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Sunday, 28 June 2026
We are called to build....
Saturday, 27 June 2026
Reverence begins with prayer....
Benedict tells us that prayer should be brief, offered with few words, arising from a heart that is pure rather than from lips that are merely busy. God is not persuaded by the length of our prayers but by the openness of our hearts.
Sr. Joan Chittister reminds us that the purpose of prayer is not to establish a routine but to establish a relationship—an enduring relationship with the God who is already with us. Prayer is not something we do at appointed hours alone; prayer is the slow shaping of a life until every thought, every word, every action becomes an expression of God's presence within us.
The ancient monks called this purity of heart. John Cassian described it as the one great purpose toward which every spiritual discipline points. It is not moral perfection. It is singleness of heart—the gradual surrender of every competing desire until there is only one great longing left: to seek God in all things.
Centuries later, Thomas Merton wrote that the pure of heart are those who no longer seek themselves, but seek only the will of God. Meister Eckhart taught that we must become empty enough for God to be God within us. Thomas Keating reminded us that the spiritual journey is less about acquiring holiness than about letting go of the false self that obscures it. And Richard Rohr often observes that we do not think ourselves into a new way of living; we live ourselves into a new way of thinking.
Perhaps that is why the word true is so profound. Truth is not merely the correctness of our opinions. It is the alignment of our lives with the life of God. We speak of true north because it does not wander. We speak of true notes because they are in harmony. Likewise, a true heart is one brought into harmony with the heart of God.
Such truth can be elusive. We are easily deceived by ambition, comfort, fear, certainty, and self-interest. The Desert Fathers warned that the greatest obstacle to God is not wickedness but illusion—the mistaken belief that our own desires are God's desires. Prayer slowly strips away those illusions. It teaches us to listen with "the ear of the heart" until God's hopes become our hopes, God's compassion becomes our compassion, and God's truth becomes the measure of our lives.
Then prayer has accomplished its work. We have become, little by little, what we have prayed. Our words grow fewer because our lives speak more clearly. We become disciples whose witness is not found primarily in eloquent speech but in quiet integrity. We become, in Benedict's vision, people whose hearts are pure, whose minds are centered in the Truth that is Truth, whose strength rests in the Power that is Power, and whose lives are transformed by the Love that is Love.
For in the end, purity of heart is simply this: to will one thing—to belong wholly to God, and in belonging to Him, to belong more completely to His world.
Friday, 26 June 2026
And so....we are called to live the Gospel message....
The wisdom of the ages, from Evagrius Ponticus and the Desert Fathers, through Augustine of Hippo, Thomas Aquinas, Meister Eckhart, Teresa of Ávila, and John of the Cross, to Thomas Merton, Richard Rohr, and Sister Joan—reminds us that the spiritual life is not about acquiring something new. It is about allowing God to reveal what has always been intended. Prayer does not inform God. Prayer transforms us—so that we become who we say we are.
By now we have come to appreciate the extraordinary clarity that Sister Joan Chittister brings to the Rule of Benedict. Today she offers one of her most compelling images: the smelter's furnace.
Raw ore enters the crucible carrying both precious metal and worthless dross. Only fire can separate the one from the other. So it is with the soul.
Benedict understood that the Divine Office is not simply a discipline of words but a furnace of grace. Day after day, the psalms gather our scattered minds, disordered loves, restless ambitions, hidden fears, and deepest hopes into the presence of God. There, in the quiet fire of prayer, they are fused into a single heart.
The Desert Fathers called this purity of heart—the undivided life. Augustine spoke of rightly ordered love. Benedict called it listening "with the ear of the heart." Richard Rohr describes it as the True Self emerging as the false self slowly burns away. Different voices, one enduring truth.
Prayer is not meant to change God's mind. It is meant to change ours.
As the furnace burns away pride, illusion, fear, and self-deception, the image of Christ becomes steadily clearer within us. Our words and our lives begin to agree. Our worship becomes visible in the way we love, forgive, serve, and hope.
