Mark Barrett’s concern when writing Crossing was to offer a way for those who do not live in monasteries to access something of what is a daily experience among supposed religious specialists. He hoped that the reader would find that monastics – so often the shadowy medieval figures of media-gothic – are in reality fellow-seekers, apprentices training among the tools of a spiritual workshop. Monastic practices are not a panacea for the ills of modern society, and it would be naive to suggest they can be. The point is rather that Christian monastic practices came into being at least in part as a responce to the tidal currents of our hearts, set swirling by our busy lives, whichever century we live in.

LOVE'S SACRED ORDER
AN UNLIKELY CATECHISM
THE CATHOLIC CONTROVERSY
18CM MADONNA MIRAKOLUZA 1101
THE SINNER'S RETURN TO GOD
GIANT SURROUNDED BY MONKEYS
TRAIL-BLAZERS FOR CHRIST
STRANNIK
HOPE IN THE GOSPELS
THE PRAYERS OF ST. THERESE OF LISIEUX 

