
Every one of us has to eat. Some of us eat too much food. Or we eat too little. Sometimes we eat without gratitude, without charity, or without respect. But, as award-winning author Emily Stimpson Chapman explains in The Catholic Table, with a sacramental worldview, the supernatural gift of God’s grace can transform and heal us through the food we make, eat, and share.
In The Catholic Table: Finding Joy Where Food and Faith Meet, you’ll discover a theology of food through the personal experience of the author and the wisdom of Scripture, the Saints, and more. Stimpson Chapman’s insightful survey of America’s food landscape is informed by the understanding of food as a sign and sacrament. As she explains, “There is nothing ordinary about food. By God’s grace, the simplest bowl of soup and the humblest hunk of cheese have the power to become an occasion of grace, drawing friends and family together around a shared table to build a shared life.”
The Church’s teachings on grace, the Eucharist, the virtues, fasting, hospitality, and the body are integral to how we consume our daily bread and lead us to peace, joy, and community (“and,” the author writes, “some really good dinners”). As Emily Stimpson Chapman explores these topics in The Catholic Table, she provides a delightfully written and meaningful framework for understanding feasting, fasting, and all the eating in between.
Now Available: The Catholic Table Video Series: a six-week study based on the book.
About the Author
Emily Stimpson Chapman is an award-winning Catholic author of over a half-dozen books, including Hope to Die: The Christian Meaning of Death and the Resurrection of the Body, co-authored with Scott Hahn; The Catholic Table: Finding Joy Where Food and Faith Meet; These Beautiful Bones: An Everyday Theology of the Body; and The Catholic Girl’s Survival Guide for the Single Years. She also is the editor of the high school faith formation series Formed in Christ and the author of numerous studies for the women’s ministry Endow. Chapman lives in Pittsburgh with her husband, Chris, and their three young children.
What People Are Saying
Reviews
An easy to read book packed with great things to think about. It helped me re-evaluate my relationship with food.
I have just listened to the full teachings given on this book. I have to first of all Thank The Holy Spirit for opening up the trial of using St Paul Center teachings. Second I thank you Emily Stimpson Chapman. I so needed to hear you speak your testimony of your understanding of the value of our bodies and the deception satan can feed into our inferior unworthy self hate destruction of truth. I cherish your writings and teaching. It is a turning point ive been searching for and i didnt know how to see or understand how to accept or live myself as a purpose of Gods love. Thank you again feom the depths of my heart. I look forward to the day i get to meet you in person you are so beauyiful and radiant in the light of truth and have granted me so much hope.
Annmarie from Ireland