Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

The Spirit of Early Christian Thought: Seeking the Face of God

Rate this book
"[A] magnificently learned, deeply felt and surprisingly pellucid set of essays."—Michael Dirda, Washington Post Book World

"A delight to read. It is written as history ought to be, especially for nonspecialist readers."—Richard A. Kauffman, Christian Century

In this eloquent introduction to early Christian thought, eminent religious historian Robert Louis Wilken examines the tradition that such figures as St. Augustine, Gregory of Nyssa, and others set in place. These early thinkers constructed a new intellectual and spiritual world, Wilken shows, and they can still be heard as living voices in the modern world.

In chapters on topics including early Christian worship, Christian poetry and the spiritual life, the Trinity, Christ, the Bible, and icons, Wilken shows that the energy and vitality of early Christianity arose from within the life of the Church. While early Christian thinkers drew on the philosophical and rhetorical traditions of the ancient world, it was the versatile vocabulary of the Bible that loosened their tongues and minds and allowed them to construct the world anew, intellectually and spiritually. These thinkers were not seeking to invent a world of ideas, Wilken shows, but rather to win the hearts of men and women and to change their lives.
Early Christian thinkers set in place a foundation that has endured. Their writings are an irreplaceable inheritance, and Wilken shows that they can still be heard as living voices within contemporary culture.

398 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2003

165 people are currently reading
1772 people want to read

About the author

Robert L. Wilken

28 books46 followers

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
517 (47%)
4 stars
389 (35%)
3 stars
159 (14%)
2 stars
13 (1%)
1 star
6 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 147 reviews
Profile Image for Cindy Rollins.
Author 20 books3,393 followers
January 27, 2024
What a lovely surprise. I started this with the feeling it was a “should” read , I ended it amazed at the author’s skill in making these ideas accessible and life giving. Where I expected dry, he breathed life into these fathers even going so far as to intertwine stories from literature to explain complex ideas. I learned so much and it especially helped me in my ongoing wrestlings with the role of education in producing virtue. I feel much better knowing this has been an ongoing thought process through the ages.
Profile Image for Charles Haywood.
549 reviews1,137 followers
August 31, 2015
This book is not a polemic or a book of apologetics; it is instead an exposition of what early Church theologians thought about important topics in Christian belief, and how those thoughts evolved and grew. If you think all theology is merely empty wind or arguments about angels dancing on the head of a pin, this is not the book for you. But if you want to know how early Christians developed their thought about the Trinity, or theological views on Christ being simultaneously fully human and fully divine, or how they viewed faith through the prism of reason, this is the book for you.

Don’t plan on finishing this book in an evening. It’s not too long, and it’s surprisingly readable, but it benefits from careful reading and consideration—I’m sure it benefits from multiple readings, as well. Moreover, given how it’s divided into clear topics, it is easy to return to the book when considering a specific topic, whether that is Christian views on the Trinity, the resurrection of the body, or the role, origin and logic of faith in Christian belief.

While it is not intended as such, this book is also a rebuke and response to the currently fashionable New Atheist set of such imagined luminaries as Dawkins and Harris (as well as other similarly shallow thinkers on the topic such as Gibbon). A key premise, always unexamined, of the New Atheists is that Christian thought is an oxymoron, and that they have discovered this key fact as a revelation missed by all prior opponents of Christianity. “The Spirit Of Early Christian Thought” shows in detail what anyone who is not ignorant already knows, that Christian thought and reasoning has absorbed the finest minds of the West for two millennia, and from the very beginning Christian thinkers actively grappled with and definitively responded to critics (Celsus, the Emperor Julian, Porphyry) who wrote in the same vein but with infinitely more intelligence and insight than the New Atheists, who are, in any reasonable view, a bunch of supercilious clowns. In fact, Wilken wrote a prior book on the topic of the arguments of early opponents of Christianity, to which this book was initially supposed to be a type of sequel/response, but which instead developed into an independent examination of Christian thought.

