentary on Holy Scripture. This tome (it's a thick one!) provides a Catholic perspective on both Old and New Testaments: historical background, theological and doctrinal connections, notes for personal application. I have used it in various ways over the past few years and always with good results. It also includes a few nice images and diagrams helpful for Book of Centuries work.
- Dummelow's One-Volume Bible Commentary - We have used this PNEU-recommended commentary for the past few years. My kids appreciate the historical details it includes on each book. (This is the new edition -- we have an older used one.)
- I will be previewing the Navarre volume on The Minor Prophets for their reference as well.
- We also draw on the Catholic Encyclopedia at New Advent whenever my kids have a question they'd like to explore further.
This coming year, we will be studying roughly 1900-present. My Form 2A and 3 students will also be studying the Middle Ages in Europe for their general history stream.
- St. Catherine of Siena: The Story of the Girl Who Saw Saints in the Sky
- Saint Dominic: Preacher of the Rosary and Founder of the Dominican Order
- Saint Thomas Aquinas: The Story of the Dumb Ox
- St. Benedict: The Story of the Father of the Western Monks
- The Children of Fatima and Our Lady's Message to the World
- Saint Hyacinth of Poland: The Story of the Apostle of the North
- Tarry's St. Katharine Drexel: Friend of the Oppressed (assigned by the CMEC)
- Beebe's Saint Dominic and the Rosary
- Thompson's St. Elizabeth's Three Crowns
- Homan's Francis and Clare: Saints of Assisi
- De Maria's Saint Maximillian Kolbe: A Hero of the Holocaust
- Diethelm's St. Pius X: The Farm Boy Who Became Pope
- Buliard's My Eskimos: A Priest in the Arctic (out of print)
- Ball's Blessed Miguel Pro (from Tan Books, very nice bio, better for Form 3)
- Royer's Padre Pro (from Hillside)
- Saint Gertrude the Great: Herald of Divine Love (from Tan Books, tiny volume)
- Fitzhenry's El Cid: God's Own Champion (haven't read this yet, but it was recently written and there are others by this author if we like this one!)
- Canton's The Story of Saint Elizabeth of Hungary (a PNEU selection)
- Saint Gianna Beretta Molla from the Encounter the Saints series (out of print)
- Godden's The Kitchen Madonna (a longtime favorite)
- Leighton's Twelve Bright Trumpets (new to me and looks very promising!)
- Peek's Crusader King: A Novel about Baldin IV and the Crusades
- Kadar-Kallen's The Cross Our Compass (well-researched, set in WWII, and written by a homeschool grad!)
Similarly, our assigned American history texts for these Forms for the modern period (Builders of Our Country, The Landmark History of the American People, and Land of Hope) do not present issues for Catholics.
This year, I will be continuing a study of the Mass with my Form 1 and 2 students and preparation for Confirmation with my Form 3 and 4 students. See the post from last year for the resources we are using!
This year, we will continue A Character Calendar, which has been a favorite with my younger students. I will also be reading from Mother Loyola's "With the Church" series, which has been my personal reading for the past year. I am excited to share some of my favorite parts with the children.
- One chapter per term from Belloc's Europe and the Faith
- A bit of reading on the history of the modern era in the Church at the end of Term 3 (not sure yet, but currently planning to assign about thirty pages from Vidmar's The Catholic Church Through the Ages -- not a big fan of his take on it, but I already have it on the shelf and it will make for good conversation with my students)
- On the free read shelf because they love Belloc: the rest of Europe and the Faith, The Great Heresies (will tie together their history from the past four years), and The Crusades
- Benson's The Lord of the World (he is a family favorite and I am looking forward to this for my Form 5 students)
- O'Brien's Strangers and Sojourners (pre-reading for my Form 5 students -- if you have read it, let me know what you think)
- Wilder's Bridge of San Luis Rey (we are doing Our Town with the CMEC, so I thought this would be a nice addition)
- Chesterton's Lepanto (we have already done his wonderful Ballad of the White Horse, which is scheduled by the CMEC, so we will read this instead)
- Barrett's The Lilies of the Field (and perhaps we'll watch the movie afterward!)
