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His Way: An Everyday Plan for Following Jesus

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This book is light and humorous in style, challenging and thought- provoking in content. It has sold over 150,000 copies and been used as a growth tool in several dioceses. It is a book about knowing and responding to Jesus Christ, and living our faith in a growing, dynamic way. It gets to the heart of lay spirituality as a spirituality which focuses, not on 'renunciation," but on union with Christ through involvement in the world of work and family, social and civic life.

246 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1977

8 people want to read

About the author

David M. Knight

57 books2 followers
Father David M. Knight was born in Dallas, Texas, ordained a Jesuit priest in Lyon, France, and spent three years as a bush pastor in Chad (Africa). He then earned his doctorate in theology at Catholic University, Washington, D.C., and after serving as acting rector of the Jesuit novitiate in Grand Coteau, Louisiana, was made pastor of two parishes there -- one black, one white -- with the mission of integrating them. (This story is written up in Tanner Colby's book Some of My Best Friends Are Black, Viking/Penguin, 2012). He was then made spiritual director for the Jesuit community of Loyola University in New Orleans. In 1973 he went to Memphis to help found a religious order of nuns, which did not succeed. But while he was engaged in this, a new provincial suggested he join the diocese of Memphis, into which he was incardinated in 1980.

Fr. Knight has taught spirituality at Catholic University, at Loyola University in New Orleans, Christian Brothers University in Memphis, and to ministers and seminarians of several denominations at Memphis Theological Seminary.

He has been a pastor three times, has taught in both boys' and girls' high schools, including a rural black high school and a school for troubled girls under the care of the Sisters of the Good Shepherd. He spent four years as a college campus minister at Christian Brothers University in Memphis, has served as Diocesan Spiritual Director of Cursillos, Diocesan Spiritual Director of the Hispanic Catholic Community of Memphis, and has been chaplain to five different communities of women religious, both active and contemplative. For several years he was a regular columnist for the Marian Helpers Bulletin. For two years he taught and discussed his books on Matthew's Gospel on the radio for an hour every Saturday morning in Spanish. He has given more than five hundred workshops, missions and retreats on the religious vows and lay spirituality, and performed ministries throughout the mainland United States, Hawaii and Alaska; and in Australia, Canada, Chad, England, Ecuador, France, Germany, Guam, Guatemala, Haiti, Ireland, Japan, Korea, New Zealand, Saipan, Sierra Leone, Sweden and Spain. He has given priests' and deacons' retreats or performed other ministry in most of the United States. He speaks English, French, Spanish and German.

As of 2016, he has published thirty-nine books, plus several booklets and manuals, and over fifty articles in twenty-nine different periodicals. His latest books are: A Fresh Look at Confession, Nuts and Bolts of Daily Spirituality, and A Fresh Look at the Mass.

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Amanda.
Author 46 books99 followers
September 5, 2023
This book is several decades old, and it's kind of a long story how it ended up in my possession. The age means there are a few dated references here and there, but not as many as you might expect. Most of the content is just as relevant and relatable today as ever. The basic question the book asks the reader to confront is: Are you a Christian for an hour on Sundays or are you a Christian every minute of every day? Does the fact that you are a Christian permeate every aspect of your life or only the convenient ones? Near the end, the author says that he hopes "the book has upset you." I think it would be difficult to read it and not feel some call to change, and that can in fact be upsetting. That's why it took me a few months to read it even though it's not very long. I highly recommend it.
Profile Image for Jeff Jacob.
21 reviews1 follower
May 26, 2019
A re read. Shouldn't have waited so long. I needed to hear these ideas/questions again.
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