
Father Seraphim Rose and the Windows Into Creative Time
Father Seraphim Rose was a monk, priest, and a powerful writer. He believed he had a small window of time to write before the apocalypse.

Father Seraphim Rose was a monk, priest, and a powerful writer. He believed he had a small window of time to write before the apocalypse.

Living a poetic life is indeed for everyone–not just for writers and composers. St. Porphyrios says that poetic hearts embrace love and sense it deeply.

In his Nobel Prize speech, Alexandr Solzhenitsyn reveals the connection between Art and Courage, and the artist’s responsibility to stand for Truth, Beauty, and Goodness.

St. Patrick’s life is juxtaposed against the hedonism of the popular Guinness suffused St Patrick’s Day. Indeed St. Patrick was a humble monk and ascetic.

This post is all about the most important realization for any creative work, for any endeavour–indeed for life itself: That, above all, you are loved.

Alexander Schmemann shows us the deep connection between Chrismation and becoming one’s self. From this point of departure, creativity as union with God is conceptualized.

Paul is a failed entrepreneur. When he enters a process of career transition, he quickly realizes he is seeking something much greater–his true authentic self.

The poet Czeslaw Milosz reveals to us a vital part of his creative process, of his poetry, namely his faith in and pursuit of God.

Elements is the latest novel by Saint Patrick Press. It is an epic story of how one becomes a saint through stages of self-emptying Love.

Thomas Merton shows us what it means to become our true selves, that is becoming a saint. What does that mean for you and me?