Wednesday, 8 April 2026

Living in the Presence of God The Everyday Spirituality of Brother Lawrence - John J. Kirvan - Great Spiritual Teachers Series

Living in the Presence of God The Everyday Spirituality of Brother Lawrence
Great Spiritual Teachers
John J. Kirvan
ISBN 9780877936015
ISBN 0877936013

Living in the Presence of God The Everyday Spirituality of Brother Lawrence - John J. Kirvan - Great Spiritual Teachers Series

This is the sixteenth volume in the Great Spiritual Teachers series I have read, It is one of the ones that is currently out of print. It is one of the oldest titles in the series, it was originally released in 1997, and I believe it was not part of either rebranding’s the series has gone through. Two Years ago I read my first book in the series, it was Born to Do This: 30 Days with Joan of Arc by Jaymie Stuart Wolfe, and loved it and the concept of the series. I have read one almost every month since that first one, and if I can track down all the out of print, will do so until I finish all 24 released to date in the series. This one was harder to track down but well worth the effort.

The description of this volume states:

“Living in the Presence of God is a thirty-day spiritual journey based on the classic work of Brother Lawrence, The Practice of the Presence of God. For over three centuries those who have pursued their soul’s dreams amidst unremitting demands on their time have welcomed the wisdom of this simple Carmelite cook and sandal-maker. Discover how Brother Lawrence can guide you in the midst of the hectic pace of your life.

If I were a preacher I would, above all other things preach the practice of the presence of God. For there is nothing in the world sweeter or more delightful than a continual conversation with God. Brother Lawrence.”

Another states:

“This book maps out a thirty-day spiritual journey based on the classic work of Brother Lawrence, The Practice of the Presence of God. Discover how Brother Lawrence's insights can guide you in the midst of the hectic pace of your life.”

About the series we are informed:

“Each book in the Great Spiritual Teachers series provides a month of daily readings from one of Christianity's most beloved spiritual guides. For each day there is a brief and accessible morning meditation drawn from the mystic's writings, a simple mantra for use throughout the day, and a night prayer to focus one's thoughts as the day ends. These easy-to-use books are the perfect prayer companion for busy people who want to root their spiritual practice in the solid ground of these great spiritual teachers.”

I believe there are 17 volumes in this series currently in print, but only 15 of those have digital editions. There are also a number that are currently out of print, The oldest I have seen are from the late 1080’s and it looks like they went through a rebranding and format change in the mid 00’s, and they have undergone yet another rebranding in the 2020’s including some new titles available in the series. I must admit I do not recall running across this series prior to that first volume on Joan. I have however added all of them to my ‘to be read list’. I love the most recent rebranding, and hope Ave Maria completes the rebranding across all volumes, and brings back into print some of the volumes currently not available; specifically the volumes on John of the Cross, Evelyn Underhill, Mother Theresa and others. This specific volume was released in 2021, making it one of the oldest in the series. 

The sections in this volume are:

Brother Lawrence 
How to Pray This Book 
Thirty Days with Brother Lawrence 
One Final Word 

While reading this I numerous passages, some of them are:

“If I were a preacher I would, above all other things, preach the practice of the presence of God. For there is nothing in the world sweeter or more delightful than a continual conversation with God. I would advise the whole world to take it up, so necessary do I consider it, and so easy.”

“There is something deeply encouraging and reassuring about a spirituality born in the steamy air of a kitchen and honed at a shoemaker's bench. It carries no trace of a hothouse world of spiritual luxury, exotic experience and leisure for the soul. It blossoms in a world where time is itself a luxury and the only space is where you find yourself.”

“He began by reading all the right spiritual books, but each, he said, sent him off in a different direction, confusing his search for God rather than aiding it. So out of sheer need-and deep insight – he reduced his spiritual life to setting out to love God above all else, nurturing that love by consciously staying in God's presence, thinking about God as often as possible, and praying all the while he fulfilled the pedestrian but life-supporting duties of a cook and sandal- maker.”

“In over three centuries there have been hundreds of editions in many languages of the work generally called The Practice of the Presence of God. It is not a book conceived and written by Lawrence, but a compilation of various materials. As a result, one edition can vary quite greatly from another in its contents. Generally speaking, you will find the sixteen letters from Lawrence to persons seeking his spiritual advice. There is also a gathering of maxims in which Lawrence sums up in his own words the basics of a spiritual life lived in the presence of God. You may also find a eulogy composed in the year following his death by someone who had great access to Lawrence while he was alive.”

“The thirty meditations in this book are designed to provide a concentrated, meditative exposure to the principle ideas that characterized the life and teachings of Brother Lawrence. Any one meditation may bring together passages from several sources and each has been composed in the first person so that Lawrence is presented as speaking directly to you, a seeker after his hard won wisdom.”

“A word of advice: read slowly. Very slowly. The meditation has been broken down into sense lines to help you do just this. Don't read just to get to the end, but to savor each part of the meditation. You never know what short phrase, what word, will trigger a response in your spirit. Give the words a chance. After all, you are not just reading this passage, you are praying it. You are establishing a mood of serenity for your whole day. What's the rush?”

