The Divine Life

Why We Were Created
a blog by Eric Sammons

Archive for September, 2010

September 6, 2010

A look inside

Amazon now has available a “look inside” of my book Who is Jesus Christ? Unlocking the Mystery in the Gospel of Matthew. If you click on the book cover on its Amazon page, you will be able to read the complete Foreword, Introduction and many pages of the text itself.

If you are like me and like to print out texts for reading later, I am making both the Foreword and Introduction available for free download in PDF format (there are also links in the right sidebar):

Foreword to Who is Jesus Christ? Unlocking the Mystery in the Gospel of Matthew by Fr. Benedict Groeschel, C.F.R.

Introduction to Who is Jesus Christ? Unlocking the Mystery in the Gospel of Matthew

The book should be shipping within the next 2-3 weeks!

Who is Jesus Christ?

Novena for the unemployed

Today is Labor Day, but unfortunately a lot of Americans are out of jobs right now. I have noticed that one of the most popular search phrases in my blog statistics is “novena for finding a job”, which takes you to a post I did over a year ago on praying a novena to St. Josemaría Escrivá for finding a job. So I thought this Labor Day I would post it again.

First here is an article on the powerful intercession of St. Josemaría Escrivá for finding a job.

And here is a PDF download of the novena prayer itself.

St. Josemaría, pray for us!

Saints

September 3, 2010

What do you do when the going gets tough? Retreat!

We all know that modern life can be antithetical to a deep spiritual life. We are distracted in a million and one ways, our culture despises and fights against true spirituality, and the daily demands of modern living can crush our efforts to grow in holiness. What do the saints and spiritual masters recommend as the response to such difficulties?

Retreat!

A spiritual retreat, that is. One of the bedrocks of a true Catholic spirituality – whether Franciscan, Ignatian, Carmelite or anything in-between – is that every person needs to take a spiritual retreat on a regular basis in order to recharge their spiritual batteries. The format of the retreat varies – it can be self-directed or directed by a priest, one weekend or a whole week or month, made with others or in solitude. In all cases though, the length usually needs to be at least a weekend to be fruitful. A retreat is a time in which we can look at the “big picture”: How are we progressing in the spiritual life? Are we sticking to our promises in prayer and works of charity? Are we putting Christ first in our lives every day? Such questions are very difficult to access objectively and seriously in just a few minutes and between emails. They are questions we need to spend time and deep prayer in answering.

I can attest to the value of such a retreat. For the past eight years, I have made sure to take a weekend retreat (usually at Holy Cross Abbey in Berryville, VA) in order to get away from the routine and draw closer to the Lord. These times of intense prayer and meditation have always been fruitful, and have often been the source of insights that would not have been possible without escaping from the daily grind. Our minds need time in order to refocus; I know that the one commonality of all my retreats is that I need Friday evening to simply “detox.” My mind is racing in a million and one directions and I cannot relax. But by the next morning I find that my daily worries subside and I am able to focus on the “one thing necessary.”

Almost anyone can make a retreat – nursing mothers are a noteworthy exception – and everyone should make one on a regular basis (most spiritual directors recommend annual retreats). We need to be trained to fight the spiritual battle we are called to fight, and retreats are a great way to receive that training. One of the best strategies for winning the war in the spiritual life, therefore, is to retreat!

Spirituality

Mysticism is not just for mystics

“Mysticism” is one of those words that immediately brings to mind otherworldly images as well as otherworldly people: St. John of the Cross and St. Teresa of Avila, for example. These mystics seem to live outside the “real” world and deal in realities far beyond us mortal men. But the fact is that every person is called to mysticism and mysticism is an embracing of the true “real” world: the world of God.

Father Luigi Borriello, a Carmelite priest, breaks down mysticism in a recent interview with Zenit (with my emphasis added):

ZENIT: Mystics are famous for being from another world, but you say this is not so.

Father Borriello: Mystics are men and women of this world.

Today there is a tendency to trivialize mysticism, as if it were something of another world, and that it has nothing to do with us. But it isn’t so. Moreover, the mystics’ experience fits in the Church and is related to faith, not foreign to it.

Mystical experience cannot be separated from faith; it can only take place in it. Mystical experience calls for a mystical theology, a reflection whose basis is mysticism itself.

Today there is a persistence of the mystical event. It is part of the post-modern society. This universal mystical richness is rediscovered in Western and Eastern religiosity. And Eastern mysticism has exercised great fascination in the West.

Also in the present climate of crisis, of confusion and syncretism, there is a temptation to confuse the authentic nature of mysticism with New Age or Next Age realities.

Religion and mysticism are different realities, and it is necessary to make distinctions.

ZENIT: In fact, many seek in the East what Christian mysticism already contains.

Father Borriello: Indeed. It’s a paradox.

Many Christians don’t know the wealth of their own mystical tradition and they turn to the East, seeking what is in the interior of that tradition.

Moreover, it is important to recall that there is a mystagogy in all mystical experience: You can also experience this as the other does.

