
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


(Please excuse the email earlier today, which led to a dead end!)
In this episode, I offer an overview of the mystical path as I conceive it, beginning with what I call Beginner’s Bliss. This is a phase at the beginning of the awakened life where we may experience periods of spiritual happiness and ecstasy, known as “sensible consolation” in Catholic mystical theology.
Following Beginner’s Bliss is the Night of the Senses, which the first great experience of purgation. The beginning of this stage is marked by a sudden cessation of sensible consolations. The spiritual well runs dry, so to speak, leading the practitioner into the crucible of radical surrender to the divine. However, this transition eventually gives way to what St. Teresa of Avila called the Prayer of Quiet. Metaphorically, we can liken this subtle second awakening in the spiritual life to the first crocuses of spring poking through the winter snow.
If you liked this post, consider sharing it.
If you haven’t already subscribed, you can here:
More of my writing in written and spoken form is available on Amazon
By Kenneth Rose(Please excuse the email earlier today, which led to a dead end!)
In this episode, I offer an overview of the mystical path as I conceive it, beginning with what I call Beginner’s Bliss. This is a phase at the beginning of the awakened life where we may experience periods of spiritual happiness and ecstasy, known as “sensible consolation” in Catholic mystical theology.
Following Beginner’s Bliss is the Night of the Senses, which the first great experience of purgation. The beginning of this stage is marked by a sudden cessation of sensible consolations. The spiritual well runs dry, so to speak, leading the practitioner into the crucible of radical surrender to the divine. However, this transition eventually gives way to what St. Teresa of Avila called the Prayer of Quiet. Metaphorically, we can liken this subtle second awakening in the spiritual life to the first crocuses of spring poking through the winter snow.
If you liked this post, consider sharing it.
If you haven’t already subscribed, you can here:
More of my writing in written and spoken form is available on Amazon