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This is the remarkable and inspiring story of how the famous and revered Chief Rabbi of Rome, Israel Zolli, became a Christian and entered the Catholic Church after World War II. Zolli was a world renowned Jewish leader and Scripture & Talmudic scholar, and an authority on Semitic philology.
Father Raphael Simon, in his autobiography, Glory of Thy People, begins with this proposition: “Resolved: never to abandon the Jewish religion. By becoming a Catholic this resolution is kept.” His writing is clear, direct and convincing. Our new, unabridged edition includes the original 1947 Preface by Bishop Fulton Sheen.
Eugenio Zolli’s spiritual autobiography, Before the Dawn, should be required reading not only because he was the Chief Rabbi of Rome during World War II, but also because he was the world’s foremost Hebrew scholar.
Our newest classic, re-published in January 2001 (50 years after the 1st edition), is Pillar of Fire. Jewish doctor, Bernard Nathanson — famous repentant abortionist who found forgiveness in the Catholic Church, reveals that PIllar of Fire was the instrument that began his conversion. Our edition of Stern’s book includes a new Introduction by Fr. Stanley Jaki.
We are now offering a softcover edition of Dr. Bernard Nathanson’s shocking autobiography, The Hand of God. It’s the story of an atheistic Jewish abortion doctor who was attracted to the Catholic Church by the mercy and forgiveness of the King of Israel.
The Church in the Pentateuch is an easy-to-read, summary of the Five Books of Moses (the Pentateuch) presents an elementary introduction to Divine Revelation in Scripture: a requirement for any Catholic student from high school to post-doctoral research.
Following this introduction to the first five books of the Bible, Remnant of Israel offers a thorough summary of the the major Covenants God has made with His People. Covenants with Adam, Noah, Abraham, Moses, David, and the New eternal Covenant instituted by Jesus are explained clearly in one book by Dr. Scott Hahn, A Father Who Keeps His Promises.
A more detailed examination of the Jewish roots of the Gospel is presented in Mission of the Messiah (a book on the Gospel of Luke)
Anyone who wishes to draw closer to Jesus must enter into Judaism with Him. Remnant of Israel offers The One Who Is To Come, a complete book on Judaism for Catholics. The One Who Is To Come is a collection of the writings of Father Arthur Klyber, C.Ss.R., the founder of Remnant of Israel. Father Klyber, who was an orthodox Jew and entered the Church as an adult, labored for over half of the twentieth century to educate Catholics about our Jewish roots, to fight anti-Jewish prejudice, and to teach Christians to love Jews and Judaism. This thorough collection of his writings is the fruit of his life’s work. The book contains a detailed and useful Index and includes abundant notations compiled by Fr. Klyber’s authorized biographer. Included are most of Fr. Klyber’s writings — spanning decades before and decades after Vatican II — inspiring the Church to implement the Council by loving the Jews.
The Church, born on Pentecost, began with a Jewish man and wife, joined in Sacred Matrimony according to the Law of Moses, and their Child: the Holy Family of Nazareth. This Jewish Family is the Bridge between Judaism and the Church. Another book, St. Joseph “Guardian of the Redeemer,” shows that Jewish family life was, and still is, in the center of Christian Life.
The more than 400 pages of The Mystery Hidden for Ages in God are an answer to the question which the author raises in his introduction: Why should spirtiual growth, my own and others’, be so slow? Why do some priests or religious seem to go backwards rather than forwards?. . . Why are Christians often more easily led into moral evil by the surrounding culture than are, say, Orthodox Jews?. . . How should Christians grow spiritually, how do they, and why the difference?
In Second Exodus we see the synagogue as it is transformed by the Messiah. This book is most informative for any Jew who is interested in the faith of Catholics. At the same time, Barrack has provided an excellent resource for Catholics to know more about their Jewish heritage.
From the Preface of Man’s Search for Meaning, Viktor Frankl writes: This book has now lived to see its seventy-third printing in English — in addition to having been published in nineteen other languages. And the English editions alone have sold almost two and a half million copies. . . I do not at all see in the bestseller status of my book so much an achievement and accomplishment on my part as an expression of the misery of our time: if hundreds of thousands of people reach out for a book whose very title promises to deal with the question of a meaning to life, it must be a question that burns under their fingernails.

