The Life of the Blessed Virgin Mary
From the Visions of Ven. Anne
Catherine Emmerich
395 page book (5.5" x 8.25"), only $9!
The Life of the Blessed Virgin Mary from the Visions of
Anne Catherine Emmerich has become a classic in Catholic literature. Based on the mystic
visions of the Venerable Anne Catherine Emmerich (1774-1824), a German Augustinian nun from
Dulmen, it focuses first on the ancestry of the Blessed Virgin Mary, then on her childhood
and early life, next on her life with Jesus and St. Joseph at Nazareth--though it does not
include the Public Ministry of Christ. Thereafter, the narrative picks up following the Passion
and Death of Our Lord. Two other books based on the visions of Anne Catherine Emmerich cover
the Public Life of Christ and His Passion and Death, namely, The Life of Jesus Christ
and Biblical Revelations (in 4 volumes) and The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus
Christ (in 1 volume). In both of these other books, mention of Our Lady during the Public
Life is prominent.
Characteristic of all the writings from the visions and revelations of Anne Catherine
Emmerich is a beautiful, holy aura that seems to surround and pervade everything she says
(most readers sense this aspect of her work from the very first pages); and The Life of
the Blessed Virgin Mary is typical of Sr. Emmerich's works in this regard. This book is
filled with unusual, saintly descriptions that are not recorded in the Gospel story--descriptions
that supplement and illustrate the Biblical narrative in a way that makes the actual Scripture
passages truly come alive. The Life of the Blessed Virgin Mary by Ven. Anne Catherine
Emmerich will richly reward the reader with insights he could never gain from any other source
and is a book he will remember all his life.
EXTRACT FROM THE PREFACE OF THE PRESENT EDITION
ANNE CATHERINE EMMERICH was born on September 8th, 1774, at Flamske, near Koesfeld,
Westphalia, West Germany, and became on November 13th, 1803, a nun of the Augustinian Order
at the Convent of Agnetenberg at Dulmen (also in Westphalia). She died on February 9th, 1824.
Although of simple education, she had perfect consciousness of her earliest days and could
understand the liturgical Latin from her first time at Mass. During most of her later years
she would vomit even the simplest food or drink, subsisting for long periods almost entirely
on water and the Holy Eucharist. She was told in mystic vision that her gift of seeing past,
present, and future was greater than that possessed by anyone else in history. From the year
1812 until her death she bore the stigmata of Our Lord, including a cross over her heart and
wounds from the crown of thorns. An invalid confined to bed during her later years, her funeral
was attended, nevertheless, by a greater concourse of mourners than any other remembered by the
oldest inhabitants of Dulmen.
(Published by St. Benedict Press - distributed by TAN Books)