Showing posts with label Father John Denburger. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Father John Denburger. Show all posts

Monday Musings - Imagine God Embracing You While You Pray!


(Image source: Wikimedia Commons)

Nearly a year ago, I shared a brief article on prayer – a gift I received while on retreat at the Abbey of Genesee. That post was well-received. You can read it here.

If you read that simple reflection, you will understand what a blessing it was for me to return to that special place a few weeks ago and to hear Father John Denburger, O.C.S.O. discuss prayer once again. 

Father did not disappoint. Underlying all prayer, he told us, is God’s decisive love for each of us.

During the course of his presentation, this soft-spoken and insightful teacher drew a distinction between two types of prayer: maintenance and spousal. 

Monday Musings - Good Prayer, Bad Prayer, The Better Prayer



There is always something more that a hungry soul can learn about prayer. I found this to be true during a brief presentation Father John Denburger, OCSO offered at a recent retreat I made at the Abbey at the Genesee in Piffard, New York



I hope I can do justice to the pearls he shared with us. The most important relationship we are called to develop in this life," Father began, "is our relationship with God and His with us." Prayer is essential. If one does not pray, there can be no fruitful relationship between God and man.



St. Maria Faustina Kowalska confirms Father's teaching, telling us that there are no exceptions to this command to pray:



"In whatever state a soul may be, it ought to pray. A soul which is pure and beautiful must pray, or else it will lose its beauty; a soul which is striving after this purity must pray, or else it will never attain it; a soul which is newly converted must pray, or else it will fall again; a sinful soul, plunged in sins, must pray so that it might rise again. There is no soul which is not bound to pray, for every single grace comes to the soul through prayer."



So what is prayer?

Eucharistic Reflection - Would A Stranger Know?

  "The Eucharist is alive. If a stranger who knew nothing about the Eucharist were to watch the way we receive, would he know...