Sin and the Wounded Soul in Catholic Anthropology is a profound and compelling exploration of one of the most urgent questions of the human condition: what has gone wrong within us-and can it be healed? Drawing upon Scripture, the Church Fathers, medieval scholasticism, and modern theological insight, this work offers a sweeping and intellectually rich account of sin not merely as a moral failure, but as a deep wound affecting the intellect, will, passions, conscience, and even the fabric of society itself.
With clarity and depth, the book traces the drama of the human soul from its original dignity through its fall into disorder, examining the subtle formation of vice, the corruption of freedom, the distortion of conscience, and the psychological realities of guilt, shame, and alienation. It ventures further into the often-overlooked dimensions of spiritual warfare and the social consequences of sin, culminating in a powerful reflection on divine justice, judgment, and the ultimate destiny of the human person.
Yet this is not a work of despair-it is a book of hope. At its heart lies the radiant truth of grace: that no wound is beyond healing, no soul beyond redemption. Through vivid historical examples, biographical stories of saints, and penetrating philosophical and theological analysis, the reader is guided toward a vision of restoration in which the wounded soul is not merely repaired, but transformed.
Written in a compelling and elevated style, this book is ideal for scholars, clergy, and serious readers seeking a deeper understanding of the moral and spiritual life. It is both intellectually rigorous and spiritually stirring-a work that challenges, enlightens, and ultimately inspires.
This is not just a study of sin. It is a journey into the depths of the human soul-and the heights of divine mercy.