Okay, so the second sentence wasn't serious. The first one was, however.
I picked up this book while looking for Letter and Spirit (same author), which I found as well (but didn't finish reading before I left NoVA without PWC library books). Hahn wrote Ordinary Work, Extraordinary Grace about his experience with Opus Dei. Prior to reading it, I knew very little about Opus Dei except: 1) Dan Brown was wrong and 2) some Catholics I know are part of it. I picked it up to better myself as a Catholic and as a minister-type-person.
This book was a short and quick read -- I finished the 120 pages in two days (neither of which were reading-intense). Hahn basically provided an overview of Opus Dei : its origin and its spirituality and how it affected his journey to the Catholic faith. The center of Opus Dei is the idea of "divine filiation," the Latinate words for "we are the children of God." Our position as children of God permeates every aspect of our lives, allowing us to take the works of daily life and sanctify them for God. Opus Dei offers particular paradigms, strategies, and tools for doing just that, so that ordinary day jobs, family life, and daily routines can center around Christ.
I'm still not sure I quite know what Opus Dei is, other than a personal prelature -- a group of laity and clergy who answer spiritually to the prelate (leader) as well as their diocesan bishop -- and a specific image of how to live out Catholicism that seems particularly applicable to today's world. But I think this lack of knowledge isn't the fault of Hahn, so much as the fact that it is hard to put a life-style into a short book and make it make sense. My sister and I both agreed that the book didn't say much new, per se, about Christianity or Catholicism, but was informative about Opus Dei
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