Lectio divina is "letting our Divine Friend speak to us through his inspired and inspiring Word," according to M. Basil Pennington, the late priest, retreat master, and prominent lecturer in the Centering Prayer movement. This ancient Christian practice requires faith, humility, openness, and fidelity. Father Pennington sets the process of praying the Scriptures in the context of meditation, contemplation, compassion, and action. He calls it "a way of friendship" wherein we pay attention to "the love letters from the Lord." Lectio, as a satisfying mental and emotional experience, can be enhanced by reading different translations of the Bible, using commentaries, participating in Bible study groups, and using the resources of Scripture-oriented websites.
Thomas Merton's Poetics of Self-Dissolution
Sonia Petisco Martínez
bookThe Cloud of Unknowing
Anonymous
bookThe Enneagram
Richard Rohr, Andreas Ebert
bookThe Heart of the World
Thomas Keating
bookTo Speak Well Of God : An Exposition of the Book of Job
John A. Pople
audiobookOrthodoxy
G. K. Chesterton
audiobookbookBetween Heaven and Mirth : Why Joy, Humor, and Laughter Are at the Heart of the Spiritual Life
James Martin
audiobookThe Sign of Jonas
Thomas Merton
audiobookThe Dark Night of the Soul
St. John of the Cross
bookThe Cloud of Unknowing : Must Read Classics
Anonymous
bookMeister Eckhart's Sermons
Meister Eckhart
audiobookThe Jesuit Guide to (Almost) Everything : A Spirituality for Real Life
James Martin
audiobook