The goal is wonderfully simple: that, by God's grace, we become who we profess to be—indeed, who He has always created us to become.
Only then do our prayers cease to be merely spoken and become, at last, embodied. Only then does God's presence become palpable in us. And only then do we become what we seek: people whose lives proclaim the Gospel long before our lips ever do.
Thursday, 25 June 2026
Out of the mind of God....
Breath deeply and begin....
Todays reflection touches on something that sits at the very heart of Benedictine spirituality. Benedict did not insist on praying all 150 psalms each week because he was a legalist. He did so because he understood that the Psalter is nothing less than a school of the human soul. The psalms teach us to pray not only when we feel close to God, but when we are angry, bewildered, joyful, grateful, ashamed, frightened, hopeful, or filled with praise. They refuse to let us become selective in our spirituality.
The Rule of Benedict gives remarkable freedom in arranging the psalms. If another distribution seems more suitable, Benedict says, arrange them differently. His one non-negotiable requirement is that the entire Psalter be prayed every week. Why? Because he believed that no disciple should be allowed to live in only one corner of the spiritual life.
The Psalms immerse us in the whole of human experience. Within them we encounter lament and thanksgiving, triumph and failure, fear and confidence, repentance and joy. They remind us that every human emotion can become prayer and that every circumstance can become a place where God is present. To neglect parts of the Psalter is, in a sense, to neglect parts of ourselves.
This insight has been rediscovered by many modern spiritual writers. Eugene H. Peterson described the Psalms as God's gift of language for lives that often leave us speechless. Before we know how to pray, the Psalms pray for us. Walter Brueggemann observed that they move continually through orientations, disorientations, and new orientations—the very pattern of every faithful life. We begin with confidence, encounter suffering or uncertainty, and emerge, often unexpectedly, into deeper trust. N. T. Wright reminds us that the Psalms form the imagination of God's people, teaching us to see our own lives as chapters within God's larger story.
Yet this raises an honest question. These prayers were written nearly three thousand years ago. They speak of kings, shepherds, enemies with swords, deserts, exile, and temple sacrifices. What possible connection do they have with traffic jams, medical diagnoses, fractured families, retirement communities, political division, or loneliness in the digital age?
The answer lies beneath the surface. Human circumstances change; the human heart does not. We may no longer flee from Saul, but we know betrayal. We may never climb the steps of the Temple, but we know longing for God's presence. We may not fight armies, yet we battle fear, pride, resentment, grief, and despair every day. The outward forms have changed. The inward struggles have not.
The challenge, then, is not simply to read the Psalms but to meditate upon them until they become our own story. We ask, "Where is this psalm speaking to my life today?" Sometimes the answer is immediate. At other times we must sit quietly, allowing the words to work upon us rather than demanding that they immediately yield their meaning. This slow reading is what Benedict knew as the patient work of conversion.
Here the wisdom of the Desert Fathers becomes invaluable. Evagrius Ponticus taught that Scripture is a mirror revealing the hidden movements of the heart. One does not master Scripture; Scripture gradually unmasks the soul. John Cassian urged monks to memorize the Psalms so thoroughly that they became the language of their own interior lives. In time, he wrote, the Psalms cease to be merely words on a page. They become our own prayer because they uncover emotions we scarcely knew we possessed.
The Desert Fathers also warned against reading merely for information. Abba Poemen repeatedly emphasized that transformation comes not through many words but through allowing one word to penetrate deeply. The purpose of Scripture is not to increase knowledge but to purify the heart. Every psalm, therefore, becomes an invitation to self-examination. Why does this verse comfort me? Why does another disturb me? Why do I resist these words? Such questions are themselves acts of discernment.
This ancient practice speaks powerfully to our own century. We often read quickly, seeking answers and information. The monastic tradition invites us instead to linger, to listen, and to allow the text to read us. We do not merely ask, "What does this psalm mean?" We ask, "What is God revealing about my heart through this psalm today?"