“Forgive my sins.
Accept all that I am,
all that I could be,
that in return
I might have nothing but you,
only you,
all of you.”

“Without the continuous help of God
we cannot escape the dangers
that abound in this life.
So how can you expect his continuous help
unless you pray for it continually?
But how can you pray to him continually
unless you are in his presence?
And how can you be in his presence
unless you think of him often?
And how can you think of him often
unless you develop
the habit of living in his presence?”

“Stay with me Lord
as another day living in your presence
fades into darkness
and silence.”

“Walk with God
in simple faith,
with humility and with love,
and try diligently
to do nothing and think nothing
that would displease hi1n.
Make it your goal to persevere
simply and solely in his presence,
maintaining
habitual,
silent,
and secret
conversation of your soul with God.
And trust that when you have done
all you can do,
he will do
what is best for you.”

“There is no great art or science
to living in the presence of God.
You need only a heart
determined to apply itself
to no one or no thing but God.”

“The key to living in the presence of God
is putting behind you everything
that you realize is not leading to him.
Only then will you become aware of
his presence within you.”

“My mind wanders.
So will yours.
But do not allow yourself
to become upset and worried.
Rather go on working
to keep out of your mind
anything and everything
that might interrupt
your sense of his presence,
your thoughts of him.”

“Prayer is nothing else
but being aware of the presence of God.
It does not end
when the appointed times for "prayer" have passed.
For we pray whenever we do our ordinary tasks,
not with a view of pleasing others,
but as far as we are capable,
in order to please God.”

“All the fine speeches I hear about God,
everything I have read about him,
all that I have come to feel about him,
have never been enough to satisfy me.”

“This is the time
to make good and effective
acts of resignation to his will,
for even one such act
could lead to spiritual growth.”

“For despite my sinfulness
you will, I know and trust,
continue to bestow
your blessings on me.
Help 1ny unbelief.
Replace my fear with joy.”

“Let your infinite graciousness
fill the night,
hearing my prayers before they are said,
knowing what I want and need
before I know myself.”

“Let us make way for grace.
And let us not lose any time.
For we know not
how much time is left to us.”

“For in whatever place I find myself,
I can always do little things,
indeed all things,
for the love of God.
So can you.”

“So if you cannot serve him
where you are,
you will serve him
where he wants you to be.”

“If you turn inward
and faithfully practice the presence of God
it is possible
that your soul will become so intimate with God
that you will find yourself
spending practically all your time
in one continual act of prayer.”

Each day follows the same format with three main sections:

MY DAY BEGINS: “As the day begins set aside a quiet moment in a quiet place to do the reading provided for the day

The passages are short; they never run more than a couple of hundred words. They have been carefully selected, though, to give a spiritual focus, a spiritual center to your whole day. They are designed to remind you, as another day begins, of your own existence at a spiritual level. They are meant to put you in the presence of the spiritual master who is your companion and teacher on this journey. This is especially true of this journey with Catherine of Siena. The readings are her report of God’s words to her, God’s side of the dialogue. And since the purpose of the passage is to remind you that at every moment during you are in the presence of a God who invites you continually, but quietly, to live in and through him, what better source than the words of God himself?”

ALL THROUGH YOUR DAY: “Immediately following the day’s reading you will find a single sentence, a meditation in the form of a mantra, a phrase meant as a companion for your spirit as it moves through a busy day. Write it down on a 3" x 5" card or on the appropriate page of your daybook. Look at it as often as you can. Repeat it quietly to yourself, and go on your way.

It is not meant to stop you in your tracks or to distract you from responsibilities but simply, gently, to remind you of the presence of God and your desire to respond to this presence.”

MY DAY IS ENDING:This is a time for letting go of the day, for entering a world of imaginative prayer … This exercise is not meant to last more than a few minutes. End it when you are comfortable doing so. It has two parts. The first, in keeping with Catherine’s model, is a personal response to the words spoken by God in the day’s reading. Just as God has spoken to you, so you speak to God. Second, you are invited to turn to the familiarity of a prayer based on Catherine’s own words. It is an act of trust and confidence, an entryway into peaceful sleep, a simple evening prayer that gathers together the spiritual character of the day that is now ending as it began—in the presence of God.

It is a time for summary and closure.”

A sample day is:

DAY 13
 My Day Begins 

When you pray,
don't multiply your words.
Many words and long speeches
are an excuse for your mind to wander.
Instead, present yourself to God
like a speechless beggar
at a rich man's gate.
Your only task is
to stay in the presence of God.

But when you pray,
if your mind does wander from God,
do not get upset.
Trouble and disquiet
are more likely to distract your soul
than bring it back to prayer.
Tranquillity is the key.
Just persevere
and God will have pity on you.

All Through The Day

Just persevere.

My Day Is Ending

Stay with me Lord
as another day living in your presence
fades into darkness
and silence.

