Roman Catholic Spiritual Direction

Tag: Recommended Reading

Tattered Titles – And the winners are…

Posted on December 8th, 2011 by Dan Burke

A while back we asked you, “What are the most tattered titles on your nightstand?” You answered with vigor and the responses were so numerous that we thought it might be helpful to summarize what our readers recommended. One of our amazing volunteers compiled every response and then put them into a spreadsheet. I was fascinated, surprised, and delighted to see how the top ten list emerged. The top three were 1) the Bible, 2) the Liturgy of the Hours, and 3) the Catechism of the Catholic Church. Here’s the top five after the top three:

  1. The Imitation of Christ – Thomas A Kempis
  2. The Collected Works of St. Teresa of Avila – St. Teresa of Avila
  3. Abandonment to Divine Providence – Fr. Jean-Pierre de Caussade
  4. The Better Part – Fr. John Bartunek
  5. Divine Intimacy – Fr. Gabriel of St. Mary Magdalen

So, there you have it. The next list reflects those books that had more than one mention. From the standpoint of the sheer number of votes to any one author (across multiple titles), St. Teresa of Avila gets the top prize.

  • Story of a Soul – St. Therese of Lisieux
  • Introduction to the Devout Life – St. Francis de Sales
  • Diary of St. Faustina – St. Faustina
  • Complete works of St. John of the Cross – St. John of the Cross
  • Consoling the Heart of Jesus – Michael Gaitley
  • Interior Castle – St. Teresa of Avila
  • Return of the Prodigal Son – Henri Nouwen
  • My Daily Bread (devotional)
  • I Believe in Love Jean – C.J. d’Elbee
  • The Fire Within – Fr. Thomas Dubay
  • The Fulfillment of All Desire – Ralph Martin
  • True Devotion/Total Consecration to Mary – St. Louis Grignion de Monfort
  • Life of Christ – Fulton J. Sheen
  • Jesus of Nazareth Book 1 – Pope Benedict
  • Daily Roman Missal
  • Revelation of Divine Love – Julian of Norwich
  • The Secret of the Rosary – St. Louis Grignion de Monfort
  • Drinking from a Dry Well – Thomas Green
  • When the Well Runs Dry – Thomas Green
  • Man’s Search for Meaning – Frankl
  • The Way of Perfection – St. Teresa of Avila
  • The Great Divorce – C.S. Lewis
  • Life of the Beloved – Henri Nouwen
  • He and I – Gabrielle Bossi
  • In Conversation with God – Francis Fernandez Carvajal
  • Theology of the Body – John Paul II

The remainder of the recommendations all had one vote each. If you would like to see all the other book recommendations you can check out the combox of the original post and a few other posts we have done to provide recommendations for you.

What are the most tattered titles on your nightstand?

Posted on October 27th, 2011 by Dan Burke

If you were stuck on a desert island alone but somehow could have just a few books dropped into the sand pit next to your tent, which ones would they be? Which books has God most used to turn your heart towards Him?

Here’s my list:

  1. Scripture/Catechism (yes, I cheated but just a little)
  2. Interior Castles – St. Teresa of Avila/All St. Teresa’s Writings
  3. Abandonment to Divine Providence – Father Jean-Pierre de Caussade
  4. The Fire Within – Father Thomas Dubay
  5. Searching for and Maintaining Peace – Father Jacques Phillippe

Tell us your first name, location (e.g. Betty from Sydney, Australia), and then your top three to five books that you have read or regularly re-read for spiritual sustenance.

IMPORTANT FRUSTRATION AVOIDANCE NOTICE: I have not done this for a long time but I know that there will be folks who break the rules (much worse than I did) and give a list of thirty books (these are usually the same folks who don’t read the posts but still strongly disagree with whatever they say). This really defeats the purpose and your post won’t make it through moderation which will only require you to go back to your books to find some peace after all that work goes to waste.

 

What is “spiritual reading” and how do busy people find time for this?

Posted on August 23rd, 2010 by Father John Bartunek

"Prayer" by Itzhak TordjmanQ: Dear Father John, My spiritual director recommended that I do some spiritual reading.  He said spiritual reading is just reading about spiritual things.  I don’t have a lot of extra time, and I am finding it hard to motivate myself to squeeze this new obligation into my schedule – it’s hard enough for me to get my daily meditation in!  Can you give me some advice?

A: It sounds like you have found a wise spiritual director.  If daily meditation is like the bread-and-butter of your spiritual diet, spiritual reading is your multi-vitamin supplement.  First let’s reflect on why that is the case, then we can make some practical recommendations for squeezing it into your schedule.

What Is Spiritual Reading?

Spiritual reading consists of reading something that explains some aspect of Catholic truth in an attractive, enriching way.  Its function is to help reinforce and deepen our Christian view of ourselves and the world around us.  In previous eras, popular culture itself was imbued with the Christian world view, so even popular books and dramas would reinforce the Christian value system.  But now that is not the case.  Instead, our minds are flooded every day by messages (advertisements, films, TV shows, news, music) that directly contradict the Christian world view.  That will have its effect on how we think and what we value.  In fact, this is one of the reasons the Church is suffering so much from so-called cafeteria Catholics.  They get their Catholic formation from secular sources (The New York Times, Newsweek…), and so they simply can’t understand why the Church would ever be against such popular and seemingly reasonable propositions like artificial contraception, artificial reproduction, and gay marriage.  Because of this ongoing flood of secular ideals, we have to consciously nourish our minds with authentic Christian teaching in order to avoid being poisoned.  That’s what spiritual reading can do.

Spiritual reading is either instructive or refreshing.  It either informs our minds so that we learn to think and understand more and more in harmony with Revelation, or it refreshes what we already know/have learned by making it shine out more clearly once again.  In either case, it counteracts the seductive, secularizing messages that saturate our cultural atmosphere.  This is why it’s such an important spiritual discipline.  It plants seeds of Christian truth in your mind, and they grow and germinate in your subconscious as you go about your daily business.  These seeds often flower during your daily prayer and meditation; in fact, spiritual reading frequently provides topics, ideas, or insights that are excellent material for Christian meditation.

Getting Practical

Spiritual reading differs from plain reading not only in the content, but also in the method.  You don’t need to spend a lot of time doing spiritual reading; fifteen minutes a day is fine.  And you don’t need to read fast. The idea is simply to taste, chew on, and swallow some healthy Catholic concepts every day.  The difference between spiritual reading and meditation is the end result. The goal of your meditation is to converse with the Lord about what matters to him and what matters to you.  The reflection and consideration that forms part of your meditation is meant to spur that conversation in your heart.  The goal of spiritual reading is to inform your mind; it doesn’t finish with a prayerful conversation (though that can sometimes pop up spontaneously, which is fine!).

A lot of the books we have been recommending on this Web site are prime material for spiritual reading.  But if you’re not a reader, or if you think you don’t have time, you can also get creative.  Good Catholic novels (novels imbued with a Catholic world view, where characters exemplify Christian virtue in a realistic but inspiring way) can serve as a kind of spiritual reading.  Listening while you drive or exercise to recordings of spiritual talks, homilies, or conferences (or books on tape, or even good Catholic podcasts) can also do the trick.

The point here is that we all need to be always growing in our knowledge of the faith, because if we are not growing, we’re withering.

Yours sincerely in Christ, Fr John Bartunek, LC, ThD

PS: The beautiful painting is entitled” Prayer” by Itzhak Tordjman