Home2023-03-01T17:35:22-06:00
March/April 2023 Issue – If Music be the Food of Love, Mark the Music!

March/April 2023 Issue – If Music be the Food of Love, Mark the Music!

Sample Content from Our Latest Issue Table of Contents Sample Article Darkness at Noon and the Light of Christ In...
Read More

A Trappist’s Monastic Enlightenment

A common misconception is to equate the words “monastic” and “medieval,” and modern people tend to be surprised to learn...
Read More

A Most Distressful Country

Musings on contemporary Ireland... Ireland: A Most Distressful Country - Joseph Pearce (jpearce.co)
Read More

Everyman and the Everlasting Man

Seeing history in the light of Christ in the company of Chesterton... Everyman and the Everlasting Man - Joseph Pearce...
Read More

The St. Austin Review

The St. Austin Review (StAR) is an international journal of Catholic culture, literature, and ideas. In its pages, printed every two months, some of the brightest and most vigorous minds around meet to explore the people, ideas, movements, and events that shape and misshape our world.

If Music be the Food of Love, Mark the Music!

Sample Article Darkness at Noon and the Light of Christ

In 1972, a man brandishing a hammer and screaming, “I’m Jesus Christ! I have risen from the dead!” attacked Michelangelo’s Pieta in St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome, doing considerable damage to the marble statue’s eye, veil, nose, and left arm.

The strange incident stunned the world, including art lovers and spiritual pilgrims who gathered that day to view the Pieta, an exquisite masterpiece depicting a suffering Mary gazing down at the dead body of her Son, which she cradles in her lap.

Upon learning of the vandalism, the Pope added another dimension to the matter, calling it “most serious moral damage”.

These reactions, and others, demonstrate the Pieta’s ability to evoke strong emotions. Hungarian-born British novelist Arthur Koestler seemed to know this when he featured the Pieta in his famous novel, Darkness at Noon. The story, which takes place in Eastern Europe during the Soviet purge of the late 1930s, centers on an old-guard Bolshevik whose reversal of fortune is sudden and extreme: he is not only thrown in prison on trumped-up charges but, while there, is haunted by his past.

The Ink Desk Blog

Check Them Out

St. Austin Review Issues

Check out our other issues here and see what you're missing!
Check Them Out

More From The Ink Desk Blog

Get Involved

Support St. Austin Review

To be truly effective, we need the help from clergy and laity everywhere. Help us help the next generation of Catholics to grow up educated in Catholic truth, beauty, and goodness. Please consider a one-time or continuing, tax-deductible gift to StAR!
Get Involved
Go to Top