The Diary of a Country Priest

The Diary of a Country Priest

1936 • 312 pages

Ratings2

Average rating4.5

15

If I was more clever, I'd rate this a five and if I went by what a struggle it was to get through it, I'd rate it a three, so I suppose this is a spot-on rating for me. I was inspired to read it after seeing it on a list of the 50 best books for Christians, and I do think it's a book that's filled with lots of insight, especially for Catholics. This book is a diary of a very humble country priest, a man that grew up quite poor, a man with a deep desire to work for God among the rather shallow people in a country parish. The priest struggles, with those who don't believe, with those who don't believe much, and with those who love to deride those who do believe. He has lots of fascinating conversations with those of his parish, thoughtful conversations, asking questions we all ask questions about, speculating on things we all speculate about.

**WARNING...SPOILERS BELOW....**
The priest feels led to intervene in a family dispute and it is during the course of this dispute that the priest experiences some of his most intense feelings about God and about his own purpose on earth. He then comes face to face with death, the death of a parishioner, the impending death of a friend, and his own death, and he confronts hard and deep truth in the process.

January 1, 2017Report this review