St. 
	Dominic: The Story of a Preaching Friar
	Donald J. 
	Goergen, OP
	Paulist Press 
	(2016)
	 
	
	 
	
	          In honor of the 800th 
	anniversary of the Order of Preachers, Donald J. Goergen, OP, offers a new 
	look at the life of its founder—St. Dominic: The Story of a Preaching 
	Friar.  The book reads more like a memoir than a biography, feels more 
	like a family photo album than a history.  Full of well-researched details 
	and rich with the chronology of events in Dominic’s life and preaching 
	career, Goergen makes it easy to imagine meeting Dominic for ourselves.  
	Here is a man who gave birth to a family of which Goergen is a part, a 
	family of friars and religious women, of priests and theologians, of active 
	sisters and committed lay people.  He makes it clear that Dominic’s story is 
	kept alive in its telling and retelling, and in Goergen’s accessible account 
	we find a Dominic very much alive in his own time and place, authentically 
	human on his way to sainthood.
	
	          Familiar legends appear alongside 
	facts adding savor to the text.  We hear about the dream Dominic’s mother 
	received before his birth and Dominic’s famed encounter with the Albigensian 
	innkeeper.  But whether Goergen is discussing a detail of Dominic’s life 
	supported by research or debated by scholars, he puts them squarely in the 
	context of the social, economic, religious, and political context of the 13th 
	century.  Our portrait of Dominic is not singular.  We meet communities of 
	preachers and members of popular religious movements outside the church, 
	popes and landowning benefactors, bishops and lay women with whom Dominic 
	spent his days.  It becomes very clear that Dominic’s formation in a life of 
	prayer and contemplation led to his life of active ministry, always in 
	cooperation with other people who believed in the preaching.  
	
	
	            To facilitate our entry into the times, Goergen includes 
	sidebars along the way with helpful definitions and introductions to key 
	historical figures.  Though themes can be somewhat repetitive, Goergen’s 
	exploration of Dominic’s interior life and possible motivations, of what the 
	saint was doing during years when his actions and whereabouts are uncertain, 
	compels us to reflect on the life of a man who was fully responsive to God 
	and committed to preaching the Gospel.  Whether Dominic intended to found an 
	international religious movement remains open to question.  What we know is 
	that Dominic’s service to the preaching led to changes in the Church 
	at a time when the world was ready for an expansion of the Gospel.  Through 
	it all, Dominic remained a friar among friars, a humble servant of the 
	preaching and of those who would also serve it.  Goergen’s St. 
	Dominic: The Story of a Preaching Friar celebrates the Order of 
	Preachers’ inheritance: the dynamic history of its first members and the 
	preaching life the worldwide Dominican family continues to share.