About This Book
A series of linked essays offers a personal, imaginative defence of traditional Christian belief, blending anecdote, paradox, and metaphor. The author critiques modern skepticism and rationalism, argues that orthodox faith supplies both wonder and belonging, and examines how Christian paradoxes and moral teachings recover a coherent vision of reality. Chapters probe the limits of abstract thought, the ethics of fairy-tale imagination, the tension between authority and adventurous individualism, and the appeal of faith as a romantic stabilizing force. The prose combines aphoristic observation with earnest argument to present faith as both intellectually defensible and spiritually nourishing.
About the Author
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