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Recommended Reading

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This collection of books is intended to help you strive to grow in the virtue of Teachability. If you would like to see a book here that isn't already listed, please contact ARMOR to request adding it to this collection.

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  • Atomic Habits: This breakthrough book from James Clear is the most comprehensive guide on how to change your habits and get 1% better every day.

  • Manual for Spiritual Warfare: A field guide to help spiritual warriors recognize, resist, and overcome the enemy.

  • Saintly Habits: Aquinas' 7 Simple Strategies You Can Use to Grow in Virtue: Use this book as a guide to virtue that will transform your understanding of what a virtuous life looks like and learn how to put this new knowledge into practice.

  • Spiritual Warfare and Divine Mercy: The Weapon for Our Times: The author provides a broad overview of spiritual warfare, the development of one’s prayer life, and a powerful encounter with the divine mercy message and the treasury of weapons Jesus gives us through it.

  • Spiritual Warfare Q & A: Intended as a how-to manual for the Church militant, this book includes six dozen spiritual warfare questions that were asked of the authors on their radio program over several years.

  • Superhabits: In a culture that prioritizes short-term fixes over long-term solutions, Superhabits offers a foundational, back-to-basics plan that produces both immediate and enduring results in overcoming whatever issue you are struggling with.

  • The Art of Living: Explore how practicing the Cardinal Virtues gives us the freedom to love.

  • The Spiritual Combat and a Treatise on Peace of Soul: This book was first published in 1589 and provides timeless guidance in spiritual discipline. St. Francis de Sales (1576–1622) read from it himself every day and recommended it to everyone under his direction.

  • The Virtues, or the Examined Life: This book is about the virtues of the Christian life--both the theological virtues (faith, hope, and charity) and the cardinal virtues (prudence, justice, fortitude, and temperance)--and it deals particularly with the question, how it is possible for believers to decide for the morally good and to live accordingly.

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