- We will also be reading Dante's Divine Comedy this year along with the CMEC!
- Chesterton's Saint Francis and Saint Thomas Aquinas (scheduled by the CMEC as one of the term biographies)
- Glynn's A Song for Nagasaki (scheduled by the CMEC as one of the term biographies)
- Dorcy's Saint Dominic
- Undset's Catherine of Siena
- Coulombe's Blessed Charles of Austria
- Goldmann's The Shadow of His Wings
- Raymond's The Family that Overtook Christ
- Molla's The Journey of Our Love (for my Form 5 daughter, named for St. Gianna)
- Additional books on St. Therese for my students who read Story of a Soul last year: My Sister St. Therese, The Father of the Little Flower, The Mother of the Little Flower (all seem to be out of print on Amazon, unfortunately)
- Stronger than Steel: Soldiers of the Great War Write to Thérèse of Lisieux (a gift from a good friend!)
- The Life and Revelations of St. Gertrude the Great
- De Wohl's Citadel of God: A Novel about St. Benedict, Lay Siege to Heaven: A Novel about St. Catherine of Siena, The Quiet Light: A Novel about Saint Thomas Aquinas (fictionalized biographies -- my older kids have loved these, and I think my newly-Form 4 daughter will too!)
- The Little Flowers of Saint Francis (my older two have used the Italian version for this Italian studies over the years, the version of I have is out of print but this one looks good)
- The Rule of St. Benedict
- Aquinas's Shorter Summa: Saint Thomas's Own Concise Version of His Summa Theologica (they have been begging to read some of the Summa, so I thought this would be a good option -- it's still quite long, though, so they likely won't read the whole thing)
- I also plan to have them read an encyclical each term, which is something they have not done yet. I wanted to choose ones that would be both historically important and clarifying about some aspect of the Faith or the Church's position today. I am currently planning on Aeterni Patris by Leo XIII, Pascendi Dominici Gregis by Pope Pius X, and Caritas in Veritate by Benedict XVI.
- Last in this section, I wanted to have them read some short works by the Early Church Fathers. Ideally I would like a compilation volume, but every one I have previewed so far has been too much (very long, multiple volumes) or not enough (mostly descriptions of the Fathers rather than the works themselvees). If you have recommendations, please let me know!
- Sheen's Characters of the Passion (for Lent -- they loved his Life of Christ last year)
- Knox's In Soft Garments: Classic Catholic Apologetics (for my Form 5, and there is a second volume of these Oxford lectures if they want to read further!)
- Jarrett's Classic Catholic Meditations (daily reading, really looking forward to this one)
- Sister Mary Philip and Mother Mary Loyola's The Sacred Heart and Mine in Holy Communion (for my Form 4 daughter)
- Hildebrand's The Privilege of Being a Woman (for my Form 5 daughter)
I hope this helps those studying these time periods with us this fall!
Any wonderful books I should add to the list above? Let me know in the comments!
(Amazon links above are affiliate links. Thanks for your support!)
Thank you so much for doing these posts every year. I have added so many great books to our shelves based on your recommendations! This will be my 3rd year with the CMEC and your Catholic additions are so helpful, thank you!
ReplyDeleteThanks for letting me know, Rebecca! I'm glad!
DeleteSounds interesting, Mignon! I'll be curious to hear your thoughts once you have had a chance to review it!
ReplyDeleteOne other thought, on the Catholic lit section, is Graham Greene's The Power and the Glory, one of the best novels of the 20th century. My husband uses it with the seniors at his school. It's one of my favorite books, and it's a great look into the complexity of the communist persecution of the Church in Mexico in the 1920's/30's through the lens of a hunted priest. Greene is just superb.