Perhaps this is why Benedict insisted upon the entire Psalter. Left to ourselves, we would repeatedly choose our favorite passages and avoid those that unsettle us. The complete cycle prevents us from constructing a God in our own image. Instead, it allows God, through every mood and every season of the Psalms, to reshape us into the image of Christ.
In the end, praying all 150 psalms is not about completing a weekly assignment. It is about allowing every dimension of human experience to be brought into God's presence until, little by little, our hearts learn to beat in rhythm with His. That is the true work of discernment. The Psalms do not simply teach us how ancient Israel prayed. They teach us how to become fully human before God.
Wednesday, 24 June 2026
A willingness to change and grow....
The disciple comes seeking an end to his discomfort. The holy one offers something far more demanding: transformation. Relief soothes the symptoms; cure reaches the disease. Relief allows us to remain essentially the same person. Cure requires that we become someone new.
This theme echoes through the wisdom of the Desert Fathers. When a young monk came to Abba Poemen seeking peace, he was not given techniques for feeling better. He was taught to die to self-will. The Fathers understood that the greatest obstacle to communion with God was not suffering itself but the ego that insists on arranging the world according to its own desires. As long as the self remains enthroned, neither God nor neighbor can truly enter.
Sister Joan's challenge is especially sharp in an age that prizes autonomy above almost every other virtue. We are trained to ask whether a choice serves us, fulfills us, advances us, or makes us comfortable. Yet Benedictine spirituality asks a different question: Does this choice strengthen the community? Does it enlarge the circle of compassion? Does it make room for another person to flourish? The movement from "What do I want?" to "What does love require?" is the beginning of the cure.
The ancient monks knew that self-centeredness is remarkably resilient. We surrender one preference only to discover another waiting beneath it. We seek relief from loneliness but resist the demands of relationship. We seek relief from conflict but avoid the work of reconciliation. We seek relief from inconvenience but hesitate to serve. Thus, much of what we call spiritual growth is merely the search for comfort in religious clothing.
The cure is painful because it asks us to relinquish the illusion that we are the center of the story. It requires the humility to recognize that our lives find meaning not in self-fulfillment but in self-giving. The Gospel, the Rule of Benedict, and the wisdom of the saints all point toward the same paradox: we discover ourselves precisely when we cease making ourselves the primary concern.
Perhaps the holy one's question remains before each of us today: Do you truly want a cure? For the cure will not merely ease your discomfort. It will change your heart. It will teach you to see Christ in the neighbor, the stranger, the difficult person, and the community itself. Relief asks little and passes quickly. Cure asks everything, but in giving everything, it gives us back our truest selves.
For more on today's reading from the Rule, I invite you to follow the link to Abba Poemen and read more about the Sayings of the Desert Fathers under our Links of Interest.
Tuesday, 23 June 2026
We are all responsible....
Sr Joan's reflection touches a theme that runs like a river through many spiritual traditions: grace is freely given, but it must be received in a heart willing to be transformed. The Sufi story of the bitter gourd captures this truth with striking simplicity.
The lesson is obvious and uncomfortable: we may surround ourselves with holy things, attend worship, recite prayers, read sacred books, and even dwell among saints, yet remain unchanged if our hearts are closed to conversion.
The Desert Fathers understood this well. One of the elders said, "A man may dwell in his cell, but if his heart wanders, he is far away." They knew that holiness is not acquired by geography or ritual alone. Abba Moses taught that one must "sit in the cell, and the cell will teach you everything."
The point was not the cell itself but the inner work of surrender,
humility, and self-knowledge we pray the solitude will reveal.
Centuries later, the anonymous author of The Cloud of Unknowing warned that religious practices become empty when they do not lead us to a deeper love of God. Likewise, Teresa of Ávila reminded her sisters that prayer's true test was not mystical experience but growth in charity. If prayer does not make us more patient, more forgiving, more attentive to the needs of others, then we have mistaken the means for the end. John of the Cross taught that God works most deeply when He strips away our illusions and teaches us to love without seeking our own satisfaction.
