Those who have fully yielded to the traditional Catholic-Christian teaching about the last things will find many occasions to pray and deepen their sense of mystery. In its eschatological realism Reflections on a Dying Life is a refreshing relief from the 'Golden Years', viagra-enhanced illusions shamelessly pandered by high finance, health plans, and the pharmaceutical industry.
Catholic Books Review
Fr. Donald X. Burt is on a very short list of the finest biblical and patristic spirituality writers in the Church of the last half century. He has rendered a tremendous service to the Church in making St. Augustine accessible to the person unable to pore through his voluminous writings. Fr. Burt's penetrating, down-to-earth style is music to the reader's ear and heart. Free of ideological tentacles and platitudes, his writings address many of today's pressing personal, relational, and pastoral issues. His books are ideal for spiritual reading as well as lectio divina, the Church's model of holistic, contemplative reading that continues to assume greater prominence in Catholic life. Having read his books since the early 1980s, I can attest to their fresh, enduring qualities and their uncanny capacity to speak to the needs of the day. Very highly and personally recommended.
Karl A. Schultz, National Speaker and author of eleven books
Reflections on a Dying Life is a specifically Christian narrative that gives witness to faith and, especially, to fides consolans, a faith the substance of which is every consolation against the potency of death.
Health Progress
Professor Burt's anecdotes are often moving, drawing on the last stages of his own journey to the grave as well as reminiscences from an active academic and pastoral life as priest and scholar.
Quarterly Review of the Community of the Resurrection
Reflections on a Dying Life is an eminently accessible and deeply pastoral book of Christian eschatology. Fr. Burt uses his masterful knowledge of St. Augustine's writings to create a classically Catholic spirituality of aging. Integrating a deep faith with his disciplined reason, Fr. Burt gently, lovingly sculpts an Augustinian spirituality of death and resurrection. Every page brims with the humor and pathos, with the irony and insight that distinguish all of Fr. Burt's writings as precious resources for contemporary believers and thinkers. Long after they have finished this book, Burt's image of the inn for travelers, woven throughout the text, will stay with readers. It will invite them to return many times during life's pilgrimage and refresh their souls in the company of this scholarly, spiritual priest.
Joseph T. Kelley, Center for Augustinian Study and Legacy, Merrimack College
From time to time, we all find ourselves thinking about who we are, where we are headed, and how we are going to get there. With the help of his mentor St. Augustine, Fr. Burt offers us some marvelous insights on these questions. He uses vibrant images to share his thoughts with us, as he reminds us that we are all living in a 'Hospice, an Inn for Travelers,' that we are 'dusty angels' looking upward as we struggle on this earth, that our faith gives us a 'room with a view' to see beyond this Hospice to eternity. Fr. Burt shows his optimism in this quote from Augustine: 'Anyone who lives a good life is not able to have a bad death.' This book is easy to read, inspiring, down to earth, and full of hope based on the promises God has given us through Jesus Christ.
Theodore E. Tack, O.S.A., Author, As One Struggling Christian to Another
To a philosopher like Fr. Burt, the love of Holy Wisdom, of Hagia Sophia, is the petus of faith. And he has shown that what is vital to the faith is indeed the practice of death, a ‘dying life' that forever lives by perishing, and lives forever more.
Health Progress
For many a reader of this journal . . . this may be the wisest and most helpful book.
Review for Religious