“Stratford Caldecott is a great English visionary and a man of supreme courage. He defends Christian orthodoxy and yet contests any narrow construal of its character. In his new book, he takes this further through generous explorations of other religious traditions and bold engagements with marginal and esoteric currents within the Christian legacy. In short compass, this profound book, like no other, points the way forward for theology. Perhaps no one else would have been capable of striking such an exacting balance between steadfastness and humility as is achieved here. Yet it is just this difficult idiom into which Stratford Caldecott now calls all true believers.”
— CATHERINE PICKSTOCK
author of After Writing
“This wonderful new book is truly prophetic. As Stratford Caldecott contends, in order to recapture people's imaginations, Catholic orthodoxy will need newly to reach for its full breadth and generosity, which requires us to consider more deeply thinkers that have superficially been deemed marginal, along with the spiritual masters of other faiths. He demonstrates the need for theurgic reenchantment and a renewed openness to the diversity of spiritual forces actually operating in the cosmos; a sense that all creatures must be supernaturally restored by grace in order to be again themselves, and in order that God may be God, as He eternally is. Stratford Caldecott here proves himself the supreme contemporary thinker of such mystery and such paradox.”
— JOHN MILBANK
author of Theology and Social Theory
“Stratford Caldecott’s new book is an outstanding achievement and a major contribution to the serious Catholic literature of our time. He offers a veritable feast to men and women of a philosophical disposition who thirst for the Knowledge of God, including a magisterial chapter on the teachings of Meister Eckhart, and another on ‘The Mystery of Islam’ that is quite possibly the best Christian commentary yet enunciated on this delicate subject. One wonders how the author could cover a spectrum of topics ranging from quantum physics to the theology of angels and do so with conspicuous mastery. He himself however gives us the answer: ‘The Trinity is for me the key to everything.’ And therein, I believe, lies the central message of the book, its most precious gift to the receptive reader.”
— WOLFGANG SMITH
author of The Quantum Enigma and Science & Myth
“Stratford Caldecott's latest book is a true adventure of both mind and soul. It bravely, and wisely, brings into conversation disparate discourse, yet does so harmoniously and creatively. A call to truth, to beauty, and to the good, this is an exceptional piece of work—every other page introduces or reacquaints one with profundity and all its possibility. Highly recommended!”
— CONOR CUNNINGHAM
author of Darwin's Pious Idea
“The Radiance of Being is a beautiful collection of essays. Caldecott offers his readers a theological cosmology that includes reflections on God, time and eternity, human persons, angels, and even a ‘theology of animals.’ He takes his cue from the anthropology of John Paul II which he observes is marked by a nuptial and Trinitarian structure. Dante, Aquinas, Chesterton, Tolkien, Bulgakov, von Balthasar and Florensky each add their own tones to the score.”
— TRACEY ROWLAND
Dean, John Paul II Institute for Marriage & Family
“Faithfully Catholic, Caldecott is characteristically clear as well as generous in his judgments. This is a wonderful book by an agile thinker on a theme of great importance.”
— DAVID L. SCHINDLER
Dean Emeritus and Gagnon Professor of Fundamental Theology, Pontifical John Paul II Institute for Studies on Marriage and Family, The Catholic University of America; Editor, Communio: International Catholic Review
“The author of The Radiance of Being is one of the most important living exponents of Catholic metaphysics”
— ADRIAN WALKER (FROM THE FOREWORD)