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$7.18The Story
- Rousing and beautiful insights on God & how to find Him
- 7 years of intimate letters between two friends in the early 1900s
- Written by Paul Claudel, French Poet, playwright , essayist and convert to Catholicism
- To his friend Jacques Rivière, who asked for help resolving his doubts on faith
- Testament to the gifts of God in the life of these men, and to the gift of friendship
The only reason we should believe in Jesus Christ is because He is true. God is not made for man, but man for God. (Paul Claudel)
Letters to a Doubter presents the seven years’ worth of correspondence between Claudel and Rivière, with Claudel distinguishing himself as both a dedicated apologist and an affectionate spiritual father as he responds to the wide array of intellectual, cultural, psychological, and practical barriers to Rivière’s ultimate acceptance of Christ and His Church as his one and true patria.
Breathing the bracing air of the Gospels, Claudel’s Letters to a Doubter is an inspiring testament to the usefulness of human friendship and affection in the order of divine providence, “that they all may be one.”
Paul Claudel (1868–1955) was a French poet, dramatist, and essayist, and a convert to Roman Catholicism. A six-time nominee for the Nobel Prize in Literature, Claudel achieved prominence in twentieth-century French literature for his unique prose style and powerful verse dramas. The 1924 drama Le Soulier de satin (The Satin Slipper) is widely recognized as his masterpiece.
Description
- Rousing and beautiful insights on God & how to find Him
- 7 years of intimate letters between two friends in the early 1900s
- Written by Paul Claudel, French Poet, playwright , essayist and convert to Catholicism
- To his friend Jacques Rivière, who asked for help resolving his doubts on faith
- Testament to the gifts of God in the life of these men, and to the gift of friendship
The only reason we should believe in Jesus Christ is because He is true. God is not made for man, but man for God. (Paul Claudel)
Letters to a Doubter presents the seven years’ worth of correspondence between Claudel and Rivière, with Claudel distinguishing himself as both a dedicated apologist and an affectionate spiritual father as he responds to the wide array of intellectual, cultural, psychological, and practical barriers to Rivière’s ultimate acceptance of Christ and His Church as his one and true patria.
Breathing the bracing air of the Gospels, Claudel’s Letters to a Doubter is an inspiring testament to the usefulness of human friendship and affection in the order of divine providence, “that they all may be one.”
Paul Claudel (1868–1955) was a French poet, dramatist, and essayist, and a convert to Roman Catholicism. A six-time nominee for the Nobel Prize in Literature, Claudel achieved prominence in twentieth-century French literature for his unique prose style and powerful verse dramas. The 1924 drama Le Soulier de satin (The Satin Slipper) is widely recognized as his masterpiece.

















