Monday, 17 November 2025

A Pocket Guide to Purgatory - Patrick Madrid

A Pocket Guide to Purgatory
Patrick Madrid
Our Sunday Visitor
ISBN 9781592762941

A Pocket Guide to Purgatory - Patrick Madrid

This is the third offering in this series I have read. I have been able to track down all but one. The three I have read are excellent, and I look forward to reading the others in the series. This one is now be out of print and I was unable to determine if there was every an eBook edition, on Goodreads there are 2 editions both paperbacks. It is a great pity this book and series are out of print. The description of this volume states:

“Certain beliefs make us uniquely Catholic one of which is purgatory.

In this quick and insightful guide, discover the important role of purgatory in your personal faith journey as well as those who have gone before you.

Best-selling author, noted defender of the Faith, and EWTN host Patrick Madrid, uses an easy Q & A format to clear up common misconceptions about the doctrine of purgatory.”

About the author we are informed:

“Patrick Madrid, a noted apologist whose books include Where is That in the Bible?, Why is That in Tradition?, Answer Me This!, and A Pocket Guide to Catholic
Apologetics (Our Sunday Visitor), is the editor of Enviy magazine.”

The chapters and sections in this volume are:

Introduction
1. Purgatory: What It Is (and Isn’t)
2. Purgatory and the Bible
3. Purgatory and the Early Church
4, Purgatory and You
5. Purgatory and Others
Notes
About the Author

I highlighted numerous passages that really struck me while reading this volume, some of them are:

“God is a Father who loves us far beyond our ability to imagine, and he wants what’s best for each of us. In some cases, what’s best involves the suffering that necessarily comes with the healing purification, or purging, from sin and its effects on the soul.”

“This little book will take you on a guided tour of the scriptural evidence for purgatory and will consider what the early Christians believed on the subject. But before we delve into the finer details of what this means, let’s first step back and get a “big picture” look at what purgatory is (and isn’t).”

“The Catholic Church teaches that purgatory is a temporary state of purification for those who die in the state of grace and friendship with God (cf. Rom. 11:22), but who still have the vestiges of temporal effects due to sin, inordinate attachment to creatures, and whose will is not fully united with God’s will.”

“This purification involves suffering (St. Paul uses the analogy of fire to emphasize this), as God’s fiery love “burns” away all impurities that may remain. Once this is complete, the soul enters into God’s presence, the beatific vision, in which the perfect bliss of beholding Him face-to-face lasts forever.”

“Is purgatory biblical? Yes. Evidence for it is wide and deep in Scripture, as we shall soon see. The belief is also wellattested to over the course of the 2,000-year history of the Catholic Church, in particular in the writings of the early Christians, including many of the early Church Fathers.”

“First, purgatory is not a place where people go to get a “second chance” from God, as Hebrews. 9:27 makes clear: It is appointed for men to die once, and after that comes judgment. In addition to being a good verse to bring up when someone poses the possibility of reincarnation, it’s also a good clarification of the fact that purgatory doesn’t involve some kind of “second chance.””

“Second, purgatory is not a place where the soul works, earns, or in any other way does something to cleanse himself; all purification that takes place in purgatory is done by God to the soul. Those who go to purgatory are assured of their salvation; there is nothing for them to do — Christ does it all in His merciful act of preparing His beloved to enter into the wedding feast.”

“Third, purgatory is not where people end up who are “too good” to go to hell and “not good enough’ to go to heaven. This is a third common misunderstanding of this doctrine. There is no such thing as a “middle ground” when it comes to salvation.”

“Since there are only two ultimate destinies possible for all human beings, heaven or hell, the issue of purgatory must be understood as simply a part of the process for some souls destined for heaven. If you die unrepentant in the state of mortal sin, you will go to hell. If you die in the state of grace and friendship with God, you will go to heaven. You may first need to be purified of any lingering sins or selfishness, however minor, that would block your complete union with the all-holy God, but that purification — purgatory — is simply a temporary prelude to your receiving your eternal reward.”

“Purgatory is a finite process" of purification, carried out by God, through His fiery love, on the soul of one who has died in the state of grace and is destined for heaven. It has no connection with the infinite penalty (hell) merited by our sin”

“Purgatory is a formally declared doctrine of the Catholic Church. It has been part of the deposit of faith “once for all handed down to the holy ones” (Jude 3) since the time of the Apostles. Purgatory is part of the Sacred Tradition of the Church; it is clearly taught in Scripture; and it was clearly taught by the early Church councils and the early Church Fathers."”

“Why can nothing unclean enter heaven? The prophet Habakkuk says it’s because God is all holy, and He will not allow anything in heaven with Him to be less than holy and spotless: Too pure are your eyes to look upon evil [O Lord], and the sight of misery you cannot endure (Hab. 1:13). What eliminates that impurity is what the Church calls purgatory — entirely different from the punishment of the damned.”

