Episode 22 Beginning to Pray: Â St. Catherine of Siena
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From Dr. Lilles’ “Beginning to Pray” Â blog site:
Catherine of Siena – passion for truth
She is an important figure for those who see a rediscovery of prayer as the force of renewal in the Church. Because she put her devotion to Christ first, she found herself with a spiritual mission to help restore the life and unity of Christ’s body. Some of her efforts met with a little success. But as she approached her death at the age of 33, her lifetime of effort in building up the Church seemed to be in vain. Corruption, scandal, cowardice – and most of all indifference – seemed to infect the Church even more. (For more on her life, go tohttp://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03447a.htm.) Yet she never lost hope and she persevered in prayer. This is because she understood the love and mercy of God.She was uneducated, but in 1377, by a miracle, she learned to write. Even so she retained secretaries to whom she dictated most of her thoughts. Her master work on the spiritual life is known as the Dialogues. These are conversations between her soul and God the Father. God the Father reveals his deep love for his Son and his plan to build up the Church. One of the beautiful aspects of this conversation is the Father’s explanation for how each soul can come to know Jesus.
Christ is the bridge to the Father and we cross this bridge by allowing our hearts to be pierced by what the Lord has done for us. The passion of Christ reveals at once the truth about who God is and who we are in his sight. For her, among the greatest blocks to the spiritual life is ignorance. Knowledge of God and knowledge of self go hand in hand in progressing toward spiritual maturity. But the knowing is not simply an intellectual trip. It as the kind of knowing informed by the loving affection of a real friendship. The friendship she describes in tender terms evokes the deepest joys and sorrows all at once.
The gift of tears, so central to early Dominican spirituality, is a beautiful part of this description. She presents those holy affections as the only proper response to the great love revealed in Christ crucified. These tears move us away from sin and into the very heart of God. She describes this as a journey that begins with kissing the feet of Jesus and entering into his wounded side. For her, intimacy with the Lord is always through the Cross and informed by a profound gratitude and humility.
One other beautiful feature of her spirituality is her understanding of virtue. This understanding is not quite classical in that she goes beyond the generic definition of a virtue as a good habit. Instead, she addresses a problem that is related to life in the Church. She notices that different Christians excel at different virtues. One might have a special aptitude for the art of getting on with others and is a special source of justice in the community. Another may be especially able to enter into the heart of someone enduring great difficulty and brings to the Church a particular awareness of mercy. Still another might have a profound gift of prayer. The question she takes up is why has the Father given different gifts to different members of the Body of Christ.
In the Dialogues, the Father explains to her that He has distributed his bountiful gifts in this way so that each member of the Body of Christ must rely on all the other members and at the same time each member bears a particular responsibility to support the Body of Christ commensurate to the gifts he has been given. In other words, his has distributed his gifts in a manner that disposes us to love one another. And the Father is counting on this mutual love, this genuine fellowship. It is part of His plan that as we cross Christ the Bridge we enter into communion with Him not merely individually, but together as a family.
The family of God requires a new kind of love, a love which only God can give us. A beautiful foundation is laid for what will later be understood as a “call within a call,” that particular mission each one is entrusted with in the eternal loving plan of God. On one hand, answering this call involves some suffering – just as Mother Theresa in our own time discovered. But those who endure this would not have it any other way. There is a certain joy and fullness of life that one discovers when one generously embraces the loving plan of the Father. The possibility of this joyful fulness makes Catherine’s message to the Church dynamically attractive.
For those beginning to pray, Catherine sheds light on the importance of truth, devotion to Christ and the life of the Church. These things organically hang together in her vision of the spiritual life so that growing in prayer goes beyond the merely therapeutic: it opens up the possibility of fully thriving, of living life to the full.
Dr. Anthony Lilles is a Catholic husband and father of three teaching Spiritual Theology at St. John Vianney Theological Seminary. He  teaches spiritual theology and spiritual direction to transitional deacons, and the spiritual classics to the men who enter the Spirituality Year, a year of prayer in preparation for seminary formation.  He is the author of the “Beginning to Pray”  catholic blog spot.