Benedict would have recognized the wisdom of the bitter gourd immediately. His monastery was never intended to be a refuge from transformation but a workshop for it. The monastery existed so that imperfect people could learn, through daily life together, to become instruments of God's peace.
The Divine Office, the common table, the work of the hands, and obedience
to one another were all means by which rough edges were worn smooth. This is why community is so essential.
We are not transformed alone. The person who irritates us teaches patience. The person who suffers awakens compassion. The person who disagrees with us teaches humility. Each member contributes a portion of the work of conversion in the lives of the others. We become, as Saint Paul suggests, members of one body, each carrying the burdens and blessings of the rest.
By grace, God offers transformation. Yet grace does not force itself upon us. The bitter gourd remains bitter when it resists the work being done within it. We are called instead to listen with the ear of the heart, to allow God's wisdom to penetrate our stubbornness, and to let the ordinary encounters of daily life become occasions of conversion.
The true pilgrimage, then, is not to a distant shrine but into the depths of the heart. There, through prayer, service, humility, and life in community, the bitterness of self-centeredness is slowly transformed into the sweetness of love. Such change is never our achievement alone. It is God's work within us. But it becomes possible only when we consent, day after day, to be changed.
Monday, 22 June 2026
The Practice
Psalmody is the practice of praying, chanting, singing, or reciting the Psalms in a structured and communal way. The word comes from the Greek psalmos (psalm) and ōdē (song), literally meaning "the singing of psalms."
In the Jewish tradition, the Psalms formed the prayer book of Israel. They expressed every dimension of human experience before God: praise, thanksgiving, lament, repentance, trust, wisdom, and hope. Jesus himself prayed the Psalms, and the early Church inherited them as its principal language of prayer.
In the Benedictine tradition, psalmody is far more than reading sacred poetry. It is a way of allowing the mind and heart to be shaped by Scripture. By praying the Psalms day after day, people religious gradually learn to see the world through God's eyes and to bring every human emotion into God's presence.
Saint Benedict writes in the Rule that "our minds should be in harmony with our voices." Psalmody is therefore not performance but transformation. The words become our words; the prayers of ancient Israel become the prayer of the Church and of the individual believer.
Sunday, 21 June 2026
A mindless moment....
Sister Joan asks a deceptively simple question: Why do we memorize so many things, yet so few prayers? We can effortlessly recall telephone numbers from decades ago, childhood songs, favorite quotations, sports statistics, and passwords. Yet many of us struggle to summon a prayer when our hearts are weary, our minds troubled, or our faith tested.
St. Benedict understood the importance of carrying prayer within. Most of his monks could neither read nor write. If they were to pray the Divine Office throughout the day, they had to commit its words to memory. The psalms, versicles, Gospel canticles, litanies, and above all the Lord's Prayer became part of the very fabric of their lives. Prayer was not something they reached for; it was something that dwelt within them.
This was more than an exercise in memorization. Benedict knew that the words we carry in our hearts shape the lives we live. A memorized prayer becomes a companion on the journey. It waits quietly within us until fear, sorrow, joy, gratitude, or uncertainty calls it forth. Then, when our own words fail, the prayer speaks for us.
Sister Joan reminds us that authentic prayer is never superficial. It may be brief, but it is never careless. It is not "a glancing thought, not a shrug or a gesture or a mindless moment of empty daydreaming." Prayer is an act of attention. It is the deliberate turning of the heart toward God. Even a few words, prayed sincerely, can open the soul to grace.
Perhaps the question for us is not how many prayers we know, but which prayers have become part of who we are. What words are available when anxiety rises in the night? What prayer surfaces when we hear difficult news? What do we whisper when gratitude overwhelms us?
For many, it may be something as simple as:
Lord, hear my prayer...
Four words. A lifetime of meaning.
