Search
 Bibles

Revised Standard Version

Douay-Rheims

New American

Home

Bibles

Revised Standard Version

Hungry Souls - Supernatural Visits, Messages and Warnings from Purgatory

Hungry Souls - Supernatural Visits, Messages and Warnings from Purgatory
Email a friendEmailView larger imageZoom

Hungry Souls - Supernatural Visits, Messages and Warnings from Purgatory

 
 
List Price: $16.95
Our Price: $11.52
You Save: $5.43 (32%)
Shipping: Eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25.
 
SKU:  

22600917

In Stock
Availability:   Usually ships in 1 business days
 
 

Note: Item may be sold and shipped by another company. Learn more.


Description

Hungry Souls: Supernatural Visits, Messages, and Warnings from Purgatory After a week of hearing ghostly noises, a man is visited in his home by the spirit of his mother, dead for three decades. She reproaches him for his dissolute life and begs him to have Masses said in her name. Then she lays her hand on his sleeve, leaving an indelible burn mark, and departs... A Lutheran minister, no believer in purgatory, is the puzzled recipient of repeated visitations from demons who come to him seeking prayer, consolation, and refuge in his little German church. But pity for the poor spirits overcomes the man's skepticism, and he marvels at what kind of departed souls could belong to Christ and yet suffer still... Hungry Souls recounts these stories and many others trustworthy, Church-verified accounts of earthly visitations from the dead in purgatory. Accompanying these accounts are images from the Museum of Purgatory in Rome, which contains relics of encounters with the Holy Souls, including numerous evidences of hand prints burned into clothing and books; burn marks that cannot be explained by natural means or duplicated by artificial ones. More than just a collection of Catholic ghost stories, Hungry Souls also discerns from these accounts important truths about the afterlife, about God's mercy, and ultimately, about the urgent necessity to pray and perform suffrages for our brothers and sisters in purgatory, and to reform our lives so as to shorten our own stay in that place of real and awful suffering.


Product Details
Author:Gerard J M Van Den Aardweg
Paperback:200 pages
Publisher:TAN Books and Publishers
Publication Date:November 30, 2009
Language:English
ISBN:0895558998
Product Width:1.37 centimeters
Product Height:2.12 centimeters
Product Weight:0.01 pounds
Package Length:8.4 inches
Package Width:5.4 inches
Package Height:0.5 inches
Package Weight:0.65 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 47 reviews

Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:5.0 ( 47 customer reviews )
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.

Most Helpful Customer Reviews

130 of 134 found the following review helpful:


5Excellent Book About Purgatory!  Dec 27, 2009 By annie "grannieannie"
All Catholics should read Hungry Souls. Today we do not hear enough about Purgatory and Hell. As Cardinal John Henry Newman stated nearly 150 years ago, "We are cherishing a shallow religion, a hollow religion, which will not profit us in the day of trouble. The age loves an exclusively cheerful religion. It is determined to make religion bright and sunny and joyous......we take what is beautiful and attractive, shrink from what is stern and painful."

In "Hungry Souls" Van Den Aardweg relates stories of visitations from those in purgatory and presents physical evidence. Chapter 8, The Exhibits of the Museum of Purgatory, includes photos of evidence of visits from souls in purgatory contained in the Museum. The museum is located in the church of the Sacred Heart of Suffrage in Rome. The pictures and stories included in this chapter are enlightening.

These stories include the fact that even our smallest imperfections need to be removed before we can enter Heaven. Many have been surprised when souls of good and pious persons have appeared to ask for help. We ought not to think that our loved ones are immediately in Heaven, and we should continue to pray for them always. Van Den Aardweg states that while we help the hungry and needy in this world, we neglect those in the next who are even hungrier and needier.

While the souls in purgatory cannot pray for themselves, the souls in purgatory do watch over us. The souls of the deceased need our prayers and good works. From time to time souls in purgatory still appear to certain individuals to ask for help. Modern day saints who have been visited by souls in purgatory include St. Faustina, Padre Pio and St. Josemaria Escriva.

In the past I have found that some books published by Tan Publishers have been of poor quality and have fallen apart after reading only a couple of times. This book is of a much better quality paper, and the print is easy to read. It is the best book I have read about purgatory, and I highly recommend it.



35 of 35 found the following review helpful:


5If You Don't Believe In Purgatory You Will After Reading This Book  Apr 07, 2010 By M. Green
This is an awesome book. Once I started reading it I did not put it down until I finished it. It is an easy read too. I do believe in Purgatory but this cemented that belief. There are photos in the book of burned hand prints from the poor souls. This book was written by a Lutheran Minister but all his facts come from the Catholic Church. My spouse read the book as quickly as I did and felt the same way. Please pray for the poor souls they are begging for your prayers. They also send you help as well. This is a must read!

