Spirit of Flame
By Edgar Allison Peers Saint John of the Cross is practically unique among Christendom’s many mystics. Never mind the connotations of delicacy, distance, or darkness which that word, mystics, might conjure up. A mystic means, simply, a person who has fallen in love with God. Ardently single-minded and single-hearted in love and purpose: in this way did John of the Cross attend to God, search for Him, strive after Him; in this way, too, did he long that others might share in this love and purpose. Here, Edgar Allison Peers writes, lies “the whole secret of the amazing power of his life, his character and his writings.” God knows what is meet for us and ordains things for our good. Think only that God ordains all. And where there is no love, put love in and you will draw love out. (Saint John of the Cross) A masterpiece of brief biography and literary appreciation, Spirit of Flame introduces this Spanish Carmelite friar, hero of the Counter-Reformation, companion to the great St. Tere