ReplyDeleteOh thank you for posting this again Celeste! Its always well received. I am reading Loyla's "Trust" this summer and curious if my family can handle it as a family read. My daughter sometimes needs an 'easier' read for her evening devotional and while it might fit into another time period than ours, it feels medieval in many ways -- "Live Well today: St. Francis de Sales's Simple Approach to Holiness" is kind of medieval self-help book that offers a theological psychology easily used for family reading or for a young person reading independently but struggles with older ways of writing (when reading by themselves).
ReplyDeleteThank you for this feedback -- very helpful! St. Francis de Sales is one of my favorite sprititual writers and my older kids read "Introduction to the Devout Life" a few years ago. I bet they we all would love the one you mentioned.
DeleteThank you so much for sharing these great resources! I did not grow up in a Catholic home and only converted 3 years ago. Trying to figure out how to create a catholic home for my family with 3 young kiddos is completely new to me. Not many people I know are familiar with the traditional Latin Mass so this has been incredibly helpful, Celeste!
ReplyDeleteWelcome, Catherine! I am a convert too...but 20 years ago now! Hard to believe it has been that long. :) I'm so glad you found this helpful! Thanks for letting me know.
DeleteOh and I just found another one that I haven't read yet but is on my shelf. Looks like a Form 1 or 1 Catholic Historical Fiction read" "Treachery and Truth: A Story of Sinners, Servants, and Saints" by Katy Huth Jones about 'Good King Wenceslas' and the real basis of the legend in the life of Vaclav 1st of Bohemia. It is a recent Pauline Books and Media print. I think it might appeal to my boys in particular in Form .
ReplyDeleteThanks, I'll check it out!!
DeleteHi, Celeste,
ReplyDeleteThanks for this post - I was just wondering how using the CMEC would integrate with Catholic history. After reconsidering the CMEC again via your last post (I see Baby Matthew was baptized by Fr. Skees! :) ) I wanted to reach out to ask some questions specifically about the CMEC but can't seem to find your contact to email (the "email me" button is redirecting me to an unusable link).
Hi! Not sure who this is since it's posting as anonymous -- but you can email me at joyouslessons@gmail.com. You can also reach out with CMEC questions to the info box: info@thecmec.org. Thanks!
DeleteOne of my favourite blog posts of the year! I'm wondering if you do this all in just one block per week (eg 20 minutes for a Form 1 student), or if you have multiple/longer blocks? I want to fortify our Catechism block this coming school year, but it's hard to fit it all in.
ReplyDeleteI love your idea of having your older students read a papal encyclical - we are big fans of Pope St Pius X (we attend a Society priory), and I recently read aloud the Junior Vision version of Diethelm's "St Pius X: The Farm Boy Who Became Pope" - it's a condensed edition with illustrations, many in colour, on each page, so it was easier for my 7 year old to stay engaged. Vision only published a few of these "Junior" versions but they're such a nice bridge to the regular Vision books for slightly older children.
Thank you for continuing to keep blogging - I still go back to your old blog posts when I want advice and inspiration. Wishing you a summer of "active leisure" :)
My kids really liked the regular Vision book for Pius X -- I didn't realize there was an illustrated and condensed version! Sounds really neat. I'll have to keep an eye out for those Junior editions.
