Portraits of Grace

Portraits of Grace: Images and Words from the Monastery of the Holy Spirit
By James Stephen Behrens, OCSO
Skokie, IL: ACTA Publications, 2007
Review by Carl McColman

Windows feature prominently in this luminous collection of photography and pithy meditations from Trappist monk James Behrens. In this striking and singular glimpse into the multivalent world quietly hidden within a third millennium cloister, Behrens eschews stereotypes and clichés. Instead of pious images of monks praying or studying, he lingers over a heap of old tires, mops hung up to dry, an old street sign overgrown by kudzu. Like many religious communities founded anywhere from fifty to fifteen hundred years ago, Georgia’s Monastery of the Holy Spirit — where all of these photographs were taken and presumably all these words were written — is rich with the splendors of nature; the community owns over two thousand acres of mostly undeveloped land. Behrens celebrates this bucolic treasure with his singularly unromantic eye: his gaze finds an autumn leaf caught in a spider web, or ominous clouds rolling in over a lonely old barn. But I don’t mean to suggest that this collection of images lacks beauty or warmth: far from it. Tenderness erupts in a candid snapshot of a dove huddling in her nest with her young, while technically gorgeous images of a bumblebee or a preying mantis are almost breathtaking in their loveliness. Pansies, stained glass, green leaves and red bricks, all dance through the book, giving it a colorful, almost kaleidoscopic feel.

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The Limitation of Christ

I can’t resist a good pun, and the only thing I like more than a good pun is a really bad one. Yesterday when I was restocking books at the store where I work, I looked at Thomas à Kempis’ The Imitation of Christ and thought “somebody should write a book called The Limitation of Christ.” More cutesy than clever, I thought, and so obvious that it had probably been done a trillion times. So I was surprised when I couldn’t find a book on Amazon.com with that title; indeed, when I googled “Limitation of Christ” all I could find was a MySpace Blog from a band in the UK called the Limitations (I couldn’t figure out their connection to Christ, so I figured they are just as hopeless for bad puns as I am).

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