For other episodes in the series visit the Discerning Hearts page for Dr. Anthony Lilles
Tags: Anthony Lilles, Church, prayer, spiritual life, st catherine of siena
This entry was posted on Monday, April 29th, 2013 at 7:26 am
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Dr. Anthony Lilles offers us a tremendous reflection based on a particular passage found in St. Faustina’s diary, #1373.  He shares what it meant when she wrote it in the context of the world in 1937, and what it now means in the  world in 2013.  But more than that, he helps us to see how we can live this out in our everyday lives.
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From the Diary of St. Faustina:
1373 O humdrum days, filled with darkness, I look upon you with a solemn and festive eye.Â
This is the scene Dr. Lilles refers to in is talk.
1377 November 5. This morning, five unemployed men came to the gate and insisted on being let in. When Sister N. had argued with them for quite a while and could not make them go away, she then came to the chapel to find Mother [Irene], who told me to go. When I was still a good way from the gate I could hear them banging loudly. At first, I was overcome with doubt and fear, and I did not know whether to open the gate or, like Sister N., to answer them through the little window. But suddenly I heard a voice in my soul saying, Go and open the gate and talk to them as sweetly as you talk to Me. Â Â I opened the gate at once and approached the most menacing of them and began to speak to them with such sweetness and calm that they did not know what to do with themselves. And they too began to speak gently and said, “Well, it’s too bad that the convent can’t give us work.” And they went away peacefully. I felt clearly that Jesus, whom I had received in Holy Communion just an hour before, had worked in their hearts through me. Oh, how good it is to act under God’s inspiration!
The opening prayer from St. Faustina’s diary #1411 offered by Dr. Lilles:
O Divine Spirit, Spirit of truth and of light,
Dwell ever in my soul by Your divine grace.
May Your breath dissipate the darkness,
And in this light may good deeds be multiplied.
O Divine Spirit, Spirit of love and of mercy,
Who pour the balm of trust into my heart,
Your grace confirms my soul in good,
Giving it the invincible power of constancy.
O Divine Spirit, Spirit of peace and of joy,
You invigorate my thirsting heart
And pour into it the living fountain of God’s love,
Making it intrepid for battle.
O Divine Spirit, my soul’s most welcome guest,
For my part, I want to remain faithful to You;
Both in days of joy and in the agony of suffering,
I want always, O Spirit of God, to live in Your presence.
O Divine Spirit, who pervade my whole being
And give me to know Your Divine Threefold Life,
Initiating me into Your Divine Essence,
Thus united to You, I will live a life without end.
Tags: Anthony Lilles, darkness, joy, reflection
This entry was posted on Wednesday, April 10th, 2013 at 3:53 pm
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From Dr. Anthony Lilles’ blog “Beginning to Pray”
There are times when prayer feels wasted. Â We cry out from the very depths of our being begging to be heard, sometimes in tears, sometimes in desperate plight, sometimes with an overwhelming sense of personal unworthiness. Â Sometimes, when some sign of Divine Providence is most sought, our voices echo in lifeless silence.
In these moments, those who doubted our faith or considered us hypocrites, they feel themselves vindicated – sometimes with glee, sometimes with hidden sorrow. Â Here, the seemingly unanswered prayer mysteriously resounds in their hearts too. Â Behind the derision one faces for having dared to believe, there is also a painful solidarity with the whole of humanity. Â For every prayer that seems unanswered reaffirms a sense of alienation, of rejection, of unbearable misery in the heart of every man and woman since Eden.
In the story of salvation, the most contemporary doubt in the Father’s love is just another manifestation of this primordial reality. Â Christian prayer does not avoid this common human condition – it boldly enters this poverty to fill it with something new. Â If it humbly accepts all forms of mockery before the mystery of unanswered prayer, it is to offer this too as a living sacrifice to the Living God.
For the Christian, the tired sorrow of unanswered prayer has been made open to an explosive beatitude. Â The Word of the Father made this painful cry His own when He implicated Himself in our sin. Â In this, the Suffering Servant found a way so that we would not have to suffer our plight alone – our wounds are healed by His.
