Written by G.K. Chesterton
Published by Image Books 1984, paperback, 167. Study guide 2014, 9 pages and 3 pages of discussion questions.
Chesterton’s Aquinas is a man of mystery. Born into a noble Neapolitan family, Thomas chose the life of a mendicant friar. Lumbering and shy — his classmates dubbed him “the Dumb Ox” — he led a revolution in Christian thought. Possessed of the rarest brilliance, he found the highest truth in the humblest object. Having spent his life amid the vast intricacies of reason, he asked on his deathbed to have read aloud the Song of Songs, the most passionate book in the Bible.
As Albert the Great, Thomas’s teacher, predicted, the Dumb Ox has bellowed down the ages to our own day. Chesterton’s book will enlighten those who would consign Thomas to the obscurity of medieval times. It will confound those who would use Thomas to bolster arid schemes of Christian rationalism. Rather, it will introduce the wondrous mystery of the man who, after a life of unparalleled genius, was seized by a vision of the Unknown and said, “I can write no more. I have seen things which make all my writings like straw.”
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