Skip to product information
1 of 13

Eucharistic Miracles Book Set

Eucharistic Miracles Book Set

Regular price $26.95 USD
Regular price $39.00 USD Sale price $26.95 USD
Sale Sold out
Shipping calculated at checkout.

FREE Shipping for all orders over $50 -- We have graduated discounts automatically  applied up to 67% when you add to cart. --- 20% off orders over $50 --- 25% off orders over $75 --- 30% off orders over $100 --- 35% off orders over $150 --- 5%Cash Back Store Credit on all orders

CHECKOUT TIPS 1. Discounts are applied automatically! 3. Pay with credit card or Express Pay

These two paperback books by Bob and Penny Lord present 43 Eucharistic miracles documented by the Church, along with teaching on the Mass and Eucharistic devotion. Unlike a single overview title, this 2-book set combines historical miracle accounts, saintly witnesses, and apologetics in one Catholic study resource for home reading, parish groups, and Adoration chapels.

  • Includes 2 paperback volumes by Bob and Penny Lord
  • Covers 43 Eucharistic miracles accepted and documented by the Church
  • Features major accounts such as Lanciano, Bolsena-Orvieto, Siena, Offida, Cascia, and Krakow
  • Explains the Real Presence and the ongoing Sacrifice of the Mass
  • Includes saints known for Eucharistic devotion, fasting, and witness
  • Useful for Eucharistic Revival study, RCIA, parish libraries, and Catholic gift giving

Book I includes 22 miracles, including Lanciano, the oldest widely documented Eucharistic miracle, along with accounts connected to Siena, Zaragoza, Avignon, and Bois Seigneur Isaac. It also highlights saints who lived solely on the Eucharist.

Book II adds 21 more miracles and expands on what happens during the Mass, the connection between Old and New Testament worship, and the witness of martyrs who died defending belief in the Eucharist. Compared to general Catholic books, this set is especially helpful for readers seeking documented miracle accounts, faith formation, and deeper Eucharistic prayer in daily life.

