Weekend Edition - A Daily Spiritual Seed

Published: Fri, 08/21/15

A Daily Spiritual Seed
Weekend Edition: August 21-23, 2015
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Webinar
"God, and the Problem of Suffering"
by Philip St. Romain, M.S., D. Min.
August 27, 2015
7:00 - 8:30 p.m.

 
Book of the Week
 
Christian Spirituality: God's Presence Through the Ages, by Richard Woods OP.  Orbis Books, 2006.

"Spirituality," the buzzwords of the '90s, is a term begging definition and roots. Woods offers both in this succinct but extensive survey. Christian spirituality, he says, is the recognition of God's presence. Rooted in the incarnation of Christ?God made flesh?it is holistic, affecting body as well as soul, the community as well as the individual. God's presence breaks into human experience as God wills, not as any institution decrees. Woods, a Dominican professor of psychiatry and spiritual theology, traces spiritual theology and practice from the apostolic era through the 1990s, lingering lovingly in the thousand years of medieval monasticism and racing breathlessly through the modern and postmodern world. The survey is complete enough to use as a textbook and graceful enough to attract the general reader. Though most attention is paid to the Western Catholic tradition, Orthodox monks and mystics appear throughout, and the chapter on the Protestant Reformation is a small gem. 

-- Publishers Weekly Review

 
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Saint of the Week


St. Rose of Lima (1586-1617): August 23


The first canonized saint of the New World has one characteristic of all saints—the suffering of opposition—and another characteristic which is more for admiration than for imitation—excessive practice of mortification.

She was born to parents of Spanish descent in Lima, Peru, at a time when South America was in its first century of evangelization. She seems to have taken Catherine of Siena (April 29) as a model, in spite of the objections and ridicule of parents and friends.

The saints have so great a love of God that what seems bizarre to us, and is indeed sometimes imprudent, is simply a logical carrying out of a conviction that anything that might endanger a loving relationship with God must be rooted out. So, because her beauty was so often admired, Rose used to rub her face with pepper to produce disfiguring blotches. Later, she wore a thick circlet of silver on her head, studded on the inside, like a crown of thorns.

When her parents fell into financial trouble, she worked in the garden all day and sewed at night. Ten years of struggle against her parents began when they tried to make Rose marry. They refused to let her enter a convent, and out of obedience she continued her life of penance and solitude at home as a member of the Third Order of St. Dominic. So deep was her desire to live the life of Christ that she spent most of her time at home in solitude.

During the last few years of her life, Rose set up a room in the house where she cared for homeless children, the elderly and the sick. This was a beginning of social services in Peru. Though secluded in life and activity, she was brought to the attention of Inquisition interrogators, who could only say that she was influenced by grace.

What might have been a merely eccentric life was transfigured from the inside. If we remember some unusual penances, we should also remember the greatest thing about Rose: a love of God so ardent that it withstood ridicule from without, violent temptation and lengthy periods of sickness. When she died at 31, the city turned out for her funeral. Prominent men took turns carrying her coffin.

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Inner Explorations: a vast array of spirituality resources for the mature Christian.

Surrender in Prayer: Prayers for abundance and freedom.

SeeScapes. Picturing the deeper dimensions of our spirituality.

Heartland Center for Spirituality: sponsoring Internet workshops year-round.

Emanuella House of Prayer: a place for prayer and silence in British Columbia.

Kyrie Places of Pilgrimmage and Renewal

Temenos Catholic Worker: support for homeless youth in Polk Street neighborhood, San Francisco.

The Sanctuary Foundation for Prayer: resources for spiritual growth.

Philothea.net: promoting the love of God as expressed in The First Great Commandment

Hearts on Fire: a blog to spark inspiration, thought, wonder, laughter and prayer.

Stillpoint: Programs in spiritual direction, contemplative prayer.

The Ark: Providing a variety of scripture and lectionary study resources.

Contemplative Ministries of the Pacific Northwest: Teaching and support on contemplative practice.


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