Paul Murray (poet)

Paul Murray
Personal
Born 26 November 1947
Religion Roman Catholic
Nationality Irish
Education University College Dublin
Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas
Other names "Father Paul"
Profession 1967
Order Dominican
Senior posting
Based in Rome, Italy
Ordination 1973
Profession 1967
Present post Rome, Italy

Paul Brendan Murray, (born 26 November 1947) is an Irish Dominican priest of the Catholic Church, poet, writer, and professor.

Murray was born at Newcastle, County Down, in Northern Ireland. In 1966 he joined the Irish Dominican Province, and was ordained a priest in 1973. Since 1994 he has lived in Rome, Italy, where he teaches the literature of the mystical tradition at the Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas, also known as the Angelicum. He holds a doctorate in English Literature from University College Dublin. In 2012 Rev. Prof. Murray was conferred with the STM degree from the Angelicum at a ceremony in St Mary's Priory, Tallaght, Dublin.

Bibliography

Prose

  • The Mysticism Debate (1977)
  • T.S. Eliot and Mysticism: The Secret History of the Four Quartets (1991)
  • A Journey with Jonah: The Spirituality of Bewilderment (2002)
  • Preachers at Prayer (2003)
  • The New Wine of Dominican Spirituality: A Drink Called Happiness (2003)
  • "I Loved Jesus in the Night": Teresa of Calcutta, A Secret Revealed (2008)
  • Door into the Sacred: A Meditation on the Hail Mary (2010)
  • Praying with Confidence: Aquinas on the Lord's Prayer (2010)
  • In the Grip of Light: The Dark and Bright Journey of Christian Contemplation (2012)
  • Aquinas at Prayer: The Bible, Mysticism and Poetry (2013)
  • Scars: Essays, Poems and Meditations on Affliction (2014)
  • God's Spies: Michelangelo, Shakespeare and Other Poets of Vision (2019)
  • Saint Catherine of Siena: Mystic of Fire, Preacher of Freedom (2020)

Poetry

  • Ritual Poems (1971)
  • Rites and Meditations (1982)
  • The Absent Fountain (1992)
  • These Black Stars (2003)
  • Stones and Stars (2013)
  • Light at the Torn Horizon (2022)
  • Moling in Meditation: A Psalter for an Early Irish Monk (2023)

See also