PREMIUM | Life Is Worth Living | Season 5
Bishop Sheen looks at the life of Russian novelist Fyodor Dostoyevsky, suggesting that he understood communism so well because he saw it from the inside out.
Archbishop Sheen investigates the causes of war.
It’s not easy being a teenager …or to understand them! They want discipline. Obedience is the pathway to bring knowledge and power. Suggestions on how...
Bishop Sheen explains the difference between knowing and loving, and the difference in the way men and women know and love.
Could the earth and universe be the results of a big bang? Bishop Sheen offers some answers to this age-old question.
Archbishop Sheen details what is wrong with Communist philosophy by showing several fun example situations.
This video discusses how love will not kill pain, but how it can diminish it. Bishop Sheen teaches us the paradoxes of “Suffering” and “Pleasure”. H...
It takes more than just bearing a child for a woman to be a mother. The Bishop offers advice that should be seen and heard by today’s mothers
Character is in the will and not the intellect. By looking for the best in others, we bring out the best in ourselves.
Jesus meets the "woman at the well" on His trip from Judea to Galilee.
Archbishop Sheen talks about what makes a person Irish
Archbishop Sheen teaches that it is not necessary to belong to the extreme left or extreme right.
Bishop Sheen proposes the idea that every nation has three moments: one of visitation from God, one of falling into moral blindness, and one of judgement.
Archbishop Sheen emphasises that a person's soul needs prayer.
Archbishop Sheen discusses the characteristics of good nurses and doctors.
Bishop Sheen discusses the qualities a woman should strive for to be successful.
Archbishop Sheen declares that love is the solution to social problems.
Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen explains the effect of Christmas on the world.
Being made to the image of God, man leaves the impress of his reason on his work. Thus, in all work there are two elements: the result produced and the human in...
Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen examines the false virtues of nice people, showing how they live by convention and not love.
Archbishop Fulton J Sheen proposes three main goals that real education should have.
Archbishop Sheen states that the time period in which the events of Fatima took place was almost the birthday of the modern world, where the forces of good and ...
Archbishop Sheen discusses the superiority complex of man.
Bishop Sheen extols the vocation of soldiering and looks at the sympathetic and sacrificial spirit it engenders.
Bishop Sheen shows how to use property and wealth in a moral way.
Bishop Sheen explains the nature of freedom, showing how it differs from doing whatever you want.
Parenthood is an awesome responsibility. Parents should train their children before the children train them.
Love is a feeling for another person. When we turn love toward ourselves, we become selfish. When we exhibit our love of our neighbor by doing good deeds, o...
In a moral universe, hell is on the outside. Three characteristics of man at war with himself are discussed: the conflict with what he is with what he pretend...
Archbishop Sheen declares that the greatest trial in history was presided over by Pontius Pilate, when Jesus was condemned to death.
Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen examines Shakespeare's play and the effect of guilt on human life.
Bishop Fulton Sheen discusses the significance of children in our lives.
In this very entertaining and thought-provoking message, Bishop Sheen tells us that there really are angels, and that in our modern world only our materialism p...
The Bishop ponders the question of how our affluence is affecting our spiritual life. Is materialism creating a division between our religion and our lives? ...
Archbishop Sheen discusses the Soviet Union's desire to co-exist with Capitalistic nations until it could take over the world.
Bishop Sheen shows why societies need to make time for leisure and contemplation. Great deeds, he explains, come only from hearts that are in touch with God thr...
Thinking well is a skill, Bishop Sheen demonstrates how it's done.
Politeness springs from a heart attuned to the needs of others. Join Bishop Sheen as he discusses the nature of courtesy.
Archbishop Sheen says he believes our lord suffered the agony in the garden for the mentally sick.
Archbishop Sheen talks about the gloom in American life, particularly in literature.
Bishop's Sheen take on humor
Archbishop Sheen explains that neither capital nor labour is always right.
The Bishop reminds us of why we celebrate this holiest of days and the attitude we should assume in our relationships with others.
Archbishop Sheen explains the dangers of regressive education.
Archbishop Sheen explains that self expression is right when the mind is directed to truth and the will is directed to goodness.
Bishop Fulton Sheen discusses the four stages of relationship between male and female that lead to Courtship.
Bishop Sheen discusses the three stages of melancholy: egotism, sting of conscience, and preoccupation with death.
Archbishop Sheen analyses a few examples of thinking on the subject of comparative religions.
Bishop Sheen shows why science is possible and how it affects our everyday lives.
This program could be subtitled “Who Is In Charge?” as Bishop Sheen explores parents’ relationships with their children and how the relationship should be...
Archbishop Sheen answers questions on what makes a good teacher, what courses should one follow in college and what is the psychological attitude of a student.
Bishop Sheen looks at some recent movements in psychology and psychiatry, asserting that there is a contemporary push toward moral value in the field.
Archbishop Sheen speaks of why Moses was such a great leader.
Bishop Fulton J. Sheen looks at three of the greatest confessions in history: the confessions of Augustine, Abelard and Heloise, and Jean-Jacques Rousseau.
Bishop Sheen offers a historical glimpse into the city of Paris and its most famous Cathedral, Notre Dame.
Bishop Sheen proposes the idea that there are three ways of loving: romantic, scientific, and Christian.
Bishop Sheen relates some funny and inspirational anecdotes about the city of Lourdes; he claims it's the best city in the world in which to be broke in every w...
Archbishop Sheen remarks that the psychoanalytic couch is used to explain away guilt.
Sheen discusses the timeless issues of Catholicism as he discusses studiousness.
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