In that simple petition we invite God to enter our confusion, calm our fears, examine our motives, heal our wounds, and strengthen our resolve. We acknowledge that we are not self-sufficient. We turn once again toward the One who knows us better than we know ourselves.
The goal of memorized prayer is not recitation but relationship. The words become pathways leading us back to God throughout the day. They remind us that prayer need not wait for a church, a book, or a special hour. It is always as near as the next breath.
And so, when the mind is restless and the heart is heavy, perhaps the simplest prayer is enough:
Lord, hear my prayer...
And in the silence that follows, listen with the ear of the heart.
Saturday, 20 June 2026
We are invited....
“Seven times a day I praise you,” says the psalm; “at midnight I rise to give you thanks.” Benedict receives these words not as poetry only, but as a pattern for living. The Roman world may have supplied the shape of the hours, but Scripture supplied their soul. Time itself becomes an altar.
Most of us cannot live by the full monastic office. Yet all of us can learn its wisdom. We can pause before we speak. We can bless a meal. We can offer kindness. We can surrender irritation. We can turn worry into intercession. We can let silence open the ear of our heart.
To pray without ceasing is to live increasingly aware of the living God within each of us: in labor and rest, in certainty and confusion, in daylight and in the midnight of the soul. The call is simple and lifelong: return, remember, praise, begin again.
Friday, 19 June 2026
An endless chant of joy...
Let me close today by inviting you to read Listening for God in the Silence
under our Links of Interest in the right hand margin.
Wednesday, 17 June 2026
Forgive us as We Forgive
...because thorns of contention are likely to spring up...
Benedict reminds us that we need His help daily to curb our vices, not the least of which is the ever-present risk of animosity toward others. The reminder is a wonderful reflection of our call to live in peace with our brothers and sisters.
forgive us as we forgive
Sr. Joan builds on this theme reminding us of Benedict's call to never omit from our prayers our need for continual for blessings and our need for continual forgiveness...
... a sense of God's greatness and our dependence;
a sense of God's grandeur and our fragility.
And so it is that we are reminded of the role of repetition in our spiritual development.
Sunday, 14 June 2026
A New Beginning
Prayer is the development of an attitude of mind that is concentrated and contemplative...always special, always meant to take us back to the Beginning and the End, the Alpha and the Omega, the Center of life.
I invite you to visit this short essay on contemplative reading.
Now visit again the Rule and and Sr. Joan's short commentary. Each seeks to waken in us a new beginning. But we must be attentive to the still small voice within—ours and His.
Saturday, 13 June 2026
Never Neglect and Never Exaggerate
Sunday, 26 April 2026
We have to allow it to happen....
Life gives us many moments when we are called to grow beyond ourselves. Benedict knew this well. And he knew the importance of the resulting growth. Sister Joan recognize these as those moments when...
we are incapable of assessing our own limits, our real talents, our true strength.
It is in these moments that we are called to stretch beyond our limits and to turn the clay into breathless beauty, but first, of course we have to allow it to happen
Happy Birthday Sr. Joan
Saturday, 25 April 2026
Into the presence of God
"Life costs. The values and kitsch and superficiality of it take their toll on all of us. No one walks through life unscathed."
It is a task of a lifetime....
Wednesday, 15 April 2026
We are called...
Sister Joan Chittister quotes Dietrich Bonhoffer, who writes "there is a meaning in every journey that is unknown to the traveler". Sister Joan discusses this aspect of chapter 61 of the rule The Reception of Visiting Monastic.
Benedict realized that visitors are not only welcomed fed and taken care of, but they give each of us the opportunity to learn from the traveler—to learn from their experiences. Joan refers to this as a kind of radical acceptance—wisdom welcomed from any direction.
And so we are call to learn and teach at every moment in our lives-never to close ourselves off in every moment of every day.
Benedictine spirituality never requires perfection. It does, however, demand effort and openness.
