277 episodes

Carmelite Conversations focuses on the teachings of Carmelite Spirituality and its application to our busy lives. It provides advice on how to live the Carmelite call to combine contemplative prayer with service to the Church. Topics are especially pertinent to those who are Secular Carmelites or considering the call to Carmel.

Carmelite Conversations Carmelite Conversations

    • Religion & Spirituality
    • 4.8 • 35 Ratings

Carmelite Conversations focuses on the teachings of Carmelite Spirituality and its application to our busy lives. It provides advice on how to live the Carmelite call to combine contemplative prayer with service to the Church. Topics are especially pertinent to those who are Secular Carmelites or considering the call to Carmel.

    Marriage is Free, Full, Faithful, and Fruitful

    Marriage is Free, Full, Faithful, and Fruitful

    In marriage preparation, Catholic couples are instructed about the Covenant of Love.  The elements  in particular that are addressed are being free, full, faithful, and fruitful.  Deacon Rusty Baldwin, OCDS, analyzes these same elements as it relates to Carmelite spirituality.  It is very enlightening and enriching. 

    • 18 min
    Exploring Contemplation with St. John of the Cross (part 9)

    Exploring Contemplation with St. John of the Cross (part 9)

    The “Will” in the Prayer of Contemplation (Ch. 13 of the book). Soren Kierkegaard said, Purity of Heart is to Will One Thing. This one thing of course is God's Will. St. John of the Cross speaks about the activity of the will as much if not more than any of the other faculties of the human person. The other two are intellect and memory. But it is the will that most significantly drives human behavior. The will is perfected through the virtue of charity, which is to say, all our thoughts, words and actions must be simple expressions of love. In this program, St. John of the Cross's words explain how we must overcome the natural tendency on the part of our will to seek satisfaction in prayer. We must never try to recapture or recreate gratifying experiences in our time in prayer. This would only serve as an attempt on our part to create our own image of God, one we both could then relate to and find our own satisfaction in. The most appropriate explanation here is that we should never attempt to find ourselves in God, but rather we should seek to find God in us. This road to union with God requires a radical purification of all that our senses and imagination could create; God is beyond all that. The only way for us to encounter God is through a process of naked faith, a letting go of all within us that is not God. A deep poverty of spirit is necessary, we must empty ourselves of all self-love, we must follow the example of Christ crucified. For it is a truth of the mystical life that the degree to which our will is united with the will of God determines the depth of love within our soul. Books:  “Saint John of the Cross:  Master of Contemplation” by Fr. Donald Haggerty; Ignatius Press. “The Collected Works of St. John of the Cross” by John of the Cross; ICS Publications.
     
     

    • 1 hr
    Thinking about the Samaritan Woman During Lent

    Thinking about the Samaritan Woman During Lent

    During this Lenten season, and by focusing on a few important points in the scripture passage on the Samaritan Woman, Deacon Mark Danis uses the lense of contemplation to highlight the importance of coming to know the truth about ourselves so that by coming into the light, we may be transformed by God.

    • 8 min
    Exploring Contemplation with St. John of the Cross (part 8)

    Exploring Contemplation with St. John of the Cross (part 8)

    So often in the spiritual journey, we can run into roadblocks. We can mistakenly perceive that we have gotten off course, and we might immediately seek to turn back to find the right path again. However, if we are walking the path of contemplation, there will most certainly be times of darkness, instances where we may feel we have done something wrong, and where we are no longer experiencing the satisfactions we once knew in prayer. It is in these times when we need to continue our prayer with a deeper degree of faith and even a more intense desire to encounter God. At this more advanced stage of the spiritual journey, God is intentionally withholding the experience of His presence so that He can do a deeper work of purification within our souls. In addition, He is asking us to practice a purer faith, and to allow Him to do this work in us. This conversation walks through the experience of this phase of prayer, and Mark and Frances describe how the soul should respond when God is calling it to this new and deeper encounter.
     
     Books: 
    “Saint John of the Cross:  Master of Contemplation” by Fr. Donald Haggerty; Ignatius Press.
    “The Collected Works of St. John of the Cross” by John of the Cross; ICS Publications.