Although the mystic is reserved, what he says is for others.

In this sense we must say to ourselves that we are all called to sanctity and to mysticism. And the mystical experience is a call to witness.

ZENIT: Christian mysticism always recognizes the “You” of God.

Father Borriello: Yes, it isn’t dissolution; it is encounter.

Christian mysticism is characterized by the Incarnation, which is always a gift; it isn’t something that the human being gains.

In it, the “You,” the duality of a God who gives himself and the man who receives, though there is fusion, always recognizes the other.

We are speaking of duality in unity, as a spiritual marriage. The two always recognize one another; they are not confused; they keep their own identity.

ZENIT: Would it be appropriate to desire a mystical experience?

Father Borriello: It is not a question of asking for it but of receiving it when it comes, if it comes.

Experience is a category that is used in all the disciplines. I prefer to speak of mystical experience; it is something that God gives to man who receives it passively, and, in fact, makes an effort on receiving it.

It is what John of the Cross calls “the night.”There is a collaboration in the acceptance, but the initiative is always God’s, who makes himself known. And the greatest revelation takes place in Jesus Christ.

Hence, mystical experience is always Christ-centered and Trinitarian. And it is revealed only gratuitously, without our merits.

Spirituality

One of three “Great” popes

I’m sure there have been more than three great popes in our history – but there are only three which history has given the title “the Great”: Leo I, Gregory I and Nicholas I (somehow, Nicholas I is always forgotten in that list). Today is the feast day of St. Gregory the Great, and patristic scholar extraordinaire Mike Aquilla gives us a nice summary of his life:

St. Gregory the Great, whose feast is today, Sept. 3, was the first monk ever chosen as Pope. He had grown up in one of the few remaining old aristocratic families in Rome. Before taking his vows, he had been an important politician in the city, so he had some experience with administration. Nevertheless, he hadn’t intended to become the most important politician of his age. Things just turned out that way. There was work to be done, and only Gregory could do it.

Rome was in bad shape when Gregory became her bishop. The plague that had killed Pope Pelagius was still raging. The city had been kicked around like a football between Goths and Vandals, with Greeks from the Eastern Roman Empire periodically stepping in to inflict even more damage. Fires and disastrously bad weather added to the catastrophes. And the constant threat of invasion from the north by the horrible Lombards kept the survivors in terror.

These Lombards were a particularly vicious sort of barbarian, at least to their enemies. They massacred everyone in their path, except for the few who might be useful as slaves. The Lombards who weren’t pagans were Arians, so they had no qualms about plundering the orthodox churches and slaughtering the clergy. Cities emptied as they approached, and soon Rome and Ravenna were the only substantial cities left in the northern half of Italy.

In theory, Italy was governed by the Roman Emperor in Constantinople, through his exarch in Ravenna. In practice, the exarch was nearly powerless, and the Eastern Empire had enough problems of its own to worry about. The exarch might be able to hold onto Ravenna, with its naturally impenetrable defenses, but he couldn’t do much about it when the Lombards decided to march on Rome. No one was left to defend the once-proud city but Gregory. It was lucky for Rome that Gregory had both experience in government and a deep and sincere faith. It took both qualities to save the city.

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St. Gregory the Great, pray for us!

Saints

September 2, 2010

Are publishers needed anymore?

It is an interesting time to be an author. By “interesting,” I mean exciting/scary/confusing/revolutionary. All of this excitement/fear/confusion/revolution centers around modern technologies, which are changing the face of reading and publishing. There are two main effects that this technology is having on the industry:

1) Ease of publication: now anyone can cheaply “publish” a book, meaning that they can bind paper together in a nice format, or they can put their book on a e-reader device. What used to be a barrier to entry no longer exists.

2) E-Reading: reading doesn’t have to involve paper anymore. Now we can read on our computers, our phones, our iPads, our Kindles and a whole host of other devices. I have mentioned previously that most people erroneously believe that e-reading is just the next step in reading that everyone will eventually take, but there is no question that e-reading is a major factor in the publishing world now.

So what does this all mean? Some are claiming that old-school publishers are dinosaurs no longer needed in the 21st century. Others believe that the low barrier to entry means that readers need some form of filter to distinguish the wheat from the chaff and therefore traditional publishers are still very much needed. Either way, authors need to be more than just good writers these days; they need to be savvy about all the options available to them when it comes to publishing.

I tend to believe that traditional publishers are still quite necessary, but that they do have to adapt better to modern trends. The dirty little fact of self-publishing is that most of it is crap that the author’s mother wouldn’t even want to read. Most people recognize this and so they put their faith in established publishing companies to find the truly well-written works out there (and they realize that those publishing companies improve those works by their editing staff). But there are very good books hidden among the self-published masses, and some people have been very successful with self-publishing.

