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Showing posts with the label encounter

How to Cultivate Peace and Talk About Jesus

In a world full of noise, the Christian is first called not to speak, but to cultivate peace —deep, interior peace that comes from Christ. When the heart is anchored in Him, that peace becomes our first and most powerful witness. We may desire others to listen to what we have to say about Jesus and His Church—and that desire is good—but we cannot expect to be heard if we have not first learned to listen . As our Lord teaches in the Gospel of Luke, “Do to others as you would have them do to you” (Luke 6:31). Listening, then, is not a strategy or a stepping stone to something “more important.” It is itself an act of discipleship. It is obedience to Christ, and even more, it is imitation of Him. Consider how Jesus Himself engaged others. Though He is the Creator, He entered into real conversations with ordinary people. He did not simply deliver monologues from on high; He listened, responded, and met people where they were. To follow Him means to do the same. Even in brief or passing enco...

Deepening Your Friendship with Christ: The Four Steps

Developing a profound and personal relationship with Jesus Christ is at the very heart of the Catholic faith, and the teaching of the Second Vatican Council (Vatican II) provides a clear pathway for this spiritual journey. This path is often understood through a four-step pattern for Christian life: Encounter, Conversion, Communion, and Mission. It begins with a personal encounter with Jesus, meeting Him in a real and transformative way. This leads to conversion, the crucial process of becoming more like Christ by turning away from sin and striving for holiness. While this relationship is intensely personal, it is also fundamentally communal—an encounter that happens through the Church and draws us into the Church. This uniquely Catholic approach ensures that our personal relationship with Christ is nurtured within the body of believers. The subsequent steps of Communion and Mission are notably prominent in the documents of Vatican II, particularly in Lumen gentium . Communion is the ...

Deep Calling Deep

In the vast expanse of the human heart, there echoes a profound longing, a yearning for something beyond the transient joys and fleeting comforts of this earthly sojourn. This divine homesickness, as it were, is but a whisper of the Holy Spirit, a gentle stirring of the soul that resonates with the Psalmist's cry: "Deep calls unto deep at the sound of Thy cataracts; all Thy waves and Thy billows have passed over me." ( Psalm 42:7 ). This sacred utterance, a testament to the soul's insatiable thirst for the Divine , speaks to the very core of our being, inviting us into a loving relationship with the Triune God. It is a call from the unfathomable depths of God's love to the nascent, often dormant, depths of our own spirit, a divine invitation to plunge into the ocean of His mercy and grace. This profound encounter, where the immensity of God's love meets the yearning of our hearts, is not a mere intellectual assent but a deeply personal and transformative exper...

Discovering Your Heart's Rest: Dr. Shane Owens' New Book on St. Augustine, Timely for an Augustinian Papacy

In a providential alignment, as the Catholic Church welcomes its first Augustinian Pope, Leo XIV, the release of my good friend Dr. Shane Owens' new book,  Return to the Heart: The Biblical Spirituality of St. Augustine’s Confessions , couldn't be more timely. This insightful work invites readers to delve into the enduring wisdom of one of Christianity's most influential figures, offering a roadmap for personal conversion and a deeper encounter with God. St. Augustine's  Confessions  holds a unique place in Western literature as the very first autobiography. It's a profound narrative of one man's tumultuous journey away from and ultimately back to God, a journey rich with human experience. As Augustine himself famously penned, "He is most intimately present to the human heart, but the heart has strayed from him. Return to your heart, then, you wrongdoers, and hold fast to him who made you." This profound call to the heart resonates deeply with our ...