    • 1 hr 10 min
    Exploring Contemplation with St. John of the Cross (part 7)

    Exploring Contemplation with St. John of the Cross (part 7)

    If you feel as though you have reached a plateau in your prayer life, or after many years of active prayer, you feel as though you are suddenly stuck, it may be the Lord is calling you to a deeper encounter with Him. The spiritual life is not static, it moves through different phases. And, like any relationship, if it is going to continue to grow, there must be changes in the way we approach prayer. There eventually comes a time in our prayer life when the Lord takes a more active role, and He needs us to begin to detach ourselves from our usual way of finding Him in prayer. This is a process of the Lord moving from our more comfortable and active practice of meditation, to a more destabilizing but interior practice of contemplation. Our primary response must be surrender and receptivity. In this next phase of the journey to God, we must be willing to allow Him to draw us toward Himself, into a place of quiet serenity. This conversation outlines both the prerequisites for this movement and the disposition the soul must develop in order to continue to make progress.
     
    Books: 
    “Saint John of the Cross:  Master of Contemplation” by Fr. Donald Haggerty; Ignatius Press.
    “The Collected Works of St. John of the Cross” by John of the Cross; ICS Publications.
     
     
     

    • 49 min
    Interior Castle (part 12): Seventh Dwelling Place; Ch. 1-2: The Grand Entrance and Spiritual Marriage

    Interior Castle (part 12): Seventh Dwelling Place; Ch. 1-2: The Grand Entrance and Spiritual Marriage

    What is like to enter into the 7th Dwelling Place?  What was it like for St. Teresa?  Then we turn to a discussion about spiritual marriage.  We focus on what this experience/union with God was like for St. Teresa.  These chapters truly help us to have Holy Amazement!
     
    RESOURCES:
     “Interior Castle, Study Guide, 2nd Edition” by St. Teresa of Avila; Translated and Prepared by Kieran Kavanaugh, OCD; ICS Publications.
    “The Collected Works of St. Teresa of Avila,” Vol. 1 (includes “The Book of Her Life, Spiritual Testimonies, Soliloquies”) by St. Teresa of Avila, Translated by Kieran Kavanaugh, OCD and Otilio Rodriguez, OCD; ICS Publications.
    “The Ordinary Path to Holiness” by R. Thomas Richard, PhD; St. Pauls, 2003.
    “Journey into Divine Intimacy with St. Teresa of Avila” by Sr. Leslie Lund, OCDH; Carmelite Sisters of Mary Publishers, 2019.
    “The Interior Journey Toward God:  Reflections from Saint Teresa of Avila,” by John Paul Thomas; My Catholic Life! Inc., 2022.
    “I Want to See God” by P. Marie Eugene, OCD; Christian Classics.
    “The Spiritual Life:  A Treatise on Ascetical and Mystical Theology” by Adolph Tanquerey, SS, DD; Tan Books.
    “Divine Intimacy” by Fr. Gabriel of St. Mary Magdalen, OCD; Tan Books.
     
     

    • 1 hr 12 min

Customer Reviews

4.8 out of 5
35 Ratings

35 Ratings

Runholy ,

Thank You

Thank you for giving a modern and practical framework for those drawn to the contemplative life, but not sure how to navigate in this age. I love Fire Within, Interior Castle, and St. John of the cross. Let me say, I am not catholic so imma little lost on some of these. But nevertheless, it has been the most helpful source I’ve been able to find to serve as a companion to the writings of this great man and woman of God.

AnyNameWillDo.... ,

Great content but sound quality lacking

Good sound quality makes the difference between the listener hearing and understanding, or becoming distracted and discouraged.

This content is very much needed in this day and age. I write to not be critical but to encourage your work in this podcast. Many blessings.

Top Podcasts In Religion & Spirituality

In These Times with Rabbi Ammi Hirsch
Stephen Wise Free Synagogue
The Bible in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz)
Ascension
The Bible Recap
Tara-Leigh Cobble
Girls Gone Bible
Girls Gone Bible
BibleProject
BibleProject Podcast
WHOA That's Good Podcast
Sadie Robertson Huff

You Might Also Like

CarmelCast
ICS Publications
Pints With Aquinas
Matt Fradd
Godsplaining
Dominican Friars Province of St. Joseph
The Liturgy of the Hours: Sing the Hours
Paul Rose
The Thomistic Institute
The Thomistic Institute
The Word on Fire Show - Catholic Faith and Culture
Bishop Robert Barron