The conflict between the New Atheists and Christians is not an abstract philosophical argument—it, or the issues under discussion, have very real consequences. All Western morality is premised on Christian thought and principles. And it is a very different moral code than that of non-Christian societies, since it is a pure myth that the Golden Rule has any core relevance to any religion but Christianity. The New Atheists believe that without God societies can still retain a moral core—Steven Pinker actually argues that morality is merely the outcome of people finding positive-sum games. Maybe. But more likely, as Wilken says, “Augustine’s ‘City of God’ defends a fundamental truth about human beings and about society. Only God can give ultimate purpose to our deepest convictions, for example, the dignity of the human person, and provide grounds for communal life that transcend self-interest.” An abstract core belief in human dignity (real dignity, not Anthony Kennedy “dignity”) seems an unlikely automatic outcome of positive-sum games. Human history suggests the opposite. But we’ll find out within the next fifty years or so.

In any case, apologetics or calling out silly people is not Wilken’s goal in this book, and he does neither. Rather, the core of the book, the reason for its existence, is “Christianity is more than a set of devotional practices and a moral code: it is also a way of thinking about God, about human beings, about our world and history.” When talking about this thinking, Wilken focuses on Origen; Gregory of Nyssa; Augustine; and Maximus the Confessor. These are all pre-medieval, or at least pre-High Medieval, thinkers—while later theologians, like St. Thomas Aquinas, are occasionally mentioned, the focus is on *early* Christian thought. That said, some readers may expect “early” to be first century, and that is not the case here, if for no other reason than that detailed theological exposition of most Christian topics took centuries to accomplish.

Aside from the specific topics, Wilken maintains two threads throughout the book. The first is the importance of Biblical exegesis to all these thinkers. The Bible, Old and New Testament, suffused all their analyses, even the most complex. This is in contrast to the popular Protestant view that before Martin Luther, the Bible was ignored. And this Biblical analysis was extremely focused and subtle, using both comparisons of different passages from the Bible and sophisticated reasoning, which is in contrast to the modern tendency to view each personal analysis, even of the uneducated and stupid, as equal, and to view purely literal interpretations as somehow superior. As Wilken notes, “the church fathers took it as self-evident that the words of the Bible often had multiple meanings and the plain sense did not exhaust their meaning.”

The second thread is that the Hellenization of early Christianity has been grossly overstated. In its simplest and crudest form, the idea is that the Judaic Christianity of Christ and the Apostles was hijacked by Saint Paul and his Neoplatonist progeny. Wilken doesn’t like this idea. Instead, he emphasizes the concrete roots of all early Christian thought in the Scriptures; informed sometimes, to be sure, by Greco-Roman philosophical ideas, but those ideas flavored rather than supplanted the Scriptures and traditions of the Apostles.

I personally found the discussions of the Trinity and the simultaneous divinity and humanity of Christ the most interesting. The Trinity absorbed many early thinkers, who first fit Jesus into the Trinity and later fleshed out the Spirit (though the Trinity itself was always accepted as a core Christian doctrine and mystery), relying primarily on Biblical exegesis rather than deductive reasoning—or, as Gregory of Nyssa said, “his aim is to ‘fit together’ what he learns from the Scripture with ‘conceptions that are drawn from arguments based on reason.’” This includes gems like Tertullian’s analogy of the social nature of the Trinity to the back-and-forth that occurs inside any human’s head while thinking.

Similarly, the early Christians struggled with the apparent paradox of simultaneous divinity and humanity (i.e., the hypostatic union). They saw clearly how this was essentially impossible to fully grasp and how ridiculous it seemed to non-Christians, and they addressed such objections head-on, when they weren’t contending among themselves on the issue. (For those keeping score at home, the mainstream Christian position that was converged on over the centuries is that in Christ there are two natures and two wills; each retaining its own properties, and together united in perfect harmony in one substance and in one single person).

As to faith itself, Wilken explains how Christians have always viewed faith not as some required unreasoned belief—quite the contrary. Outsiders, non-Christians or the non-religious, view religious faith as an inverse invincible ignorance. Wilken notes that Christian faith has been a key point of attack by non-Christians from the very beginning, citing Galen and Celsus, through many later thinkers. But Wilken carefully shows how Christians, from earliest times, have instead viewed faith as a combination of recognition of the testimony of reliable people who had come before, reasoning, and concrete evidence.