View full details

Frequently Asked Questions

Eucharistic miracle books are Catholic books that collect historical accounts of miracles connected to the Real Presence of Jesus in the Eucharist, usually with Church-approved sources, background, and spiritual commentary. They are best for Catholics who want to deepen belief in the Mass, learn about well-known cases like Lanciano and Bolsena-Orvieto, or defend the faith with historical examples. This two-book set, Miracles of the Eucharist Books I and II, is especially suited to readers who want both miracle accounts and devotional reflection. It includes 43 miracle accounts in total, plus material on Eucharistic saints, fasting saints, and the meaning of the Mass as the ongoing Sacrifice of the Cross. Because it is written in accessible paperback format, it works well for personal reading, parish study, adoration chapel libraries, and gift giving. The main tradeoff is that this type of book is more devotional and apologetic than academic. Readers looking for a scholarly reference catalog of every known case may want additional sources alongside it.
A common starting point is Lanciano, Bolsena-Orvieto, Siena, Cascia, and Zaragoza. These five are widely discussed because they represent different eras, places, and spiritual themes within Catholic tradition. Lanciano is often considered the most famous because the Host reportedly became flesh and the wine became blood, and it is described as the oldest documented Eucharistic miracle. Bolsena-Orvieto is closely associated with the establishment of the Feast of Corpus Christi. Siena is known for consecrated Hosts reportedly remaining preserved without decay for centuries. Cascia is remembered for a bleeding Host connected to the restored faith of a priest. Zaragoza is notable for accounts of the Host appearing as the Infant Jesus. This two-book set is useful for readers who want more than a basic list. Book I includes major cases such as Lanciano, Offida, Bolsena-Orvieto, Siena, Cascia, Zaragoza, Bois Seigneur Isaac, and Avignon, while Book II expands with additional miracles and devotional context about the Mass.
Yes, this is a strong choice if you want a broad introduction to Eucharistic miracles from different countries and centuries in one readable set. Rather than giving only a short summary list, these books present individual cases with historical and spiritual framing, which helps readers understand why each event matters in Catholic belief. Across both volumes, the set includes 43 miracles accepted and documented by the Church according to the product description. The books cover well-known examples from Italy and Spain, along with cases such as Réunion, Turin, El Escorial, Morrovalle, Ettiswil, Boxtel-Hoogstraten, and Krakow. That makes it helpful for readers searching for "Eucharistic miracles of the world" in a format they can actually read and reflect on. The tradeoff is that it is not presented as a modern encyclopedia or downloadable database. It is better for faithful reading, study, and prayerful learning than for someone who only wants a quick spreadsheet-style list.
This set covers 43 Eucharistic miracles in total. Book I contains 22 miracles, and Book II adds 21 more. That makes it a substantial resource for readers who want more than a few famous examples but do not necessarily need an exhaustive reference of every reported case in Church history. The content includes famous miracles such as Lanciano, Bolsena-Orvieto, Siena, Cascia, and Zaragoza, along with many others that are less commonly known. Book I also includes saints who lived solely on the Eucharist, while Book II adds reflections on martyrs, Eucharistic saints, and what happens during the Mass. This structure makes the set helpful for different kinds of readers. Beginners get a solid overview of the best-known miracles, while more engaged readers get enough additional material to use it for personal study, parish reading, or adoration chapel reference. If you are specifically looking for a single-volume quick guide, this two-book set may be more detailed than necessary, but it gives much broader coverage.
Book I focuses on foundational Eucharistic miracles and is centered on cases that help explain and strengthen belief in the Real Presence. It includes 22 miracles accepted by the Church and described as proven by science in the product summary, along with examples of saints who lived solely on the Eucharist. It covers major cases such as Lanciano, Offida, Bolsena-Orvieto, Siena, Cascia, Zaragoza, Bois Seigneur Isaac, and Avignon. Book II serves as a companion volume and expands the collection with 21 additional miracles. It also goes beyond miracle stories by explaining what really happens during the Mass, highlighting martyrs who died defending the Eucharist, and presenting saints known for Eucharistic devotion, including Saint Thomas Aquinas, Saint Peter Julian Eymard, Saint John Vianney, Saint Therese, and others. In practical terms, Book I is the stronger starting point for miracle accounts, while Book II is better for readers who also want apologetics, Eucharistic spirituality, and teaching on the Sacrifice of the Mass.
Yes, these books are well suited for Catholics returning to the Church, people rediscovering belief in the Eucharist, or readers who have questions about the Real Presence. The content is designed to connect miracle accounts with the central Catholic teaching that Jesus is truly present in the Eucharist as Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity. What makes this set especially helpful for returning Catholics is that it does more than list miracles. It includes explanations of how the Mass relates to Calvary, how the Eucharist fulfills the Old Law, and why saints and martyrs treated the Blessed Sacrament with such reverence. That combination can help bridge history, doctrine, and personal devotion. The best fit is someone open to reading from a Catholic devotional and apologetic perspective. A reader looking only for neutral academic history may want supplementary material. But for personal renewal, RCIA support, Eucharistic revival reading, or a parish lending shelf, this set is a practical and faith-focused choice.
This set is more focused on miracle testimony than a general Catholic book about the Mass, but it also includes broader Eucharistic teaching. A standard book on the Mass usually explains liturgy, doctrine, and prayer life. Miracles of the Eucharist Books I and II adds that context through historical miracle accounts that many readers find memorable and persuasive. Its strongest advantage is that it combines multiple uses in one set. You get 43 miracle accounts, examples of Eucharistic saints, and teaching on the Mass as the ongoing Sacrifice of the Cross. That makes it especially useful for readers who learn best through concrete stories rather than abstract theology alone. The tradeoff is that if your main goal is liturgical formation, a dedicated catechetical book on the Mass may be more systematic. This set works best for people who want to strengthen belief, inspire devotion, or share faith with others through documented miracle narratives and saintly witness.
Yes, these books are a good fit for adoration chapels, parish libraries, prayer groups, and informal Catholic study settings. The product description notes that the books have been placed in Eucharistic Adoration Chapels since printing, which fits their devotional and instructional purpose. They work well in group settings because the material is naturally divided into individual miracle accounts, making it easy to assign one case per meeting or use selected stories for discussion before or after adoration. Book II also broadens the conversation by covering saints devoted to the Eucharist and the meaning of the Mass, so a parish group can move from miracle history into doctrine and prayer. The main limitation is format. These are paperback books rather than a formal workbook or structured curriculum, so leaders may need to create their own discussion questions. For flexible parish use, however, that simplicity can be an advantage, especially for Eucharistic revival efforts, chapel reading tables, and adult faith formation.
The books were written by Bob and Penny Lord, Catholic authors known for devotional and faith-formation writing. According to the product description, they authored the first English-language book on the Miracles of the Eucharist, and the work is described as a Catholic classic. That matters because authorship helps readers understand the lens of the book. This is not an anonymous compilation or a purely academic digest. It is a Catholic work written to teach, strengthen belief, and encourage devotion to the Eucharist. Readers who want faith-based interpretation alongside historical accounts will likely appreciate that approach. The product description also notes a video version introduced by Mother Angelica, which places the work within a recognizable Catholic devotional context. For shoppers choosing between a dry reference text and a spiritually guided Catholic book, that distinction is useful. If you want readable miracle narratives tied directly to Eucharistic faith and practice, the authors' perspective is a strength.
Yes, this set is a strong gift option for Catholics interested in Eucharistic miracles, Eucharistic revival, saints, or deepening devotion to the Mass. It is especially suitable for converts, confirmation sponsors, prayer group members, adorers, and family members who want to grow in understanding of the Real Presence. One reason it works well as a gift is that it serves more than one type of reader. Someone drawn to history gets 43 miracle accounts. Someone focused on spirituality gets reflections on Eucharistic saints and the Sacrifice of the Mass. Someone engaged in apologetics gets examples often used to defend Catholic belief about the Eucharist. The format is two paperback books, so it is easy to read gradually rather than all at once. The main consideration is the reader's interest level. It is best for a Catholic or spiritually curious reader open to devotional Catholic teaching. For that audience, it is a thoughtful and practical gift with lasting use beyond a single reading.