His last wordless cry of abandonment revealed His life’s project: He dared to offer with love to the Father His every breathe and heartbeat from first to last so that every human hardship might be completely enveloped in divine mercy. Â Now, by faith, His project can become our project. Â Because His offering to the Father was perfect in love, the Savior of the world fills our dying weakness with the secret freshness of new life whenever we offer it to Him with even the tiniest effort of solidarity. Â When prayer seems unanswered, the One who cried to the Father for love of us from crib to Cross is allowing us an opportunity to share in the salvific work of His own prayer.
Like the myrrh, the tears and the kisses that once anointed the feet of Jesus, prayer wasted on God for our brothers and sisters, for spouse and children, and even for ourselves, always takes on cruciform proportions – dimensions that extend from one horizon to the other, from height to depth, from what is visible to what cannot be seen. Â If such prayer weeps over abandonment, disappointment, frustration, injustice, inadequacy, failure, voids and weakness – such prayer also boldly cleaves with gratitude to the invincible hope that none of this can separate us from that astounding love revealed by the Risen Lord.
Dr. Anthony Lilles is the author of “Hidden Mountain, Secret Garden”
Available at Amazon.com as an ebook (click here), a paperback edition (click here).  You may also order a paperback edition at createspace.com.
Tags: Anthony Lilles, faith, heart, joy, love, prayer, reflection, solidarity
This entry was posted on Thursday, March 7th, 2013 at 12:35 pm
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Episode 20 Beginning to Pray:  “Heaven in Faith”  Day 10 Prayer 2 – “In the heaven of our soul let us be praises of glory of the Holy Trinity, praises of love of our Immaculate Mother.”
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Dr. Anthony Lilles is a Catholic husband and father of three teaching Spiritual Theology at St. John Vianney Theological Seminary. He  teaches spiritual theology and spiritual direction to transitional deacons, and the spiritual classics to the men who enter the Spirituality Year, a year of prayer in preparation for seminary formation.  He is the author of the “Beginning to Pray”  catholic blog spot.
From “Heaven in Faith: Day 10 Prayer 2” found in The Complete Works vol 1:
44. …In the heaven of our soul let us be praises of glory of the Holy Trinity, praises of love of our Immaculate Mother.  One day the veil will fall, we will be introduced into the eternal courts, and there will we will sing in the bosom of infinite Love.  And God will give us “the new name promised to the Victor.”” What will it be?  LAUDEM GLORIAE”
For other episodes in the series visit the Discerning Hearts page for Dr. Anthony Lilles
We would like to offer heartfelt thanks to
Miriam Gutierrez for providing for us “the voice” of Blessed Elizabeth for this series
Dr. Lilles’ book, which can be found as a Quality Paperback and e-book edition
Tags: Anthony Lilles, blessed elizabeth of the trinity, carmelites, heaven, heaven in faith, Immaculate Mother, love
This entry was posted on Saturday, December 1st, 2012 at 2:38 pm
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[powerpress]“Hidden Mountain Secret Garden: a theological contemplation of prayer” helps the reader discover the riches of mental prayer in the Catholic Tradition. In fact, the images of the “Hidden Mountain” and the “Secret Garden” are ancient metaphors for contemplative prayer, a kind of prayer that begins and ends in faith.
This book is especially for those whose prayer is a search for the loving eyes of One who has conquered death. This kind of prayer beholds the wonder of Christ’s living but hidden presence in one’s highest thoughts and most noble aspirations as well as in one’s instinctual urges and deepest longings. The ecstasy of this kind of prayer extends beyond even the vast unexplored horizons of the human heart and opens to an immensity of such excessive mercy that all else is forgotten — and only love remains.
The whole world needs this love: it is the secret garden, the hidden mountain, the inexhaustible riches only prayer knows and an excess of grace only prayer can make known. This is why Blessed John Paul II told the Church not to be afraid to open wide the doors of our hearts to Christ and it is why He told the young people of the world to be proud to proclaim the Gospel of the Lord. For those brave souls who have faithfully open their hearts to the Lord through this discipline of this kind of prayer, every Christian owes you a debt of gratitude. For those who want to join them, this work encourages you along the way — for the journey you endeavor is at once the most perilous, the most heart-rending and the most wonderful adventure this world has ever known.
Available at Amazon.com as an ebook (click here), a paperback edition (click here).  You may also order a paperback edition at createspace.com.