Wilken’s core point is that any historical (as opposed to mathematical) knowledge involves a type of faith, as Augustine said, and quotes Augustine: “Nothing would remain stable in human society if we determined to believe only what can be held with absolute certainty.” The existence of witnesses (the original meaning of “martyr”), reason, evidence, and authority (in the sense Augustine used the Latin “auctoritas,” as a person able to guarantee the validity of a legal document or action), allow Christians to conclude that their faith is not blind. Once you read this section of Wilken’s book, anybody who uses the Flying Spaghetti Monster (which lacks all four markers of Christian faith) as a counter-Christian argument will, if he thinks clearly, be duly ashamed and put that argument aside with his Hot Wheels.

That said, Wilken also acknowledges that faith is not at all a matter of pure reason, as the Manichees would have it. He has a long discussion of the role of hope and love in faith, again quoting Augustine, “If you have faith without hope and without love, you believe that he is the Christ, but you don’t believe in Christ.” And he concludes, “But in matters of religion the away to truth is not found in keeping one’s distance. It is only in loving surrender that we are able to enter the mystery of God. In the words of Richard of Saint Victor, the twelfth-century theologian and spiritual writer, ‘Where there is love, there is seeing.’ By putting itself in service of truth, faith enables reason to exercise its power in realms to which it would otherwise have no access. It is only in giving that we receive, only in loving that we are loved, only in obeying that we know.” And, of course, this is the core of Christianity. The Trinity is important but abstract to most believers’ lives. But faith itself is not, and Wilken’s book ties the entire Christian project together.
Profile Image for Jonathan.
19 reviews
October 17, 2015
Wilken’s aim—to “depict the pattern of Christian thinking as it took shape in the formative centuries of the church’s history”—was soundly achieved, and his central argument, that “Christians reasoned from . . . . history, from ritual, and from text,” was thoroughly and even eloquently demonstrated (xiv, xvii). Several features emerge as important to Wilken’s successful presentation. First, the essential characteristics of early Christian thought that Wilken proposes at the beginning recur over and over again throughout each chapter. Yet these characteristics recur naturally, giving the reader assurance that Wilken is not forcing his ideas on the data, but that these ideas emerged from the data. One clear example of this is the “omnipresence of the Bible” (xvii), which Wilken had promised at the outset: nearly every page of his book has some reference to, if not a quotation of, Scripture. Second, Wilken draws from the writings of the early Christians themselves to walk his readers through their thought processes. For example, when he discusses how the early Christians would allegorize Scripture, he gives several examples of how Augustine, Gregory of Nyssa, and Gregory the Great did just that (69-79). Even for readers who disagree with an allegorical hermeneutic, Wilken’s primary source examples render such allegorizing to be understandable, if not compelling. Third, Wilken seems to have really captured the spirit, not just the ideas, of the early Christians. What he says about the work of Gregory the Great is also true of Wilken’s own work: “He did not construct a world of ideas for others to admire, but one to live in” (313). Thus, while well-researched and accurate, the book is also unavoidably devotional, pulsating with the love for Christ that saturated the hearts and minds of these Christian forerunners.

Readers looking for a critique of early Christian doctrinal thought (especially from a Protestant perspective) will not find it here. While Wilken comments unfavorably on the way in which some Christians handled debates (concerning the debates about Christ’s nature he writes, “it is not an edifying history,” 112), he makes no attempt to evaluate Biblically, for example, whether the veneration of icons is right or wrong (237-261), or whether the allegorizing is a legitimate method of Biblical hermeneutics (69-77). Reviewer A. M. C. Casiday notes that Wilken bypasses the topics of monasticism and the offices of the church, but those omissions certainly can be attributed to Wilken’s primary aim of capturing the spirit of early Christian thought, not so much the structures in which this thought developed.
Conclusion

Because Wilken’s book has so effectively captured the spirit of early Christian thought, students can expect it to be foundational in orienting their future studies of this period of church history. Despite its uncritical reporting of areas in which the early Christians deviated from Scripture, students can also expect it to be an ongoing source of spiritual refreshment and inspiration. Besides these benefits, Wilken has offered tantalizing glimpses of these heroes of the faith, enticing his readers to journey back to those first centuries and make their personal acquaintance.
103 reviews2 followers
May 16, 2024
The value of this book is that, as the title suggests, it is more of a guide to how the earliest Christians THOUGHT than it is a basic church history.

