Join thousands of book lovers
Sign up to our newsletter and receive discounts and inspiration for your next reading experience.
By signing up, you agree to our Privacy Policy.You can, at any time, unsubscribe from our newsletters.
John Médaille maintains that philosophers-beginning with the consummate dialectician Socrates who gives Euthyphro a thorough drubbing-have illegitimately stifled the special access that theologian-poets have to ultimate truths at the heart of all human experience. Thomas Storck objects: the power to see reality as it is, to discover principles and arrive at conclusions, is as natural to man as breathing and walking; after all, even Scripture says we have no excuse if we fail to recognize God in his works, if we fail to yield to the testimony of miracles and the evidence for revelation. But what is reason, after all? Are there even facts apart from judgments, judgments apart from interpretations, and interpretations apart from worldviews developed through the stories we learn and tell one another? Back and forth it goes, as Storck defends philosophy, objectivity, and Thomism, while Médaille seeks to expose their vulnerable flanks. In a world of sound bites and short attention spans, how rare is an amiable, penetrating, sustained dialogue between two thinkers of great intelligence and undoubted good will, who, though disagreeing about many things, are still drawn back, again and again, to the central mystery of Christ, supreme Logos and sacrificial Lamb?
City under Siege is contemporary Catholic poetry at its finest. Mark Amorose, a master of the sonnet and epigram, is a rare poet, one who overcomes poetry's most difficult challenge: religious poems. Amorose praises creation, the Catholic Church, Mary, angels, saints, and martyrs -- an heroic defense of the City of God, a city now under siege
JESUS THE IMAGINATION: The Garden explores the imaginal realm serving as the natural, psychological, and spiritual scaffolding of the human condition in poetry, essays, and art. With work by Jeremy Naydler, Therese Schroeder-Sheker, Paul Valery, Katie Hartsock, Jonathan Geltner, and others, and featuring an interview with beekeeper Gunther Hauk.
Jesus the Imagination: A Journal of Spiritual Revolution, Christ-Orpheus explores synergies both ancient and modern between these two figures who descended into the Underworld to liberate the dead and then returned. Featuring work by Emi Shigeno, Daniel Joseph Polikoff, and Jonathan Geltner, and an interview with harpist Therese Schroeder-Sheker.
Sign up to our newsletter and receive discounts and inspiration for your next reading experience.
By signing up, you agree to our Privacy Policy.