DeleteAs for scheduling, it really depends. Much of what I have here is Sunday reading -- my kids all do a Sunday reading block of varying lengths depending on age. My Form 1 students usually read a chapter (or I read a chapter with them) in their saint bio, however long that takes. Then I usually have one 20 minute block a week to work on catechism, study of the Mass, etc. with them. And then we have family reading over breakfast that includes books tied to the liturgical calendar and spiritual reading for my youngers. The older students gradually have more and more religious reading built into their schedule, so my high schoolers have a daily devotional time of about 20 minutes, a weekly Catholic history block of 40 minutes, Sunday reading of at least 30 minutes, and then other leisure reading that is tied to religion that they do in afternoons/evenings/weekends. So we kind of handle it differently year by year! :)
That is a very helpful breakdown, thank you! I was wondering if Sunday Reading figured into the equation; as I have been reading more about it, it's definitely an area that I could be more structured about and make better use of. I think the key here is my own Sunday habits - we do take things slowly on a Sunday, spending our day at home after Mass, but I tend to want to introvert for the day, as does my husband (but God gave us an extroverted child lol). I like the idea of reading a chapter of a saint biography on Sundays. I do read the relevant chapter from Fr. Diamond's "Sunday Morning Storyland" on the way home from Mass - he has that wonderfully direct way of speaking to children that doesn't sugarcoat the realities of sin. Our morning catechism block used to be much longer before we started formal lessons - now I don't have time for much more than the daily readings from the Benedictus and the Character Calendar. I kind of miss those leisurely days of celebrating the saints' feast days and reading lots of picture books about the saints. Much to ponder as I plan our timetable for the upcoming school year...
DeleteI really try to protect some quiet downtime for myself on Sundays also. Having independent reading for the kids helps me accomplish this -- so once he can read more on his own, I think you'll find Sunday reading a lot easier to implement! :) But it's nice to have just a chapter to read -- a quiet activity we can do together that doesn't take a lot of energy for me but fills up my little kids' need for mom time. ;)
DeleteI have possibly found a real winner for a biography of St. Thomas a Becket, "The Falcon and the Dove" by Alfred Duggan. I am pre-reading it, and I am absolutely gripped by the narrative! I have found myself laughing out loud at some of his dry descriptions of the "lay of the land" in Christendom at the time of Becket's great conflict with King Henry. I can't endorse it 100% until I read more about how he treats our hero and the Church, but if it stays as good as the first couple of chapters, I highly recommend it as a terrific living book for strong Form 2 readers, or Form 3 and up.
ReplyDeleteThank you -- you'll have to let me know what you think when you finish! I didn't put Murder in the Cathedral on here, but my high schoolers are reading that with the CMEC as well. So a more traditional account of St. Thomas would be a great addition!
DeleteThis is so helpful, Celeste! Really appreciate you sharing your knowledge on some of these reading options! Going to work through some of those Windeatt stories with my Form 1 and younger kids! Trying to get an early start before baby 5 joins us in September!
ReplyDeleteAppreciate what one of the other commenters said about the Fr. Diamond lessons also! I think my kids will like adding those this year. We have a longer car ride to/from Mass now, so this is how we will fill much of that time!
Congrats, Amanda -- wishing you a wonderful summer prepping for your little one!
DeleteHi Celest! Thank you for this post, it is really helpful. I was wondering, how do your Form 3 and high schoolers approach Bible readings? Do they narrate or is it spiritual reading? I'd appreciate any insight you can give me.
ReplyDeleteHi Jenn! Their Bible readings are assigned and narrated. They also keep favorite lines in their commonplace. Generally speaking, they read the Bible text, narrate, read from a commentary, add to their narration anything they found shed light on their understanding. The commentary is not every day -- just as they have time.
DeleteHi Celeste! Have you seen "The Apostolic Fathers in English"? It's translated and edited by Michael W. Holmes and includes complete texts from Clement, Ignatius, and Polycarp, among others. I used this text in a graduate level class on early Church history and found it to be very good. One downside is that it may not include a wide enough variety of Church Fathers for your needs, but just thought I'd suggest in case it helps!
ReplyDeleteThank you for the suggestion, Sally -- it looks great!
DeleteHi Celeste! My oldest will be preparing for her confirmation this year and I was wondering if you report catechesis as an elective or just leave it out of the transcript.
ReplyDeleteHi! I have a "Religion and Philosophy" class on our transcript every year and include the reading for sacramental prep there, as well as Bible reading, saints lives, spiritual reading, etc.
DeleteThank you! I really appreciate your guidance 🙂
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