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A Spiritual Journey . . .

2/21/2013

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Contemplative prayer as described by the Saints - Contemplative light / knowing

    St. Teresa of Avila wrote that the Lord places in the soul the knowledge that He wants it to have and this without words or image.  In this way, Teresa says, God gives the soul understanding of His desires and great mysteries and truths, or gives her understanding of some vision that He had given her [The Book of Her Life, Ch 27:6].

    She wrote:  "The soul undergoes a change ... it seems that a new, living high degree of love is beginning.  For although the intellectual vision ... that represents God in an imageless way is more perfect, a wonderful thing happens when so divine a presence is represented in the imagination ... These two kinds of vision almost always come together.  This is the way they occur: with the eyes of the soul we see the excellence, beauty, and glory of the most holy humanity; and through the intellectual vision . . . we are given understanding of how God is powerful, that He can do all things, that He commands all and governs all, and that His love permeates all things" [The Book of Her Life, C

    The saints describe this light in two ways, the light of the glory of God that they see in a physial way through a vision, and then their mind is given infused knowledge of an explanation of what they have seen.

    I had an experience of this:  In California at my parish, we would have a Catechism study.  Our priest was with us and we would cover about two pages in the two hours that we met.  We had a couple of sceptics in the group which made our sessions interesting as we all learned,  as we all took turns answering their questions.  One day Father couldn't be with us and the sceptic challenged us with the statement that she didn't believe that the bread and wine changed into the body and blood of Jesus.  As the rest gave their explanations, I remained silent, for I realized that I didn't believe it either.

    That night when I went to bed I prayed, "Lord, I believe it because that is what I have been taught all my life by my Catholic faith.  I believe it because I believe the stories of Eucharistic miracles that have taken place.  But, Lord, I don't believe it.  Please remove my unbelief."

    During the night I awoke and there was a box of light around me.  I thought, "This is interesting.  Lord, I do not know what this means, but You are the potter, I am the clay.  Mold me, meld me," and I went back to sleep.

    The next morning I had forgotten the incident of the light and got dressed, ate breakfast, and was heading across the living room floor to go to the computer when I stopped in the middle of the room.  I realized in a flash that I was a changed person!  I believed!  My whole being believed that the bread and wine became the body and blood of Jesus Christ when the words of Consecration were said over them.  No argument convinced me of this - yet I believed!  When the Church teaches about the light of infused knowledge given to us by the light of the Holy Spirit, I know exactly what it means by that statement.  That knowledge, that belief was infused into my soul, not through words, but through Light.

    I was a changed person!  I truly believed this experience was from God.  Going to Church was no longer a matter of Sunday obligation.  Going to daily Mass became a treasured Grace.  I believed everything I had been taught about the Eucharist.  I could no longer day dream through the Mass.  What was going on at the altar became very important.  My presence, my total awareness, was now necessary.  My Lord was right there!  He was my food, my drink, my nourishment, the healing power within me.  He was the source of all Grace I would need until I was able to receive Him again.

______________
Kathy Moore, Song of Hope, (Coyote Publishing, Yreka, CA) p. 92 (available from this website).

Teresa of Avila, The Book of Her Life, trans. Kieran Kavanaugh and Otilio Rodriguez (Washington DC: ICS Publications, 1976).

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A Spiritual Journey

2/17/2013

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Contemplative Prayer had been described as unworded prayer.

    In The Cloud of Unknowing, written in the fourteenth century perhaps by an English monk, the unknown author wrote about the lack of words in contemplative prayer.

    "A man may know completely and ponder thoroughtly every created thing and its works, yes, and God's works, too, but not God himself.  Thought cannot comprehend God.  And so, I prefer to abandon all I can know, choosing rather to love him whom I cannot know.  Though we cannot know him we can love him.  By love he may be touched and embraced, never by thought."

_________________
William Johnston, ed., The Cloud of Unknowing (New York: Image Books, 1973) ch 6, p. 54.

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A Spiritual Journey . . .

2/16/2013

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Contemplative Prayer in Scripture and as Described by the Saints and Mystical Writers
                              Unworded Prayer


    The saints have pointed out the scriptures that best describe the experience of contemplative prayer.  "Be still and acknowledge that I am God, supreme over nations, supreme over the world" (Psalm 46:10).  Contemplative prayer is a gaze of faith, fixed upon Jesus.  As a parishioner told the Cure of Ars, "I look at Him and He looks at me" (Catechism of the Catholic Church #2715).

    Contemplative prayer could last a moment - it could last several hours.  A person realized that he has experienced it afterwards, as he realizes that he has changed.  The psalms sing to his soul:  "My whole being yearns and pines for Yahweh's courts, My heart and my body cry out for joy to the living God" (Psalm 84:2).  He realizes that he is in love with God!

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See Thomas Dubay, Fire Within (San Francisco:  Ignatius Press, 1989) page 65-69.  Also see Elizabeth of the Trinity, Heaven in Faith and also Last Retreat, for an explanation of scripture as it relates to contemplative prayer.  These can be found in Elizabeth of the Trinity, The Complete Works, trans. Aletheia Kane, O.C.D., Volume One (Washington DC:  ICS Publications, 1984) all pages.

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A Spiritual Journey . . .

2/15/2013

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The Fruit of Contemplative Prayer is a greater desire to know God, our Beloved.