“Dr. Anthony Lilles has authored an introduction to prayer that is inspiring and encouraging. For those desiring to pray this is a resource that is full of practical advice – written simply and attractively. This book bears the mark of a man – husband, father and teacher – who is not only imbued with the wisdom of the Saints, but who has also, through his own prayer, learned how all of us can, through prayer, foster faith in and love for Jesus and his Gospel.â€
THOMAS G. WEINANDY, O.F.M., CAP. Executive Director for the Secretariat for Doctrine United States Conference of Catholic Bishops
This is a wonderful book. I’ve taught spiritual theology many years and I wish I had had this text use. In fact, I wish I had written this book. It is scriptural, patristic, historical, theological, mystical, experiential and user friendly. Dr. Lilles takes us through the spiritual journey of prayer, citing Fathers and doctors, saints and even sinners to guide us on our Christian way toward contemplation. Weaving many themes into a harmonious whole, he opens up the life of contemplation for all Christians, our baptismal birthright in a way that is accessible and attractive. This is a book one will read more than once.
FR. GILES DIMOCK, O.P., S.T.D University Parish of St. Thomas Aquinas At the University of Virginia
In this book we find the real meat of the new evangelization. The church in America will not be renewed by “facts about Jesus†but only through one’s choice to let Christ reach the heart and change it from within. It is an ancient message received by only few: Do not be afraid of letting go of what now defines you. Let Christ tell you who you are. Dr. Lilles is one of the ablest guides to lead us through to such a choice. Will I stay with knowledge about Jesus or will I enter the garden of prayer and finally come to know Him!! Do not be afraid to be loved, read this book.
DEACON JAMES KEATING, PH.D, Institute for Priestly Formation, Omaha, NE
Tags: Anthony Lilles, contemplation, faith, prayer
This entry was posted on Monday, November 26th, 2012 at 9:54 am
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Episode 19 Beginning to Pray: Â “Heaven in Faith” Â Day 10 Prayer 1- “In what peace, in what recollection Mary lent herself to everything she did!”
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Dr. Anthony Lilles is a Catholic husband and father of three teaching Spiritual Theology at St. John Vianney Theological Seminary. He  teaches spiritual theology and spiritual direction to transitional deacons, and the spiritual classics to the men who enter the Spirituality Year, a year of prayer in preparation for seminary formation.  He is the author of the “Beginning to Pray”  catholic blog spot.
From “Heaven in Faith: Day 10 Prayer 1” found in The Complete Works vol 1:
40.  “It seems to me that the attitude of the Virgin during the months that elapsed between the Annunciation and the Nativity is the model for interior souls, those whom God has chosen to live within, in the depths of the bottomless abyss.  In what peace, in what recollection Mary lent herself to everything she did!  How even the most trivial things were divinized by her!  For through it all the Virgin remained the adorer of the gift of God!  This did not prevent her from spending herself outwardly when it was a matter of charity”
For other episodes in the series visit the Discerning Hearts page for Dr. Anthony Lilles
We would like to offer heartfelt thanks to
Miriam Gutierrez for providing for us “the voice” of Blessed Elizabeth for this series
Tags: blessed elizabeth of the trinity, carmelites, heaven and faith
This entry was posted on Saturday, November 24th, 2012 at 8:04 am
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Episode 18 Beginning to Pray:  “Heaven in Faith”  Day 9 Prayer 2- “God who is rich in mercy, impelled by His exceeding love, even when we were dead because of our sins, has brought us back to life in Christ Jesus.”
[powerpress]
Dr. Anthony Lilles is a Catholic husband and father of three teaching Spiritual Theology at St. John Vianney Theological Seminary. He  teaches spiritual theology and spiritual direction to transitional deacons, and the spiritual classics to the men who enter the Spirituality Year, a year of prayer in preparation for seminary formation.  He is the author of the “Beginning to Pray”  catholic blog spot.
From “Heaven in Faith: Day 9 Prayer 2” found in The Complete Works vol 1:
37.  “If anyone should affirm to me that to find the bottom of the abyss is to be immersed in humility, I would not contradict him.  However, it seems to me that to be plunged into humility is to be plunged into God, for God is the bottom of the  abyss.  This is why humility, like charity, is always capable of increasing.”
