Exclusive – Tagged Down Syndrome Awareness Day, Bishop Robert Barron Publishing company Word on Fire, is unleashing a breakthrough new book designed specifically to help adults with Down syndrome and other intellectual disabilities who have disproportionate goals for abortion.
A champion of intellectually disabled people, written by Mark Bradford, titled “Let’s Pray: Catholic Prayer for All Capabilities”, which includes simplified traditional prayers, large prints and large prints of readability, and accessible fonts for people suffering from dyslexia and other reading challenges.
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“Prayer is for each of us,” Edward Kurtz, Archbishop of Louisville, wrote in the preface to the book. (iStock)
In the United States, an estimated 250,000 people suffer from Down syndrome, and millions of them have knowledge challenges.
Nevertheless, there are no prayer books for these learning challenges designed for adults…until now.
“Prayer is for each of us.” Archbishop of Louisville Edward Kurtz wrote in the book’s foreword.
Kurtz, who grew up with an older brother with Down syndrome, called the book a “beautiful gift” for those who long for faith but have no means.
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Bradford told Fox News Digital that when he saw his 20-year-old son, Thomas Augustine, who had Down syndrome, he was inspired to create a new book and had to use a book with “horrible illustrations” written on it, aiming to pray for rosary for kids.
“For adults with mental retardation, there is no such resource,” he explained. “I hope it is a beautiful resource for encouraging adults with disabilities, and in fact, anyone with a reading level of about 3-6 years can develop a habit of prayer using books that are only prepared for them.”
Fox News Digital has obtained an exclusive copy of the book. Bradford explains that through the book’s visually shocking but not childish images, easy-to-read text and engaging layout, it can help anyone, especially those with learning challenges, form a habit of prayer.
Bradford says even the typography chosen for prayer is a unique font designed by Dutch typists, designed specifically to assist readers with dyslexia.

Despite the stigma often associated with Down syndrome and other learning disabilities, Bradford said that by “let’s pray” he wanted to convey the message that “everyone who is formed in the image of God is called into a relationship with him.” (iStock)
“Let’s Pray” includes four main parts: “To build a habit of prayer, “To participate more at Sunday Mass,” “Dedication” and “Pray for a special era,” which includes “Pray for the purpose of your life” and “Pray for the prayer when your loved one dies or dies.”
The book even includes a part of “Praying to End Abortion,” which acknowledges the reality that many Down syndrome babies were selected as “very sad” abortion Because of their disability.
“When some women find themselves having babies, they get very sad and scared. They don’t want their children, and sometimes they find babies with Down syndrome or other disabilities,” the book reads. “They need us to pray for them every day so that they say yes, like Mary, to make their special children love.”
There is also a section at the end of the book for readers to write down their own prayers.
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Bradford explains that through the book’s visually shocking but not childish images, easy-to-read text and engaging layout, it can help anyone, especially those with learning challenges, form a habit of prayer. (iStock)
Despite the stigma often associated with Down syndrome and other learning disabilities, Bradford said that by “let’s pray” he wanted to convey the message that “everyone who is formed in the image of God is called into a relationship with him.”
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“Those with intellectual disabilities can have a rich and fruitful prayer life,” he said. “This requires respect with resources that encourage prayer and the development of relationships with the creator.”