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Author Topic: Self Knowledge & Self-Discipline by Fr. B. W. Maturin - 1915  (Read 1019 times)

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Offline rosarytrad

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Self Knowledge & Self-Discipline by Fr. B. W. Maturin - 1915
« on: April 24, 2023, 11:13:07 AM »
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  • I read this book over Lent and learned so much from it. I highly recommend it, and think it qualifies as essential reading for Catholics. I've attached a pdf of a powerpoint I made and used for a lecture on the book. My presentation only scratches the surface of the richness of the actual text but I think it serves as a good cliff notes of each chapter. This is a book that one can return to and get something new out of every time.

    This is a top notch psychology book. Modern psychology has done away with the soul and/or separated it from the mind and body. This book does not do that. He uses solid Catholic principles and Sacred Scripture to give us a practical approach to self-discipline.

    He explains what Self-Knowledge actually is, the principle of self-discipline, the Four Laws of Human Nature, and much much more. I cannot recommend this book enough. You won't be disappointed.

    https://archive.org/details/SelfKnowledgeSelfDiscipline1916/page/n9/mode/2up
    The mercies of the Lord I will sing for ever. - Ps. 88:2a
    St. Anthony of Padua, pray for us.
    St. John of God, pray for us.
    Our Lady of Guadalupe, mystical rose, make intercession for Holy Church.

    Offline Simeon

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    Re: Self Knowledge & Self-Discipline by Fr. B. W. Maturin - 1915
    « Reply #1 on: April 24, 2023, 11:38:26 AM »
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  • Thanks much! Looks really good.

    Nice work on the presentation!


    Offline rosarytrad

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    Re: Self Knowledge & Self-Discipline by Fr. B. W. Maturin - 1915
    « Reply #2 on: April 24, 2023, 03:36:01 PM »
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  • Why, thank you! I hope you enjoy the book as much as I did. I'll be interested to hear your thoughts on the book.
    The mercies of the Lord I will sing for ever. - Ps. 88:2a
    St. Anthony of Padua, pray for us.
    St. John of God, pray for us.
    Our Lady of Guadalupe, mystical rose, make intercession for Holy Church.

    Offline Simeon

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    Re: Self Knowledge & Self-Discipline by Fr. B. W. Maturin - 1915
    « Reply #3 on: April 24, 2023, 04:04:23 PM »
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  • Why, thank you! I hope you enjoy the book as much as I did. I'll be interested to hear your thoughts on the book.

    Sure thing, but it will take a while. I go slowly in books, and I just now stepped off into a Vatican II rabbit hole. :)

    Offline Emile

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    Re: Self Knowledge & Self-Discipline by Fr. B. W. Maturin - 1915
    « Reply #4 on: April 24, 2023, 04:21:27 PM »
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  • It's been several years, but I recall it being a worthwhile book.

    Fr. Maturin was an interesting man. I thought I had read something written by Fr. Ronald Knox about him but couldn't find it right off.


    Quote
    Father Basil William Maturin
    Father Basil Maturin (1847 – 1915), 68, was a British citizen and Irish national.  He was a Roman Catholic chaplain at Oxford University and well-known author of religious books.  Father Maturin, on his 1915 voyage of the Lusitania, had just finished a Lenten series at the Church of Our Lady of Lourdes in New York. Father Maturin administered absolutions to several people on the sinking Lusitania. Father Maturin was lost in the disaster.
    Life

    Dr. Maturin was born in Ireland on 15 February 1847 to William Basil Maturin and Jane Cook Maturin and the grandson of writer Charles Maturin. He was educated at Trinity College, Dublin.  In 1876, he was sent to Philadelphia.  There, Maturin had been the rector of an Episcopalian church in the city, St. Clement’s.  Maturin became a Roman Catholic in 1897 and was ordained by Cardinal Herbert Vaughn in 1898.
    Maturin was also author of several religious and psychological books such as Laws of the Spiritual Life (1908), Self-Knowledge and Self-Discipline (1909), Christian Self-Mastery, and The Price of Unity (1912). He was appointed the Catholic chaplain to the University of Oxford in 1913. In 1915,he made a successful preaching tour of the United States, planning to return to England on Cunard’s RMS Lusitania.
    While in New York before the voyage, Maturin had talked to several Irish-Americans about the war.  Perhaps he was relieved in his findings, saying, “I can’t imagine where we got the idea in England that they are pro-German.”
    Lusitania

    On the day of the Lusitania disaster, 7 May 1915, Maturin had lunch with Reverend Charles Clarke.  During the Lusitania‘s sinking, Maturin was seen “pale but calm” and administering absolutions to several.  He was then seen handing a child into a lifeboat with the request, “Find its mother.”
    Father Maturin was not wearing a lifebelt.
    Maturin’s body was #223 and recovered by two elderly fisherman in Ballycotton Bay.  His body was identified based on his papers, silver watch, fountain pen, banker’s drafts for £2000, and other personal items he had with him.  His body was then shipped to England.  Although Maturin was predicted that his funeral would be held in a small, half-empty church on a rainy day, in London’s Brompton Oratory plans were set for “impressive last rights” (Hoehling/Hoehling, 220).
    A few recalled a passage from one of Maturin’s books, which perhaps prophetically, said such:
    Quote
    It was a great victory of the human mind which annihilated space and time, and circled the globe with telegraph wires.  But greater still is the victory which gives a man strength and courage to receive with equanimity over those wires a message telling him that all he valued in life has been taken from him.
    Contributors:
     
    William Graham
    Michael Poirier
    References:
    Hoehling, A. A. and Mary Hoehling.  The Last Voyage of the Lusitania.  Madison Books, 1956.
    Preston, Diana.  Lusitania:  An Epic Tragedy.  Berkley Books, 2002.
    “Basil W. Maturin.”  Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia.  Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. 22 July 2004. Web. 24 July 2011.  <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basil_W._Maturin>

    https://www.rmslusitania.info/people/saloon/basil-maturin/



    Offline Simeon

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    Re: Self Knowledge & Self-Discipline by Fr. B. W. Maturin - 1915
    « Reply #5 on: April 27, 2023, 09:31:12 AM »
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  • I started the book. Thank you so much for recommending it. 

    It's different from other books on the spiritual life. He is so plainspoken and yet so poetic at the same time. Certainly a gift. 

    The preface alone was life changing for me. I've never read any other author approach the subject from that point of view. I'm now deep into chapter one. This book is a Godsend!


    Offline songbird

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    Re: Self Knowledge & Self-Discipline by Fr. B. W. Maturin - 1915
    « Reply #6 on: April 27, 2023, 07:55:06 PM »
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  • I started the book, great!  Love those archives !