A few highlights: in the second chapter, An Awesome and Unbloody Sacrifice (this chapter alone is worth buying the book), Wilken shows clearly that early Christian worship was centered around a re-presentation of the cross, an encounter with the true body and blood of Jesus Christ in the Eucharist, and an entering into the one sacrifice of Calvary that transcends time and space. Read this chapter!

In the fourth chapter, Seek His Face Always, Wilken explains how we as Christians arrived at the doctrine of the Trinity. This was not a doctrine that came from thinkers in an ivory tower. Rather, he shows that our belief in the Trinity comes from the life of Christian worship and prayer from the very beginning. Lex orandi, lex credendi (the law of prayer is the law of belief)

If you are like me and are interested in the young earth/old earth conversation, then the sixth chapter, The End Given in the Beginning, is an amazing insight into how the early church fathers read the book of Genesis. I think that many of the silly and unnecessary debates that go on today about the first 11 chapters of Genesis would go away if we would take time to learn to read Genesis from the church fathers.

Lastly, the tenth chapter, Making This Thing Other, is a great look into how the church fathers viewed the use of pictures, statues, images, and relics of Christ and the saints. Because of their theology of the Incarnation, the historic church has always recognized that when God takes on physical matter in the Incarnation, he “makes this thing other.” Every icon of Christ, Mary, and the saints is a testament to the gospel; it is a sign that Christ has redeemed our physical world. Wilken shows how God is glorified in Christ and the saints.

Give this a read!
42 reviews
December 15, 2025
It took me until the epilogue to understand what Wilken is trying to do with this book. He's showing the dynamic way that the early church addressed and appropriated the practices, philosophies, and arts of the secular world that it grew up in. A pretty interesting and edifying read, and I probably only took home 15 percent of it. Will revisit in the future. Good work, Wilken.
Profile Image for Jaden Weatherly.
56 reviews4 followers
May 15, 2024
This was a great book!

This book is not a chronological display of facts about the early church. It’s a topical overview of specific Fathers of the early church such as Augustine, the Cappadocians, and Maximus the Confessor to name a few, with each chapter usually highlighting one or two Fathers and diving deep into their spirituality on the topic.

Big takeaways:
-The early church was liturgical and sacramental. In the same way as today? Not sure. But surely they believed in genuine, sacred mysteries happening during the Eucharist and Baptism, full stop.

-The early church fathers were very well versed in Holy Scripture, philosophy, and literature generally. The Fathers let scripture be the lens through which they interpreted the secular philosophy of their day and of the ancients, and they did a great job of not throwing out the baby with the bath water.

-Lastly, the Fathers never did theology without these two things: a zealous love for God and a life of disciplined prayer. You can just tell from their writings that these deep theological treatises are not just intellectual works, they are deeply spiritual and full of love for God, with rich theology pouring out from that.

Will definitely be referring back to this book often!
110 reviews9 followers
October 13, 2021
Brilliant, learned, and readable set of essays that give an illuminating, though not exhaustive, overview of early Christian thought. Would definitely recommend!
Profile Image for Madison Grace.
28 reviews1 follower
July 14, 2025
it wasn’t bad! i just wasnt blown away by it! was a little confused if it was supposed to be biographical or about the historical reception of the Trinity ?
Profile Image for Scott.
524 reviews83 followers
June 13, 2015
Very fine intro to patristic thought.
Profile Image for Teri Pardue.
195 reviews10 followers
August 14, 2018
I have not done much reading in patristics, other than Augustine’s Confessions, and I found this book a perfect introduction.

It managed to cover a large amount of material (and church fathers) in a fairly short book, seeming to take a magnifying glass to specific events or people when most necessary. I learned a lot and wrote down a lot that I wanted to delve into more deeply. The chapter on early Christian poetry was one of my favorites.

“The words of the Scripture made a temple deep within the hearing of early Christian preachers. Not only in sermons but also in theological works, in letters, and in spiritual writings the church fathers display an enviable verbal command of large sections of the Bible. In contrast to modern theological writings in which the Bible is cited in support of theological ideas, and hence usually relegated to the footnotes, in the early church the words of the Bible were the linguistic skeleton for the exposition of ideas. Even in the writings of the most philosophical of early Christian thinkers their thoughts are expressed in the language of the Bible, seldom above it. The liturgy provided a kind of grammar of Christian speech, a key to how the words of the Bible are to be used” (p. 43).