For other episodes in the series visit the Discerning Hearts page for Dr. Anthony Lilles
We would like to offer heartfelt thanks to
Miriam Gutierrez for providing for us “the voice” of Blessed Elizabeth for this series
Tags: Anthony Lilles, blessed elizabeth of the trinity, carmelites, catholic, catholic podcast, catholic prayer, cathollc spirituality, heaven and faith, Spiritual Theology, St. John Vianney Theological Seminary
This entry was posted on Saturday, June 30th, 2012 at 11:05 am
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Episode 17 Beginning to Pray: Â “Heaven in Faith” Â Day 9 Prayer 1- “God has predestined us to the adopotion of children through Jesus Christ, in union with Him…”
[powerpress]
Dr. Anthony Lilles is a Catholic husband and father of three teaching Spiritual Theology at St. John Vianney Theological Seminary. He  teaches spiritual theology and spiritual direction to transitional deacons, and the spiritual classics to the men who enter the Spirituality Year, a year of prayer in preparation for seminary formation.  He is the author of the “Beginning to Pray”  catholic blog spot.
From “Heaven in Faith: Day 9 Prayer 1” found in The Complete Works vol 1:
32.  “See,” says St. John, “what manner of love the Father has bestowed on us, that we should be called children of God’ and such we are….Now we are the children of God, and we have not yet seen what we shall be.  We know that when He appears, we shall be like Him, for we shall see Him just as He is.  And everyone who has this hope in Him makes himself holy, just as He Himself is holy.”
For other episodes in the series visit the Discerning Hearts page for Dr. Anthony Lilles
We would like to offer heartfelt thanks to
Miriam Gutierrez for providing for us “the voice” of Blessed Elizabeth for this series
Tags: Anthony Lilles, blessed elizabeth of the trinity, carmelites, catholic, catholic podcast, catholic prayer, cathollc spirituality, children of God, heaven in faith, prayer, Spiritual Theology, St. John Vianney Theological Seminary
This entry was posted on Wednesday, June 13th, 2012 at 6:31 pm
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Episode 16 Beginning to Pray: Â “Heaven in Faith” Â Day 8 Prayer 2- “It seems to me that all is loss since I have known the excelling knowledge of my Lord Jesus Christ…”
[powerpress]
Dr. Anthony Lilles is a Catholic husband and father of three teaching Spiritual Theology at St. John Vianney Theological Seminary. He  teaches spiritual theology and spiritual direction to transitional deacons, and the spiritual classics to the men who enter the Spirituality Year, a year of prayer in preparation for seminary formation.  He is the author of the “Beginning to Pray”  catholic blog spot.
From “Heaven in Faith: Day 8 Prayer 2” found in The Complete Works vol 1:
30.  Let us lovingly eat this bread of the will of God.  If sometimes His will is more crucifying, we can doubtless say with our adored Master:  “Father, if it is possible, let this cup pass me by,” but we will add immediately:  “Yet not as I will, but as You will”; and in strength and serenity, with the divine Crucified, we will also climb our calvary singing in the depths of our hearts and raising a hymn of thanksgiving to the Father.
For other episodes in the series visit the Discerning Hearts page for Dr. Anthony Lilles
We would like to offer heartfelt thanks to
Miriam Gutierrez for providing for us “the voice” of Blessed Elizabeth for this series
Tags: Anthony Lilles, blessed elizabeth of the trinity, carmelites, catholic, catholic podcast, catholic prayer, cathollc spirituality, Elizabeth of the Trinity Episode 16, heaven in faith, Spiritual Theology, St. John Vianney Theological Seminary
This entry was posted on Saturday, June 2nd, 2012 at 11:52 am
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Episode 15 Beginning to Pray: Â “Heaven in Faith” Â Day 8 Prayer 1- “Those whom God has foreknown, He has aldo predestined to become confomed to the image of His divine Son…“
[powerpress]
Dr. Anthony Lilles is a Catholic husband and father of three teaching Spiritual Theology at St. John Vianney Theological Seminary. He  teaches spiritual theology and spiritual direction to transitional deacons, and the spiritual classics to the men who enter the Spirituality Year, a year of prayer in preparation for seminary formation.  He is the author of the “Beginning to Pray”  catholic blog spot.