Tuesday, 14 April 2026
Root Mother
I do not see you as much as I feel you– know you, the way I know my bones hold me upright as I walk, or the pressure of bare feet on cool grass. You, Root Mother, draw my eyes downward to the earth, where the heart of life beats, the deep throb beneath all the distractions we call life. Root Mother, yes, that is the best name I can give you, although your true name sounds more like water over stone or the creak of growing corn. Some truths are hidden, tucked away in the holy darkness, far from my dissecting mind, yet I know they are there, safe in your hands. Who says I must understand something fully in order to celebrate it– even to be held by it? You call me back to the center of my own being, a space much lower than any lofty thoughts of my mind, where you wait with divine patience. I will never begin to know the truth of my own body until I rest in the rich darkness of yours, and for this grace I thank you. ~Stuart Higginbotham |
Sunday, 12 April 2026
Eyes softened...
We are asked...
Wednesday, 8 April 2026
We are invited....
Benedictine spirituality seeks to free the body so that the soul can soar. A gift long lost in a consumer society.
Wednesday, 18 February 2026
The Earth Laughs with Flowers
Even life in hot fields and drab offices and small houses is somehow one long happy thought when God is its center, and blessings, however rare, however scant, are blessed.
We simply must learn to surrender into His hands--making Him the center of our lives!
Tuesday, 17 February 2026
Two unfailing realities....
At the break of dawn, every day of the week, Benedict, through his organization of the morning, psalms, reminds the monastic of two unfailing realities.
Life is hard and we will struggle; and, having survived the week, saved one more time God. We are under the shelter of his wings.
Monday, 16 February 2026
Two pockets...
Each of us should have two pockets, the rabbi teaches. In one should be the message, "I am dust and ashes." And in the other, we should have written, "For me the universe was made."
God, by His Grace, will prevail
and in doing so will enable us to prevail.
Saturday, 14 February 2026
Something fresh everyday
If you follow the daily office closely, you will find that there is an element of freshness every day. The prayers and patterns are concentrated and contemplative. Benedict encourages us to listen as well as recite.
Pay particular attention to the Sabbath as a moment of returning to the surety and solemnity of life, for setting our sights above the daily, for restating the basics, giving meaning to the rest of the week. Yes, reinforced through repetition.
Live your life without exageration
Fill your bowl to the brim and it will spill. Keep sharpening your knife and it will blunt. Chase after money and security and your heart will never unclinch. Care about people's approval and you will be their prisoner.Do your work, then step back.
The only path to security.
The movement to pray...
The movement to prey is the movement of God in our souls. Our ability to pray depends on the power and the place of God in our life--we pray because God attracts us, and we pray only because God is attracting us. We are not, in other words, even the author of our own prayer life. It is the goodness of God, not any virtue that we have developed on our own, that brings us to the heart of God.
Sister Joan challenges us with this notion. Many of us would like to believe that we have such great insight into the world, into the universe, that we can author our own prayers. But if we look closely at the words that we choose, at the elements of our life that draw our attention, at the goodness that we seek to accomplish, we suddenly realize that these are not our works alone.
I believe he is the author of these actions; the author of these prayers. He authors these so that we might see what he desires for us, and in time, I believe we act with Him motivated by his love for us and His love for the world in which we live.
Many of these prayers come from deep within us, that is true. But so He resides deep within us. He is the very heart of our soul, the soul of our lives. Once we embrace this, once we accepted this, then I think the conversation begins. Prayer life, grounded in faith, conversation with him growing daily.
Among the sayings...
Among the sayings of the Desert fathers, there is a story that may explain Benedict's terse and clear instructions on prayer:
One of the disciples asked Abba Agathon, "among all good works, which is the virtue that requires the greatest effort?" Abba Agathon answered, "I think there is no labor greater than that of prayer to God. For every time we want to pray, our enemies, the demons, want to prevent us, for they know that it is only by turning us from prayer that they can hinder our journey."
The twelfth step....