But one trend which most publishing companies have resisted is the trend of making more and more writing available for free. Due to the free nature of content on the Internet, most people have become more and more accustomed to paying nothing for something. They don’t mind paying for a book if they think it worthwhile, but they are often unwilling to do so “sight unseen” – they want to be able to at least read some of it first (this is why I got Our Sunday Visitor to agree to allow me to offer the Foreword and Introduction to my book Who is Jesus Christ? Unlocking the Mystery in the Gospel of Matthew available as a free download – more details coming soon). Too many publishers, however, feel like the content of their books are not to be tasted until full admission has been paid.

Self-publishing has its place in the publishing world, but only in very specific instances. The authors most likely to be successful in self-publishing are those who already have built a following for their works through traditional publishing means (for example, if J.K. Rowling decided to self-publish a book, you don’t think it would fail, do you?), and also have the ability to pay others to edit their works (almost no author can self-edit – it is just an affliction of the trade). These trusted names do not need the engine of traditional publishers to drive them to success – but such people are few and far between.

That being said, traditional publishing houses must become more adept at not only following the trends in publishing, but setting them. They need to realize that there has been a seismic shift in the publishing world and their continued success depends on remaining in front of it. The world of books would become a chaotic place indeed if traditional publishers were to disappear, so here’s hoping that they can succeed in the 21st century.

Books,Technology,Who is Jesus Christ?

Evangelization: it’s not just for Evangelicals anymore

A couple of great articles on the need for all Catholics to evangelize:

From Msgr. Pope: It’s Time to Obey Christ and His Command that We Evangelize

From Aggie Catholics: Witness = Hard / Scary / Non-Negotiable

Make a commitment to do something to evangelize someone today! It’s not as hard (or as painful) as you think!

Evangelization

Info-tech Sabbath

As someone who has been deeply involved with modern technologies for over a decade, I know how powerful tools like the Internet can be for evangelization and apostolic works. However, that power cuts two ways, as technology can also take over someone’s life. That is why rule #6 of my Rules of Engagement for Catholics on the Internet is “Take at least one day off a week from the Internet.” Taking a day off allows one to refocus on what is truly important in life (hint: it’s not email).

Joe Carter over at First Things has come to a similar conclusion:

I never find the time to be alone with God during the week, so I’ve dedicated this Sunday afternoon to prayer. But before I do I should check my e-mail so I won’t be distracted. It won’t take long before. . . Thirty-two new messages, including one from the boss? I better reply right now. They might be important.

Some invitations from Facebook. Those are easy to clear out so let me accept them and I’m . . . hmm, I didn’t realize I had more notifications. Looks like Stacy finally launched a blog; I’ll just click through really quickly to check it out. Some great stuff. I really should add her blog to my RSS reader before I forget. What, “More than 100+ items”? Didn’t I just check this yesterday? I should really whittle these down a bit before it gets worse.

Wow, here I was about to focus on prayer and Bible study and my favorite theology-blogger has an excellent post on spiritual disciples. I have to share that with my own blog readers. That’s a topic that’s really on my heart today, and it won’t take long.

Hmm, looks like some comments are hung up in our spam filter again. Better fix that, or people will be discouraged from commenting. Oh man, does this guy misrepresent what I wrote. I can’t let that go unchallenged. Readers might be led astray. It won’t take long.

OK, now I need to buckle down and pray. Let me check the time on my iPhone—no way, it’s been four hours?—and who are these voicemails from?

Continue reading

Modern technology, which was supposed to simplify our life and give us more leisure time, has in many ways done the opposite. We Christians need to be careful not to let it become our god, demanding all our time and attention.

Technology

September 1, 2010

Book Update

I spoke to Our Sunday Visitor recently and my book Who is Jesus Christ? Unlocking the Mystery in the Gospel of Matthew is currently at the printers. They expect to receive it by around September 15th, at which time they will send me my copies. So if you have already ordered the book from me (thank you!), I’ll send it out as soon as I get it. If you haven’t ordered yet, you can do so now and you’ll also receive it as soon as it is available.

If you ordered from Amazon, I assume that they will be shipping it shortly after the 15th as well.

Who is Jesus Christ?

Benedictine monk, and Ignatius Press author, converts to Orthodoxy

Fr. Gabriel Bunge – Benedictine monk, well-respected patristic scholar, and author of the book Earthen Vessels: The Practice of Personal Prayer According to the Patristic Tradition – was recently received into the Orthodox Church:

[Metropolitan] Hilarion also heartily welcomed hieromonk Gabriel (Bunge), who, for more than 30 years has lived a hermetical life in the mountains of Switzerland. “You were a Catholic, but in soul you were Orthodox” – Metropolitan Hilarion said to him – “Today, before the all-night vigil, you converted to Orthodoxy, which was a natural conclusion of a long spiritual journey. ”

Metropolitan Hilarion warmly congratulated Father Gabriel on his reception into holy Orthodoxy, and gave him an icon of the Heavenly Queen, “Joy of All Who Sorrow” in memory of the fact that he was united to the Orthodox Church in this church, consecrated in honor of this icon.

Eastern Christianity,Ecumenism

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