From “Heaven in Faith: Day 8 Prayer 1” found in The Complete Works vol 1:
26.  This is how the mystery of predestination, the mystery of divine election appeared to the enlightened gaze of the Apostle.  “Those whom He has foreknown”  Are not we of that number?  Cannot God say to our soul what he once said through the voice of His prophet:  “I passed by you and saw you.  I saw that the time had come for you to be loved.  I spread my garment over you.  I swore to you to protect you, and I made a covenant with you, and you became mine.”
For other episodes in the series visit the Discerning Hearts page for Dr. Anthony Lilles
We would like to offer heartfelt thanks to
Miriam Gutierrez for providing for us “the voice” of Blessed Elizabeth for this series
Tags: Anthony Lilles, blessed elizabeth of the trinity, carmelites, catholic, catholic podcast, catholic prayer, cathollc spirituality, Elizabeth of the Trinity Episode 15, heaven in faith, Spiritual Theology, St. John Vianney Theological Seminary
This entry was posted on Saturday, May 19th, 2012 at 9:55 am
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Episode 14 Beginning to Pray: Â “Heaven in Faith” Â Day 7 Prayer 2- “Be holy for I am holy“
[powerpress]
Dr. Anthony Lilles is a Catholic husband and father of three teaching Spiritual Theology at St. John Vianney Theological Seminary. He  teaches spiritual theology and spiritual direction to transitional deacons, and the spiritual classics to the men who enter the Spirituality Year, a year of prayer in preparation for seminary formation.  He is the author of the “Beginning to Pray”  catholic blog spot.
From “Heaven in Faith: Day 7 Prayer 2” found in The Complete Works vol 1:
24…”When God sees that we are prepared to receive His grace, His generous goodness is ready to give us the gift that will give us His likeness. Â Our aptitude for receiving His grace depends on the inner integrity with which we move towards Him.” And then God, “bringing us His gifts,” can “give Himself, imprint on us His likeness, forgive, and free us.”
For other episodes in the series visit the Discerning Hearts page for Dr. Anthony Lilles
We would like to offer heartfelt thanks to
Miriam Gutierrez for providing for us “the voice” of Blessed Elizabeth for this series
Tags: Anthony Lilles, blessed elizabeth of the trinity, carmelites, catholic, catholic podcast, catholic prayer, cathollc spirituality, heaven in faith, Spiritual Theology, St. John Vianney Theological Seminary
This entry was posted on Friday, May 11th, 2012 at 10:06 pm
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Episode 13 Beginning to Pray: Â “Heaven in Faith” Â Day 7 Prayer 1 – “God chose us in Him before creation, that we should be holy and immaculate in His presence, in love.“
[powerpress]
Dr. Anthony Lilles is a Catholic husband and father of three teaching Spiritual Theology at St. John Vianney Theological Seminary. He  teaches spiritual theology and spiritual direction to transitional deacons, and the spiritual classics to the men who enter the Spirituality Year, a year of prayer in preparation for seminary formation.  He is the author of the “Beginning to Pray”  catholic blog spot.
From “Heaven in Faith: Day 7 Prayer 1” found in The Complete Works vol 1:
22. Â “Our created essence asks to be rejoined with its principle”, The Word, “the Splendor of the Father, is the eternal archtype after which creatures are designed on the day of their creation.” Â This is ‘why God wills that, freed from ourselves, we should stretch out our arms towards our exemplar and possess it,” “rising” above all things “towards our model.” Â “This contemplation opens” The soul “to unexpected horizons.”
For other episodes in the series visit the Discerning Hearts page for Dr. Anthony Lilles
We would like to offer heartfelt thanks to
Miriam Gutierrez for providing for us “the voice” of Blessed Elizabeth for this series
Tags: Anthony Lilles, blessed elizabeth of the trinity, caremelites, catholic, catholic podcast, catholic prayer, cathollc spirituality, Elizabeth of the Trinity Episode 13, heaven in faith, Spiritual Theology, St. John Vianney Theological Seminary
This entry was posted on Saturday, April 28th, 2012 at 9:02 am
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Episode 12 Beginning to Pray: Â “Heaven in Faith” Â Day 6 Prayer 2 – “If your eye is single, your whole body will be full of light.“
[powerpress]
Dr. Anthony Lilles is a Catholic husband and father of three teaching Spiritual Theology at St. John Vianney Theological Seminary. He  teaches spiritual theology and spiritual direction to transitional deacons, and the spiritual classics to the men who enter the Spirituality Year, a year of prayer in preparation for seminary formation.  He is the author of the “Beginning to Pray”  catholic blog spot.