    Many people think that contemplative prayer will just come to them, and sometimes it does, for this is a gift from God.  But a person must remember that he is on a spiritual journey, and with all grace, he must respond to it.  Even after one experiences contemplative prayer, he must go back to meditation to purify himself.  In modern days, this is called a daily examination of conscience.  The fruit of contemplation is a greater desire to know the Beloved.  One returns to Scripture, and all that was mentioned above under meditation.  One continues vocal prayers and participation in liturgical prayers expecially the Mass.
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A Spiritual Journey . . .

2/14/2013

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Contemplative Prayer - is when God embraces our heart!


    St. Bonaventure writes that one should consider that through this love comes all indulgences given by God -all good abundance - and through this love is possessed the desirable memory of His Presence - then He embraces a person's heart!  This is the consummation of the Soul!  The perfect step!  The Unitive Step!  

    What an individual experiences is not the object of his imagination, for one cannot attribute to Him neither time, neither face, neither shadow, neither measurement, neither limit; for He cannot be represented - but it is all desirable . . . Last, it cannot be entered in the rational order, and it cannot be defined, neither proved, neither appreciated, neither understood, neither grasped, for His intelligibility exceeds all intelligence. . . . but He is all desirable.

_____________
Bonaventure, La Triple Voie, 1269-1270.  Available from the internet. http://jesusmarie.free.fr/bonaventrue_la_triple_voie.html
Translation my own. Third Section, Consummation of the Soul, XVII.5

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A Spiritual Journey . . .

2/13/2013

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Contemplative Prayer
Contemplative prayer is pure gift.

    Although contemplation is pure gift - you cannot prepare for it nor summon it  - the saints acknowledge that you can make yourselves more open to such prayer.  St. Teresa of Avila recommends that you slow down your normal processes, try to keep your mind from wandering by saying a few simple words.  Some writers recommend:  "Jesus, I love you", or the Jesus prayer:  "Jesus Christ, son of the living God, have mercy upon me, a sinner".  Teresa says, be aware that you are in God's presence.  Think about His love.  Then words fall away in the pure receptivity of contemplation.  You should not strive to cease from thought, although this may happen for a short time.  You should abandon yourself into the arms of Love and occupy yourself with thanksgiving.
__________________
St. Teresa of Avila, The Interior Castle, The Fourth Dwelling Place, chp. 3, no.7.

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A Spiritual Journey . . .

2/12/2013

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Contemplative Prayer - Doing everything for God with love and charity

     John Welch (1939-), a Catholic priest of the Carmelite Order, and chair of Carmelite Studies at the Washington Theological Union, in his book, The Carmelite Way, An Ancient Path for Today's Pilgrim, says that St. Teresa of Avila warns that in the third mansion, a person could become too content to leave this place.  But the purpose of prayer, Teresa reminds people, is conformity with God's will, not consolations.  If one wants to do what God wants, this desire is expressed in the way a person lives his life [68].

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St. John of the Cross (1542-1591) in The Ascent of Mount Carmel, describes the purgations that a soul experiences as it passes through the various levels on its way toward the divine light of perfect union with God.  These purgations are purifications of the soul.  These purgations also fit in with St. Bonaventure's descriptions of the Purgative and Illuminative way.  On the journey, the person must first deprive himself of his desire for worldly possessions, as Bonaventure describes - the best candy, the softest clothes, and the most expensive apartment.  John calls this mortification of the appetites.  Since the senses are deprived of such things, it is like a night to them.  As a person travels on this road, he goes by faith, and to the intellect, faith is like a dark night.  He is traveling toward God, who is also like a dark night to a soul in this life [73-74, Ch 1, par 1-6].

________________________
John Welch, O. Carm., The Carmelite Way, An Ancient Path for Today's Pilgrim (New Jersey:  Paulist Press, 1996).
John of the Cross, The Ascent of Mount Carmel, in the Collected Works of St. John of the Cross, trans. Kieran Kavanaugh, and Otilio Rodriguez (Washington, DC: ICS Publications, 1973).

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A Spiritual Journey . . .

2/10/2013

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Preparing for Contemplative Prayer - Meditation - the Purgative  & Illuminative Way

       During your time of meditation, a person must seek out malice, says St. Bonaventure.  Its roots are anger, envy and luke-warmness.  Anger is manifested by gestures and speech, envy by sadness of the good of another, and luke-warmness by unfavorable suspicions, and by blasphemous thoughts.

          Bonaventure teaches that by looking over these things, a person must always keep in mind his death and that it is imminent.  He must always keep in mind that the eyes of the Judge are fixed upon him, and also that the Blood of the Cross has been spilled for him.  After examining his conscience in his meditation, he must follow through with correction by acquiring the virtues of generosity, austerity and gentleness.  Bonaventrue quotes the prophet Micah (6:8):  "I have shown you, man, what is good, and this is required of the Lord, only this, to do what is right, to love mercifulness, and to walk humbly with your God."

      In the Illuminative Way, Bonaventrue says, a person thinks about:  First, his debt to God - what a price Jesus paid for him - and the sins that God has forgiven and the punishment he merits.  Second, he thinks about the favors that God has granted him.  And finally he thinks about the promised rewards.
_____________________
Saint Bonaventure, La Triple Voie, 1269-1270.  Available in French from the internet.  http://jesusmarie.free.fr/bonaventure_la_triple_voie.html , (Accessed 12/18/08).  Translation my own.

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    Kathy

    Invite God into your heart to renew it and to instruct you.

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