123 of 139 found the following review helpful:


2Please proceed with caution  Dec 13, 2010 By Quo Primum
I would like to agree with everyone else here that this is a trememndous book, but I have some sincere reservations about it. While I agree that books about the souls in purgatory are necessary and often productive of improved spiritual life, there are some pros and cons about this book.

Pros first - it is a bonus to have these detailed photographs from the Suffering souls museum. I had read about some of these objects, such as the burnt cloth, burnt table, etc. in some other books on purgatory and am glad at last to see them. I wish these photos could be inserted in TAN's earlier and better book, Purgatory Explained by the lives of the saints, which contains descriptions from the saints themselves.

Which leads me to the first con. This book is almost entirely the words of Gerard Van Den Aardweg, and while I have no issue with him, I think it far more beneficial to hear first hand accounts from the saints who experienced these things themselves. Aardweg is also an apologist for some more controversial people such as the Jose' Escriva (wrote a book about him)and Sister Faustina. The reason these are controversial is that some traditional groups do not accept their accounts of sanctity, since Sr. Faustina's writings were condemned by the Holy Office (while it still existed) and the diaries were written in several people's handwritings. This is not the place to go into a discussion on that, or on Escriva, but the amount of people who have come forward in that case and wanted to testify at the canonization hearings against his santitiy (former secretaries who witnessed him curse and threaten, etc) is staggering, and these people were denied the opportunity to testify. That in addition to the Vatican getting rid of the "devil's advocate" in the more recent canonizations has given many people pause.

So with that in the background, I tried to judge the book on its own merits and this was disturbing. He presents some of these events of the "paranormal" (not a very catholic term and the Church usually uses "supernatural) and it has the feeling sometimes of reading Amityville Horror or some poltergeist book. He also gives as examples episodes in which people engaged in "spiritualism" (a movement from the victorian era that was forbidden for Catholics) in which using seances, souls would be conjured up. This practice is a grave sin for Catholics, and yet the author never points this out. He wraps up one example by admitting that this was a "diabolical apparition." So why does he include this on a book about the Holy Souls? In another case, he taklks about a Viscount who uses a spiritualist "speaking table" after conversation with this being, the "spirit took leave of us with thesewords: "God forces me to speak thus; hell claims me back, farewell." Besides the oddity of a demon saying anything as nice as "farewell" why are readers interested in helping suffering souls exposed to paranormal and sinful behavior with souls condemed to hell?

Finally, for centuries the Church has offered the faithful the opportunity to help the suffering souls with indulgenced prayers. I could not locate a single indulgences prayer in this book and wish that it al least provided readers with sources to find those indulgences, such as the Raccolta, the earlier Purgatory book from TAN and espcially The Purgatorian Manual printed by Mother of Our Savior Catholic Goods.

51 of 55 found the following review helpful:


5Wonderful Book  Feb 26, 2010 By Debora Viego "Debbie Viego"
I didn't really understood much about Purgatory before, but got interested after reading a interview with Maria Simma. Looking for more about her, I came across Hungry Souls. It is true...all catholics need to read this book! Just got it today by mail and cannot put it down!!! I went thru the whole book first, and seems to be very well presented. We need to be aware of the souls in Purgatory and offer masses, pray the rosary and do more for them. I wanted to break away from reading and write this. GET IT NOW!!!!!

22 of 22 found the following review helpful:


5How to Send Souls to Heaven  Jun 23, 2010 By Edward Bubnys "money numberer"
What profit it a man if he materially gains the whole world but in the process loses his very soul? I am in strong agreement with most of the reviews of this book. We do NOT hear enough about Purgatory from our religious authorities nowadays. The F.X. Schouppe book from 1893 is good but over a century old. The Van Den Aardweg book fills a need for the modern 21st century reader. The fact the author is a highly educated lay married Catholic makes for more compelling reading by the vast majority of faithful. Faced with such stories of souls as described in this book, the only relevant question is, "Are these visions REAL or merely self-encouraged HALLUCINATIONS." When sober, rationally-inclined individuals report such visitations, hallucinations are less likely to be the cause.
As I was reading Van Den Aardweg's book, I myself had auditory communication from a soul of a dear friend, call her V.S., who has been in purgatory for over 20 years and wants my help with prayers and especially Catholic masses. I dare not refuse her out of love and out of risk to my own soul. Since I have a Ph.D. in Financial Economics and run my own tax business, I am not someone inclined to romantic hallucinations and mumbo jumbo. When one discounts those books written by sensational opportunists out to make a quick buck at the expense of spiritually and emotionally vulnerable readers, one finds books like HUNGRY SOULS with stories that resonate with legitimacy. Van Den Aardweg has done us all a service with his contribution. I highly recommend it.




See all 47 customer reviews on Amazon.com
 About UsContact Us
Web business powered by Amazon WebStore