From “Heaven in Faith: Day 6 Prayer 2” found in The Complete Works vol 1:
19. …What is this single eye of which the Master speaks but this “simplicity of intention” which “gathers into unity all the scattered forces of the soul and unites the spirit itself to God. Â It is simplicity which gives God honor and praise; it is simplicity which presents and offers the virtues to Him. Â Then, penetrating and permeating itself, permeating and penetrating all creatures, it finds God in its depths.
For other episodes in the series visit the Discerning Hearts page for Dr. Anthony Lilles
We would like to offer heartfelt thanks to
Miriam Gutierrez for providing for us “the voice” of Blessed Elizabeth for this series
Tags: Anthony Lilles, blessed elizabeth of the trinity, carmelites, catholic, catholic podcast, catholic prayer, cathollc spirituality, heaven and faith, Spiritual Theology, St. John Vianney Theological Seminary
This entry was posted on Saturday, April 21st, 2012 at 10:14 am
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Episode 11 Beginning to Pray: Â “Heaven in Faith” Â Day 6 Prayer 1 – “To approach God we must believe”
[powerpress]
Dr. Anthony Lilles is a Catholic husband and father of three teaching Spiritual Theology at St. John Vianney Theological Seminary. He  teaches spiritual theology and spiritual direction to transitional deacons, and the spiritual classics to the men who enter the Spirituality Year, a year of prayer in preparation for seminary formation.  He is the author of the “Beginning to Pray”  catholic blog spot.
From “Heaven in Faith: Day 6 Prayer 1” found in The Complete Works vol 1:
19. “We have come to know and to believe in the love God has for us.” Â That is our great act of faith, the way to repay our God love for love; it is “the mystery hidden” in the Father’s heart, of which St. Paul speaks, which, at last, we penetrate and our whole soul thrills!”
For other episodes in the series visit the Discerning Hearts page for Dr. Anthony Lilles
We would like to offer heartfelt thanks to
Miriam Gutierrez for providing for us “the voice” of Blessed Elizabeth for this series
Tags: Anthony Lilles, blessed elizabeth of the trinity, carmelites, catholic, catholic podcast, catholic prayer, cathollc spirituality, Elizabeth of the Trinity Episode 11, Spiritual Theology, St. John Vianney Theological Seminary
This entry was posted on Sunday, April 15th, 2012 at 7:35 am
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Episode 10 Beginning to Pray: Â “Heaven in Faith” Â Day 5 Prayer 2 – “He who eats My flesh and drinks My blood, remains in Me and I in him.”
[powerpress]
Dr. Anthony Lilles is a Catholic husband and father of three teaching Spiritual Theology at St. John Vianney Theological Seminary. He  teaches spiritual theology and spiritual direction to transitional deacons, and the spiritual classics to the men who enter the Spirituality Year, a year of prayer in preparation for seminary formation.  He is the author of the “Beginning to Pray”  catholic blog spot.
From “Heaven in Faith: Day 5 Prayer 2” found in The Complete Works vol 1:
18. ….”The first sign of love is this:  that Jesus has given us His flesh to eat and His blood to drink.”  “The property of love is to be always giving and always receiving.  Now this love ” of Christ is “generous.  All that He has, all that He is, He gives; all that we have , all that we are, He takes away.  He asks for more than we of our ourselves are capable of giving.”
For other episodes in the series visit the Discerning Hearts page for Dr. Anthony Lilles
We would like to offer heartfelt thanks to
Miriam Gutierrez for providing for us “the voice” of Blessed Elizabeth for this series
Tags: Anthony Lilles, blessed elizabeth of the trinity, carmelites, catholic, catholic podcast, catholic prayer, cathollc spirituality, Elizabeth of the Trinity Episode 10, heaven in faith, Spiritual Theology, St. John Vianney Theological Seminary
This entry was posted on Saturday, April 7th, 2012 at 12:24 am
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