This book really made me want to delve further into the works of the fathers of the early church. It showcases their beauty and theological depth. I love these words on patience from Tertullian:

“Patience outfits faith, guides peace, assists love, equips humility, waits for penitence, seals confession, keeps the flesh in check, preserves the spirit, bridles the tongue, restrains the hands, tramples temptation underfoot, removes what causes us to stumble, brings martyrdom to perfection; it lightens the care of the poor, teaches moderation to the rich, lifts the burdens of the sick, delights the believer, welcomes the unbeliever, commends the servant to his master and his master to God, adorns the women and gives grace to men; patience is loved in children, praised in youth, admired in the elderly. It is beautiful in either sex and at every age of life…Her countenance is tranquil and peaceful, her brow serene…Patience sits on the throne of the most gentle and peaceful Spirit…For where God is there is his progeny, patience. When God’s Spirit descends patience is always at his side.”

Profile Image for Ethan Zimmerman.
202 reviews12 followers
March 29, 2023
An eloquent introduction to various broad themes in early Christian thought. This almost hagiographic survey highlights how Christians thought about the nature of Christ, the purpose of his work, the reasonableness of faith, communion with God as our creaturely end, the nature of being in God's likeness, and various other things.

I found the book to be somewhat inspiring (when I wasn't trying to sleepily cram it in before class). But really, what was most evident to me was that for many theologians of the early years, rigorous thought about God was ultimately to "seek His face." Not that mystery could be eradicated, but that God was worth pursuing with all human facilities. They were moved to write, think, preach, and serve out of the deep conviction that something cosmos-changing had happened when God became man.
13 reviews
February 27, 2020
I recommend this book for those interested in learning how early Christian thinking developed from the inception of Christianity beginning with the ascension of Christ through the first few centuries.

The author reveals the development of theology (focusing mostly on Christology), Christian worship (focusing mostly on communion, baptism, and public Scripture readings), and other liturgical practices amidst external threats from Rome and internal challenges from within the church.

The only minor piece of critique I have is that the author does not deal with the shortcomings of the prominent figures discussed in the book. For example, most of the key Christian thinkers who contributed greatly to the development of Christian thought were only described in a positive light, and rarely were their fallacies mentioned. The failure of mentioning their struggles hides some of the additional challenges they and subsequent Christians faced.
Profile Image for G.R. Vickers.
6 reviews
January 15, 2024
A solid introduction to the development of Christian thought in the Patristic age, it offers a large survey of the time’s major writers. While interweaving quotes consistently throughout, Wilken does well to keep his own voice alive throughout the book. The diction Wilken uses is comprehensible, making the content easily digestible for novices on the book’s topics. Also, the chapters are all roughly the same length and are broken into sections through helpful headings, giving the whole work a coherent feel.
Profile Image for Rafael Salazar.
157 reviews43 followers
July 2, 2019
Fascinating read. This is a page-turning survey of the intellectual life of the church fathers that legitimately surprised me by how much Reformed spirituality owes to these early Christians. Filled with refreshing quotes and I summaries, Wilken sounds like a learned teacher that loves his subject enough to share it beautifully. I'm probably turning to this book again in the future.
Profile Image for Flynn Evans.
199 reviews13 followers
February 28, 2020
An incisive account of the defining contours of the practices and theology of early Christianity. Wilken highlights how Christians saw themselves as primarily being immersed in a robustly biblical social and doctrinal imaginary, guiding them in their unique witness to the pagan world as well as solidifying their distinct sense of liturgy.
Profile Image for Matt Lewis.
101 reviews4 followers
April 18, 2023
This book was fantastic. One of two books that was recommended to me to read before I start my graduate Theology program this Fall.

