1 / 25

What do you hope to get out of this class?

What do you hope to get out of this class? . Lectio Divina Workshop. Marc Cardaronella. Workshop Overview. Week 1: Foundation Attitudes for Success Week 2: The Process Week 3: Additional Relational Aspects Week 4: Variations and Alternatives. Tonight’s Agenda.

kirk
Télécharger la présentation

What do you hope to get out of this class?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. What do you hope to get out of this class?

  2. Lectio DivinaWorkshop Marc Cardaronella

  3. Workshop Overview • Week 1: Foundation Attitudes for Success • Week 2: The Process • Week 3: Additional Relational Aspects • Week 4: Variations and Alternatives

  4. Tonight’s Agenda • My history with lectio divina • The fundamental attitudes or dispositions necessary to gain the most benefit from your time of prayer • A quick overview of the process

  5. Pope Benedict XVI “I would like in particular to recall and recommend the ancient tradition of lectio divina…If it is effectively promoted, this practice will bring to the Church—I am convinced of it—a new spiritual springtime.”

  6. Reading of a kind that renews the mind and expands to the divine

  7. Foundational Attitudes

  8. A Certain Kind of Reading • Isaiah 31:4: "As a lion or a young lion growls over his prey…“ • "Growl" (hagah) is usually translated as "meditate," as in the Psalm 1 phrase describing the blessed man or woman whose "delight is in the law of the LORD," on which "he meditates day and night". • Hagah is the word that our Hebrew ancestors used frequently for reading the kind of writing that deal with our souls. (p. 2)

  9. A Certain Kind of Reading “I am interested in the cultivation of this kind of reading, the only kind of reading that is congruent with what is written in our Holy Scriptures, but also with all writing that is intended to change our lives and not just stuff some information into the cells of our brain.” (p. 3)

  10. A Certain Kind of Reading “These are words intended, whether confrontationally or obliquely, to get inside us, to deal with our souls, to form a life that is congruent with the work that God has created, the salvation that he has enacted, and the community that he has gathered. Such writing anticipates and counts on a certain kind of reading, a dog-with-a-bone kind of reading.” (p. 4)

  11. A Certain Kind of Reading “There is only one way of reading that is congruent with our Holy Scriptures, writing that trusts in the power of words to penetrate our lives and create truth and beauty and goodness…This is the kind of reading named by our ancestors as lectio divina, often translated "spiritual reading," reading that enters our souls as food enters our stomachs, spreads through our blood, and becomes holiness and love and wisdom.” (p. 4)

  12. The Forbidding Discipline “Forbidding because it requires that we read with our entire life, not just employing the synapses in our brain. Forbidding because of the endless dodges we devise in avoiding the risk of faith in God. Forbidding because of our restless inventiveness in using whatever knowledge of "spirituality" we acquire to set ourselves up as gods. Forbidding because when we have learned to read and comprehend the work on the page, we find that we have hardly begun. Forbidding because it requires all of us, our muscles and ligaments, our eyes and ears, our obedience and adoration, our imaginations and our prayers.”

  13. The Forbidding Discipline “Our ancestors set this "forbidding discipline" (their phrase for it was lectio divina) as the core curriculum in this most demanding of all schools, the School of the Holy Spirit, established by Jesus when he told his disciples, "When the Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all the truth…he will take what is mine and declare it to you" (John 16:13-15; also 14:16; 15:26; 16:7-8). All writing that comes out of this School anticipates this kind of reading: participatory reading, receiving the words in such a way that they become interior to our lives, the rhythms and images become practices of prayer, acts of obedience, ways of love.” (p. 10)

More Related