“The temporal effects due to sin extend, sadly, far beyond just physical illness and death.” They include the spiritual impurities and weaknesses that cling to the soul. So, in addition to being purged of these impurities, we may also have to make restitution as well.”

“The most explicit extra-biblical evidence for the belief in the doctrine of purgatory in the ancient Church is found in its liturgies. Without exception, in the East and the West, the various eucharistic liturgies contained at least one memento mori, “remembrance of the dead.””

“The reason Christians have always prayed for the dead is because they have known, having learned it from the Apostles themselves, that many — perhaps most — who die in a state of friendship with God still must undergo a purification that involves suffering. Prayers on behalf of our deceased brothers and sisters in the Lord can help alleviate and even shorten that suffering.”

“But perhaps the most important lesson we can learn from these facts is that we can avoid purgatory altogether, or at least an extended stay there, by offering to the Lord our daily trials and pains. These sufferings are purgatorial in themselves, if they are offered to God with a loving and contrite heart. In this way, our suffering is purified and elevated. It becomes a participation in the redemptive sufferings of Jesus Christ (cf. Col. 1:24).”

I hope those quotes give you a feel for this volume. This is an excellent little volume. Over the last few years I have read several volumes on Purgatory and Holy Souls there, this is a great starting point for those who have not read much, or as a refresher for those of us who have. I really enjoyed working through it, and will likely return to it again. It has been a while since I had read a volume by Patrick Madrid, I have a few I have picked up over the years I have not got to, that will need to jump up in my ‘to be read’ pile.

This volume could be read by a secondary school student, or a grad student, but a theologian or a new convert and they will all get something out of it. It is an excellent volume that any Catholic or any Christian would benefit from reading. 

It is a great read, thank you Patrick Madrid and Our Sunday Visitor.

Note: This book is part of a series of reviews2025 Catholic Reading Plan 

Our Sunday Visitor Pocket Guide Series

Books in the OSV Pocket Guide Series:
A Pocket Guide to Living the Divine Mercy - George W. Kosicki 
...

Books in the Handy Little Series from OSV:
The Handy Little Guide to Adoration - Michelle Jones Schroeder
The Handy Little Guide to Confession - Michelle Jones Schroeder
The Handy Little Guide to the Holy Spirit - Michelle Schroeder
The Handy Little Guide to the Lent - Michelle Schroeder
The Handy Little Guide to Novenas - Allison Gingras
The Handy Little Guide to the Liturgy of the Hours - Barb Szyszkiewicz

Handy Little Guides - Our Sunday Visitor

Books in the OSV Companion in Faith Series:
For Those Who Grieve - Jeannie Ewing
Living in Peace - Father Jeffrey Kirby
The Beatitudes - Kathleen M Basi
The Lord's Prayer - T.J. Burdick
The Power of Forgiveness - Patrice Fagnant-Macarthur

Companion in Faith Series Our Sunday Visitor

Books by Patrick Madrid:
Any Friend of God's, is a Friend of Mine: A Biblical & Historical Exploration of the Catholic Doctrine of the Communion of Saints
Answer Me This!
Where is That in the Bible?
Why Is That in Tradition?
A Pocket Guide to Catholic Apologetics
A Pocket Guide to Purgatory
The Godless Delusion: A Catholic Challenge to Modern Atheism
Search and Rescue: How to Bring Your Family and Friends Into or Back Into the Catholic Church
Pope Fiction: Answers to 30 Myths & Misconceptions About the Papacy
Why Be Catholic: Ten Reasons Why It's Not Only Cool but Important to Be Catholic
150 Bible Verses Every Catholic Should Know
Does the Bible Really Say That? Discovering Catholic Teaching in Scripture
Life Lessons: Fifty Things I Learned in My First Fifty Years
On a Mission: Lessons from St. Francis de Sales
More Catholic Than the Pope: An Inside Look At Extreme Traditionalism
A Year with the Bible: Scriptural Wisdom for Daily Living
How to Do Apologetics: Making the Case for Our Faith
Now What? A Guide for New (and Not-So-New) Catholics
Catholics and the Rapture: Will You Be Caught Up Or Left Behind?
Scripture and Tradition in the Church


Books Edited by Patrick Madrid:
Surprised By Truth: 11 Converts Give the Biblical and Historical Reasons for Becoming Catholic
Surprised by Truth 2: 15 Men and Women Give the Biblical and Historical Reasons For Becoming Catholic
Surprised by Truth 3: 10 More Converts Explain the Biblical and Historical Reasons for Becoming Catholic
Surprised by Life: 10 Converts Explain How Catholic Teachings on Life led Them to the Church
...

Related Posts about Purgatory:
Prayers:
Sermon Sunday November 2nd 2025 All Souls Day Father Jeff Bergsma
...

Books:
...

Fiction:
The Wait - F.C. Ribeiro 
...

Picture Books:


 

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