For Pythagoras and many other Greek philosophers, the beauty of the cosmos reflected not only a harmonious order but divinity itself. That is why they were also a community that worshipped. Pythagoras’s legacy reached even to the United States, being responsible for the architectural beauty of Monticello, Harvard Hall, and the Capitol Building.
The Bandit, The Executive, and the Power of Fear
Sacred Art That Survived the Oppression of the Church in Britain and Ireland Up for Auction
Volcanoes, Storms, and a Sleeping Christ
A Statue in the Gothic Style Sculpted by Martin Earle
Patton, Pizza, and the Ingenuity of Man
Report on the March for Eternal Life - and notification of more Pilgrimages coming this year.
Covenants, Contracts, and the Body of Christ
Beauty in the Spiritual Life, Part 3: A Meditation on A Painting of Christ as the Eternal Flower of Paradise
Saint Brigid and the Love of the Trinity
Beauty in the Spiritual Life, Part 2: Suggestions on How to Develop the Impulse for Beauty
Augustine and the Holy Spirit
Beauty in the Spiritual Life, Part 1: Beauty as a Principle of Choice
The conscience can act in a prohibitive sense, that warns us against sinful acts. But there is another principle of choice that is more positive and affirmative and is a creative impulse that works in harmony with the order that underlies the beauty of all things. That is the conscience of creativity that chooses the most beautiful option.



















