
How does it work?
Every month, sent directly to your home, you will receive a very special box that we hope will help you grow in your faith, spiritual life, and intimacy with God!
Each box has a specific theme. To shed light on your understanding about this Truth, we will send you a carefully selected book and other surprise materials that will help you in this process!
Saint John Paul II spoke of our universal call to holiness. This means that every one of us is called by God to be holy in our daily lives. To help you respond to this Call, we created two different boxes: the Kerygma Box and the Didache Box. As people are in different places in their spiritual journeys, we recognize that God's powerful message is communicated through various sources. With this in mind, the Kerygma box is for readers who seek a lighter reading experience and the Didache box is for readers seeking a deeper reading experience.
We invite you and your family to join us on this beautiful and blessed journey!
Types of Boxes

Kerygma Box
Lighter reading
Kerygma is a Greek word used in the New Testament that means "proclamation." More precisely, it is the proclamation of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. The main goal of the Kerygma is the conversion of the people that listen to it.

Didache Box
Deeper reading
Didache is a Greek word that means "The Teaching" or "The teaching of the Twelve Apostles". It is a primitive Church document describing early Christian ethics, practices, and order.
What's in the box?

The Book
The focal point of our box. Every month you will receive a carefully chosen book to guide you in your spiritual journey in the Catholic faith.

Special gifts for you
You will also receive special gifts related to that month's box. It is something that will help you to better integrate the theme. This is a surprise that will be revealed when you receive your box at home!
June Box - Most Sacred Heart of Jesus
This general devotion arose first in Benedictine and Cistercian monasteries of that time, especially in response to the devotion of St. Gertrude the Great, but specific devotions became popularized when St. Margaret Mary Alacoque (1647-1690), a Visitation nun, had a personal revelation involving a series of visions of Christ as she prayed before the Blessed Sacrament. She wrote, "He disclosed to me the marvels of his Love and the inexplicable secrets of his Sacred Heart." Christ emphasized to her His love -- and His woundedness caused by Man's indifference to this love.
