Spiritual direction is the process of accompanying people on a spiritual journey. Spiritual direction exists in a context that emphasizes growing closer to God (or the holy or a higher power).
Spiritual direction explores a deeper relationship with the spiritual aspect of
being human. Simply put, spiritual direction is helping people tell their
sacred stories everyday. Spiritual direction has emerged in many contexts using
language specific to particular cultural and spiritual traditions. Describing
spiritual direction requires putting words to a process of fostering a
transcendent experience that lies beyond all names and yet the experience longs
to be articulated and made concrete in everyday living. It is easier to
describe what spiritual direction does than what spiritual direction is.
Spiritual direction helps us learn how to live in peace, with compassion,
promoting justice, as humble servants of that which lies beyond all names. (Liz
Budd Ellmann, MDiv, Executive Director, Spiritual Directors International)
Spiritual direction is
the contemplative practice of helping another person or group to awaken to the
mystery called God in all of life, and to respond to that discovery in a
growing relationship of freedom and commitment. (James Keegan, SJ, Roman
Catholic, USA, on behalf of the 2005 Coordinating Council of Spiritual
Directors International)
Spiritual direction is a
time-honored term for a conversation, ordinarily between two persons, in which
one person consults another, more spiritually experienced person about the ways
in which God may be touching her or his life, directly or indirectly. In our
postmodern age, many people dislike the term "spiritual direction"
because it sounds like one person giving directions, or orders, to another.
They prefer "spiritual companionship," "tending the holy,"
or some other nomenclature. What we call it doesn't make any real difference.
The reality remains conversations about life in the light of faith. There was
much to talk about, to sort out in the light of faith in those days when
confusion in the Church became a daily reality.
Although spiritual direction has had a burst of new life, it is really quite
ancient. Across both the Hebrew and the Christian Scriptures, we find people
seeking spiritual counsel. The Queen of Sheba sought out the wisdom of Solomon.
Jesus gave us examples in his conversations with Nicodemus, with the woman at
the well, in the ongoing formation of Peter and the other disciples. In the
early church, people flocked to hermits in the desert for spiritual counsel.
Across the centuries we find striking examples in some Irish monks, in some
German Benedictine nuns, in Charles de Foucault, Teresa of Avila, John of the
Cross, Francis de Sales, and others. Today, spiritual directors come from many
traditions.…
(Satpalji Maharaj)
(Satpalji Maharaj)
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