The Child was born!

Published in Announcements on Dec 24, 2008

Margit Locker in Hungary sends this image for Christmas reflection. Please add your comments and thoughts.

Musings on the Winter Solstice

Published in Announcements on Dec 24, 2008
Kelly Carlin-McCall writes:
[T]oday, I will let this Winter Solstice be another opportunity of awakening. I will not only contemplate what has been lost in my own life in the great burning of my grief, but I will also contemplate what has been lost in this country the last eight, fifty and/or two hundred years.
To read her entire reflection, click here.

Christmas in sand

Published in Announcements on Dec 24, 2008

Spiritual Directors International member Elizabeth Lim, RGS, from Singapore sent a slide show of a Christmas nativity scene made of sand in the Canary Islands.

Sand Nativity-Pesebre de Arena.pps

Wondering about the closeness of God to us

Published in Announcements on Dec 24, 2008
Daniel O'Leary writes:
A few weeks ago I was listening to the bells of Ampleforth Abbey pealing grace across the moors and valleys of North Yorkshire. The invitation to share a week with the monks was a great honour. And a great grace. The discipline and regularity of monastic life protects the sacred setting for exploring the shy secrets of God. Together we wondered at the meaning of Incarnation - did God really become human, totally our flesh, utterly our senses, breath of our breath, heart of our heart?
To read his entire post, click here.

Mount Calvary Monastery Fire

Published in Announcements on Dec 1, 2008

On Friday, November 14, 2007, Mount Calvary Monastery and Retreat House overlooking Santa Barbara was destroyed by the Tea Fire.  Fortunately, the brothers, sisters and guests were all safely evacuated.


To read more, to support Mount Calvary in your thoughts and prayers, please click here to visit them.

Spiritual Direction and Psychotherapy

Published in Announcements on Dec 1, 2008

Psychologist Frank Moncher was asked about the difference between spiritual direction and psychotherapy as it relates to a new document released Oct. 30 by the Congregation for Catholic Education: "Guidelines for the Use of Psychology in the Admission and Formation of Candidates for the Priesthood." 

His distinction not only provides insight for seminarians, but also helpful information for the general public seeking spiritual direction:

 

In brief, the role of psychotherapy is to free a person from any privations or pathology that might encumber the exercise of their will.
In other words, the psychologist's work is about clearing the path so that a person can pursue their desires in life most ardently.

This is then where spiritual direction proceeds, to guide the discernment of the person so that they pursue true goods and holiness.
Nevertheless, as the document states in paragraph 4, formators are responsible for natural level aspects as well as spiritual aspects of a candidate's development, so coordination between psychologists and formators can be helpful.

Further, in the real world, spiritual direction and psychotherapy naturally occur simultaneously or even in the opposite sequence. In situations where a psychologist and spiritual director are working as a team, in my experience, it is not difficult to keep the roles clear with regular communication.

I should mention, however, that there is some danger for psychologists who are formed in a different psychological and/or faith tradition. I am aware of some who explicitly state that their model is to blend therapy and direction in the same process, not distinguishing the two, which I feel risks less than optimal progress in both areas.

 

To read more, Please Click here.

The Paradox of Faith

Published in Announcements on Dec 1, 2008

With Christmas rapidly approaching, the season can quickly become engulfed in present madness, forgetting what the day is supposed to be about.  Keynoter Daniel O'Leary notices this disturbing trend, noting how easy it is to be seduced by the season.  He writes:

Christmas disturbs adults with profound dilemmas for the soul. How do we resolve that tension between the real and the really real, that call from another place to be answered in this place? Are we open to sacrificing what we are, for what we may become? These quiet questions, all too easily stifled in the frantic lists of Christmas expectation, still carry, for the open soul, a disturbing persistence.

 O'Leary isn't the only one aware, he quotes in his article Ron Rolheiser, "God help any of us if we become so dulled or self-protective, that we are no longer soul-chained to worlds beyond us."

While we keep on trying to trust in this perennial promise of peace, in the creative absence between the "now" and the "not yet", we will try to believe with all our hearts this Christmas, that a blossoming of the individual soul, a transformation of our society and planet, is already happening; that this holding together of "the seen and the unseen" is secure within us.

To read more of this article from The Tablet, Please Click here.

If you have thoughts about the Christmas Season, what it means and what it should mean, please share your thoughts with us.

The Many and The One

Published in Announcements on Dec 1, 2008

Spiritual Directors International continues to create opportunities for collegial multifaith dialogue about spiritual companionship. The October 30, 2008 Leadership Institute was held at Wisdom House in Litchfield, Connecticut, USA.

"The Many & The One: Multi-Faith and Interfaith Sensitivities in Spiritual Direction and Formation" with Carol A. Fournier, NCC & Rabbi Shawn Israel Zevit  provided a valuable day of reflection and learning with a global, contemplative group. I was challenged, nurtured by deep conversations, and willing to engage subtleties of multifaith and interfaith spiritual direction and formation. Presenters and participants all added richness to the fall 2008 Spiritual Directors International Leadership Institute.

Please share your questions and reflections!

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