The 12th step of humility is that we always manifest humility in our bearing, no less than in our hearts, so that it is evident at the Opus Dei, in the oratory, the monastery or the garden, or on a journey, or in the field, or anywhere else.
To be truly humble is to simply measure ourselves without exaggeration. Humility is the ability to know ourselves as God knows us and to know that it is the little we are that is precisely our claim on God.Humility is, then, the formation of our relationship with God, our connectedness to others, our acceptance of others, our way of using the goods of the Earth, and is our way of walking through the world, without arrogance, without domination, without scorn, without put-downs, without distain, without self-centeredness. The more we know ourselves, the gentler we will be with others.
Go in peace to love and serve the Lord.
The eleventh step....the wise are known by few words....
....tread tenderly upon the life around us....
If we truly know our place in this world, we can easily afford to make room for others. We do not need to dominate conversations and insist on our own way--there is room in life for all of us.
God can be God for all of us because we have relieved ourselves of the ordeal of being God ourselves. We simply unfold and become.
Step 10...do not be confused...
Do not be confused. Benedict is not asking us to be such stoic that we never smile or laugh. He wants us to recognize that life is serious and that we are called to honor our ourselves and the world in which we live. He wants us to be in control of ourselves at all times, never threatening others.
A humble person handles the presence of the other with soft hands, a velvet heart, and an unveiled mind – even your enemies.
Step 9...
When arrogance irrupt anywhere, it erupt invariably in speech. Our opinions become the rule. Our ideals become the goal. Our judgments become the norm. Our word becomes the last word, the only word.
Step 8....stay in the stream of life....
Step 7....humble in my own eyes....
Aware of our own meager virtues, conscious of our own massive failures, despite all our great efforts, all our fine desires, we have in this degree of humility, this acceptance of our ourselves, the chance to understand the failure of others. We have here the opportunity to be kind.
Step 6....
in the world.
Sister Joan remind us that Benedict says that life is not about amassing things but to get the most out of whatever little we have. If we can learn to love life where we are, and what we have, then we will have room in our souls for what life alone does not offer--the creator within.
Tuesday, 3 February 2026
The 5th step.
We must first reveal to ourselves who we really are. We cannot grow until we do.
Sunday, 1 February 2026
The 4th step. Life is dificult
...difficult, unfavorable, or even unjust conditions, where our hearts must quietly embrace suffering, and endure it without weakening or seeking escape.
On first reading, this may seem so foreign, so unrealistic – that we must even remotely consider accepting such conditions. But in time, we will realize one of the most important lessons of life – it really isn't all about us.
We frequently cling to our own ways, refusing to confront and accept the reality of life. But there are a great many essential and positive lessons to be learned from these trials. They are not to be ignored.
Sister Joan reminds us that in this degree of humility, we must hold on when things do not go our way, for we must learn to...
...withstanding the storms of life rather than having to flail and flail agaist the wind and, as a result, lose the opportunity to control ourselves when there is nothing else in life we can control.
Yes, yes, I understand. This is so easy to say. But we must persist! We must persevere! We must endure! We must learn to live this life for Him! It really is not all about us.
Saturday, 31 January 2026
The 3rd Step. We are called to submit!
We are but one word among many. Humility lies in learning to listen to the words, directions, and insights of those around us who are a voice of Christ for us today. These are the relationships of which sanctity is made. Invite Him to join with you, walk with you, and listen for His word in the other.
The 2nd Step. Born to do His Will
...we shall imitate by our actions that saying of Christ's: "I have come not to do my own will, but he will of the One who sent me"
"how do we tell the world of God from our own? How do we know when to resist the tide and confront the opposition and when to embrace the pain and except the bitterness because "God will it for us."
I believe the answer lies and our willingness, and our ability to listen quietly for his voice. For his will.
It will come to us as a gentle nudge or maybe even a shove. If we're willing to listen.
Tuesday, 27 January 2026
Humility
...if the preservation of the globe in the 21st century requires anything of the past at all, it may well be the commitment of the rule of Benedict to humility.