For anyone looking for a baseline of what the Church Fathers believed and taught, I would recommend this. I have to say there are some amazing spiritual insights in here as well. There’s something that particularly stood out to me about lectors and the need for them to be intimately familiar with the Word of God.
Profile Image for Amanda.
375 reviews21 followers
April 25, 2019
This book is a fabulous look into the development and heart of the early Christian church. In truth the knowledge of God and the love of God must be formed together in order to see God, to be changed by God. The early church leaders demonstrate this again and again by their writings and their lives. They cover themselves with and wrestle with the language of the scriptures and cling to the incarnation of our Lord Jesus. As the last line of the book states "They are still our teachers today."
Profile Image for Griffin Gooch.
Author 1 book18 followers
December 10, 2024
I actually enjoyed the audiobook version more than the physical book
47 reviews
February 10, 2025
Fantastic overview of how Christian leaders and thinkers refined their theology for the next few hundred years after the apostles.
Profile Image for Caleb.
104 reviews15 followers
July 1, 2024
“Like an inexhaustible spring…[the church fathers] irrigate the Christian imagination with the life-giving water flowing from the biblical and spiritual sources of the faith. They are still our teachers today.”
Profile Image for Joey Rasmussen.
35 reviews3 followers
October 22, 2024
Really good introduction on the early church fathers, what they were concerned about, and how we should interact with their thoughts today as we do theology.
Profile Image for James.
68 reviews
June 17, 2023
An excellent book that is written in a welcoming prose, despite the deep theological and historical topics it addresses. My only complaint is his mention of infant baptism not being something done in the early church (this seems to be corrected in a later book of his) and mentioning the “Bible” in the early church, despite it taking some time for the formal canon of Scripture to be recognized. I’m probably being nit-picky, but those two things bothered me. Otherwise, it is absolutely worth the read.
Profile Image for John David.
381 reviews382 followers
May 21, 2014
Anyone who has ever tried to dip their toes into the waters of medieval theology can quickly be overwhelmed by its complexities and occasional rank obscurantism. Wilken, much to his credit, knows his subjects so well that he can distill their most important ideas in historical context (especially important as this book covers a period where much of the known world begins as Roman and pagan and ends several centuries later, when both the Empire and its paganism were gone) and explain how they were important in the development of Christian intellectual history – all while remaining extraordinarily accessible for the reader with no formal knowledge of patristic theology.

At the heart of the book are two major messages. First, to separate evidence and sensory knowledge from pure faith – very much a temptation for those of us who have been born since the Enlightenment – would have made no sense to the early Church fathers. From the time of Origen and Tertullian, earthly evidence and divine faith were both seen as necessary, and even to feed into one another. Thinking is part of believing, and vice versa. Second, the series of practices that we recognize as early Christianity are undoubtedly social and communal in nature. Wilken stresses over and over again that even the monks would lived in desert confinement for decade after decade, still saw Christianity, at its root, as love for fellow man and community.

The thinkers that he covers are all very important, and range in time from its first couple of centuries to approximately the eighth century, covering the entire harvest of early Christian thought. The most important among them include Justin Martyr, Origen, Clement (and Cyril) of Alexandria, Athanasius, Basil of Caesarea, Ambrose, John Chrysostom, Gregory of Nyssa, Maximus the Confessor – and perhaps the greatest mind the Church has ever known, Saint Augustine. To assist the reader who has minimal familiarity with this rich history of thought, Wilken arranges his discussions topically, with chapter names drawn from an appropriate epigram which opens each chapter. “Founded on the Cross of Christ” discusses how we come to know God, “An Awesome and Unbloody Sacrifice” references worship and the sacraments, and “Seek His Face Always” picks up Trinitarian themes (Trinitarian discussions, as fundamental as they were to early Christology, are not relegated to this one chapter alone). For me, the most fascinating chapters were on a couple of the first Christian poets, and another on importance of the Bible and how the shape and texture of its writing so differed from Greek and Roman literature that it profoundly refigured the ideas of the early fathers.

While the author covers a wide range of topics that are often considered dry, the overall effect of the book comes across as the passionate history of a fascination with the people Wilken writes about. His vim and vigor for the fathers of the early Church is clear and unmistakable, so much so that the historical figures he presents almost seem whitewashed – pure and almost superhuman. His orthodoxy perhaps results in a lack of thorough criticism on some points where it would have been welcome. However, if you’re looking for critical responses to the fathers, these should not be difficult to find. However, as pure contemporary apology for a centuries-old intellectual tradition, this book stands above many others I have read.
Profile Image for Kameron.
47 reviews2 followers
January 14, 2018
Excellent summary of early Christian thought and practice. Wilken draws from a range of early church Fathers primarily through letters, sermons and treatises to give us a sense of how they understood Scripture, the Sacraments, society, icons, spiritual life, poetry, and other topics. Intellectually stimulating yet also quite practical and devotional.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 147 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.