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Why does great art so often come from broken people? And what does that mean for Christians who want to make something true—something that actually holds hope without being sentimental?
This episode opens the Summer 2026 season on subcreation with a story from Camelot. Not the glory of it—the kitchen of it.
Sir Gareth of Orkney arrives at Arthur's court as a servant, earns his knighthood in anonymity, and becomes a figure for every maker who's ever wondered whether they have the right to create beautiful things given what they know about themselves.
We follow his road and ask: what does honest Christian subcreation actually look like? And why do the artists who move us most seem to carry their wounds right in the work?
Hosts: Sarah Howell, Amy Lee, Yongwon Lee, and Matthew Clark
By Anselm Society5
3434 ratings
Why does great art so often come from broken people? And what does that mean for Christians who want to make something true—something that actually holds hope without being sentimental?
This episode opens the Summer 2026 season on subcreation with a story from Camelot. Not the glory of it—the kitchen of it.
Sir Gareth of Orkney arrives at Arthur's court as a servant, earns his knighthood in anonymity, and becomes a figure for every maker who's ever wondered whether they have the right to create beautiful things given what they know about themselves.
We follow his road and ask: what does honest Christian subcreation actually look like? And why do the artists who move us most seem to carry their wounds right in the work?
Hosts: Sarah Howell, Amy Lee, Yongwon Lee, and Matthew Clark

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