... a proper sense of self in a universe of wonders. When we make ourselves, God, no one in the world is safe in our presence. Humility… is the basis for right relationships in the life.
Monday, 26 January 2026
The 1st step...
"How does a person seek union with God? the seeker asks.
"The harder you seek," the teacher said, "the more distant you create between God and you."
"So what does one do about the distance? "
"Understand that it isn't there, "the teacher said.
"Does that mean that God and I are one? "The seeker said.
"Not one. No two."
"How is that possible? "The seeker asked.
"The sun and its light, the ocean and the wave, the singer and the song. Not one. Not two. "
Friday, 23 January 2026
We must want...
You must give yourself to it wholeheartedly. You must enter into it with Hope and surety. You must not kick and kick against the goad. (A goad is a pointed stick to prod animals.)
This, Benedict says, is not obedience. This is only compliance, and compliance kills, both us, and the community, whose heart is fractured by those who hold theirs back. Real obedience depends on wanting to listen to the voice of God in the human community, not wanting to be forced to do what we refuse to grow from.
Sunday, 18 January 2026
This is our call
The Tools for Good Works
Sunday, January 18, 2026Chapter 4First of all, "love God with your whole heart, your whole soul and all your strength, and love your neighbor as yourself (Mt 22:37-39; Mk 12:30-31; Lk 10:27)."
for "that most valiant kind of monastic heart," who sets out to find the holy in the human. The call to contemplation to not simply to see Christ in the other but to treat the other as Christ. Benedict calls us first to justice: love God, love the other, do no harm to anyone.
...to be engaged in the great Christian enterprise of acting for others in the place of God.
This is our call.
Friday, 16 January 2026
Wisdom is....
Sister Joanne observes these collective life experiences do count – remarking that wisdom is simply it's distillation.
Thursday, 15 January 2026
Call to Lead
Benedictines are called to birth souls of steel and light; they are called to live the life they lead; their call to live in discriminately; their call to favor the good, not to favor the favorites; they are to call the community to the height and depth and breath of the spiritual life; they are to remember and rejoice in their own weaknesses in order to deal tenderly with the weaknesses of others; they are to attend more to the spiritual than to the physical aspects of community life; and finally, they are to save their own souls in the process, to be human beings themselves, to grow in life themselves.
Wednesday, 14 January 2026
Trial by Faith
We are called to struggle in life with those around
us--to grow in depth, in sincerity, and in holiness,
to grow despite weaknesses, to grow beyond our
weaknesses.
Sunday, 11 January 2026
To Enshrine The Way
Benedict focuses again today on the importance of the prior and prioress leading a life which they seek to enshrine in others. Sister Joan brings it to life for us today.
and the crystal that rings true. Otherwise, why should anyone else
Saturday, 10 January 2026
A reminder...
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Blessed, because we still carry extraordinary freedom, creativity, resources, and the ability to speak, gather, and worship. These are gifts entrusted to us, not earned by us.
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Broken, because division, anger, suspicion, and greed have crept into our common life. Many see neighbors not as fellow children of God, but as enemies. Our politics often reward outrage more than compassion. We live in an age of abundance, yet millions go hungry or are crushed under debt. The Creator must surely weep that after so many years, we still struggle with racism, violence, and indifference.
The eyes of the painting—serious, compassionate, longing—ask us whether we have grown closer to the dream Rockwell imagined, or drifted further.
Can we be humble enough to ask for help?
Humility is the only path back. We must admit:
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We cannot fix this by clever policies alone.
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We cannot heal by shouting louder than the other side.
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We cannot find peace until we are willing to kneel—each in our own way of prayer, silence, or surrender—and confess that we have fallen short.
Humility is not weakness. It is the courage to say:
- See the humanity of the neighbor with whom you disagree
- Choose kindness when cruelty is easier
- Teach children not just to succeed, but to serve
- Pray—not only for your family—but for the stranger
