The page you are currently looking at is my day-to-day blog. There are others! You can navigate to them by using the links on the right hand side of this page, and then between them in a similar fashion. Not An Ivory Tower is a collection of some of my writings deriving from my post-doctoral research with an inter-faith seminary in the States; Celebrating the Year offers thoughts, short liturgies, prayers, food suggestions, and decorative ideas for various festivals, times and seasons; Tro Breizh is the beginning of a devotional calendar of Breton saints; Threshold contains templates/scripts which can be personalised (with my help if you wish) for such occasions as births, betrothals, marriages, new homes, farewells, and partings; and Finding Balance is a series of workshops based on the chakra system. Explore, browse, enjoy - and please do send me your feedback via the comments boxes!

Saturday 28 April 2018

Catch up...

The long, long, long winter has finally turned to Spring, and we enjoyed, last weekend, a couple of days of really warm sunshine - which, of course, meant we forsook work in the house for the garden, which now has mowed grass, a hacked back west bank all the way along our patch to the north of the house, and the makings of a deluxe chicken coop... Yes, Mrs Fluffybottom and her gang of four (Big Venus, Chickpea, Grey Malkin, and Little T) are arriving next week!! (This is them in their current patch.)



Meanwhile, having celebrated Earth Day last Sunday, 22nd April (did you sign the plastic petition and check your global footprint??), tomorrow, 29th April is the feast day of Catherine of Sienna. Born Caterina Benincasa in 1347, she was the 23rd of 25 children that her mother bore: they didn't all survive, including Caterina's own twin. After the death of her sister Bonaventura in childbirth, Caterina, then aged 16, refused to marry her widower brother-in-law, and chose instead to join the Dominican Order of Penance (later known as the Dominican Third Order), an organisation of religious lay people who lived at home, wore distinctive dress and worked with poor and sick people - of whom there were many, this being the era of the Black Death, which wiped out a third of the population of Europe.

Three years later Caterina experienced a vision of Jesus putting a ring on her finger, which she later described as a 'spiritual marriage' to Christ. While continuing her charitable work, Caterina became concerned by the corruption within the church, and, like many others, blamed this on the moving of the Papal court from Rome to Avignon, French politics and lifestyle being believed to be decadent and corrupt......... No comment!

So, from 1374 onwards, Caterina, and a group of those who followed her lead, began travelling throughout northern and central Italy, advocating clerical reform within the church, repentance, and renewal through total love for God. She also sent a series of letters to Pope Gregory XI, exhorting him to return to Rome, and she was even granted an audience with him in 1377 in Avignon. Caterina also wrote a major treatise about love for God, neighbour, and self, entitled 'The Dialogue of Divine Providence'.



She died at the age of 33, is revered for her writings, her political boldness, and her spirituality, and was proclaimed the first woman 'doctor of the church' in 1970 by Pope Paul VI. Her theology and spiritual experience are generally described as 'mystical'.

The term 'mysticism' has been defined and used in many ways over time, but generally involves extra-ordinary states of mind and experience, including the sense of becoming one with the Divine/Absolute, the consciousness of Godde's omni-presence, and unusual intuitive insights. I like the simple definition that the mystical is that which inspires a spiritual sense of mystery, awe and fascination, or, as another has put it, using the eye of love to gaze at divine realities. As I look around and see the garden and the countryside springing into green life, I know whose hand is at work - and it isn't ours.







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