Now is not the time
to search for words,
or to conjure up great thoughts,
but for silence.
I am a speechless beggar
at a rich man's gate.
My only task is
to stay in your presence.
Hear, I beg you,
what I cannot say,
what I need not say.”

I wanted to share the One Final Word section:

“Towards the end of his life, looking back over decades of single minded attention to the presence of God, Brother Lawrence confessed to being surprised:

I came to the monastery these many years ago
thinking that I would pay
for my awkwardness and faults
by sacrificing to Cod
my life and all its pleasures.
But God has disappointed me.
I have n1et with nothing
but satisfaction.

You can expect the same.

God always surprises, never disappoints, whatever spiritual path you take, whether it is that lived and recommended by Brother Lawrence or by some other great spiritual teacher.

If you decide that the path of Brother Lawrence is one that you wish to follow more closely and deeply, read and study the entire text of The Practice of the Presence of God, one that contains his letters, his maxims and other supplementary material.

You may, however, decide that his experience has not helped you. There are many other teachers. Somewhere there is the right teacher for your own, very special, absolutely unique journey of the spirit. You will find your teacher; you will discover your path.

We would not be searching, as St. Augustine reminds us, if we had not already been found.”

I really loved this volume and really wish it was in print and available digitally. I know a half dozen people I would give it to immediately! And that final section or something like it is in all the volumes. I hope those quotes and the sample days give you a feel for this excellent volume. I am very thankful I was able to track a copy of this one down. I have been reading The Practice of the Presence of God, for over thirty years now, since I first encountered it in Campus Ministry. It was really inspiring and encouraging to read this volume. It draws heavily from Brother Lawrence’s own words.

I have benefited from every volume I have read and I have completed more than half of the series. I have now read 16 volumes in this series, and currently working on a seventeenth I can state this is another great offering in the series. I find that some speak to me more than others. I can also state I benefited from the month with each person being profiled. And if I went back and did a volume again at a different point or season in life I might interact with it differently. And if this became available digitally would be one of the first I returned to after finishing them all. I already plan to circle back to both this volume and the volume on Joan and reread them once I have completed the series.

This is a great read, it is one I really enjoyed reading. I can easily recommend this volume, if you can track it down, and the series as a whole, and I look forward to reading others in the series. If you have not given any in this series a try this would be an excellent starting point or whichever one seems to call to you.

Note: This book is part of a series of reviews: 2026 Catholic Reading Plan

Great Spiritual Teachers Series from Ave Maria Press




Books in the Great Spiritual Teachers Series:
Abide in love: the Gospel spirituality of John the Evangelist – John Kirvan 
Fear Not the Night - John of the Cross and John Kirvan 
God Awaits You Based on the Classic Spirituality of Meister - Richard Chilson 
Grace Through Simplicity - Evelyn Underhill and John Kirvan 
Love Without Measure - Mother Teresa and John Kirvan 
That you may have life: let the mystics be your guide for Lent - John Kirvan 
Where Only Love Can Go - The Cloud of Unknowing and John Kirvan  

Tuesday, 7 April 2026

Praying the Stations with Teenagers - Gwen Costello

Praying the Stations with Teenagers
Gwen Costello
ISBN 9780896223868

Praying the Stations with Teenagers - Gwen Costello

Recently I went through the collection of Stations I had and found I had about 10 I have never read or reviewed and have made the commitment to try and make it through them this Lent, and I added 2 as I have been reading, praying, and reviewing my way through the collection. Of the 10 I started with 6 were from Twenty-Third Publications, and while researching this review I found a few others I am interested in.

This is the fourth of the Stations of the Cross I have read from Twenty-Third Publications in this series, I have read a few not part of this series from them as well. I really loved Praying the Stations Mary’s Way of the Cross, by Richard G. Furey CSsR and picked up several others in this series. But I was fairly disappointed in Praying the Stations with Saint John XXIII by Bill Huebsch; so had sort of ignored them the past few years. This year I will try and get through the 6 I have and then see about tracking down some others that piqued my interest. It appears versions of this devotion in this series have come in and out of print for years. I believe I have found 20 titles in this series, some out of print long enough I cannot find good cover images. 

This version of this devotion has been through a number of editions, I believed first published in 1988, the edition I read was a 6th printing from 2008. And there is even a more recent rebranded edition available on the Twenty-Third Publications site.

The description of this booklet states:

“This acclaimed booklet addresses many of the challenges teens confront today as they follow Jesus in their daily lives: peer pressure, drugs, alcohol, prejudice, and so on. A true conversion experience that has been widely used with 7th through 12th graders.”

This volume begins with:

Before You Begin...

“If anyone wants to come with me, he or she must put aside self-interest, and then pick up the cross and follow me. Pursuing self-interest leads to nothing in the end, but putting aside self-interest for my sake leads to everything.’
Matthew 16:24 (adapted)

Jesus spoke these words to his first followers. And now he is speaking them to you. Yes, you. Though “only a teenager,” you are a person of great worth in Jesus’ eyes, so great that he is inviting you to follow him.

And how might you follow Jesus? First of all by putting aside your own selfish interests. This requires looking around you at other people and putting their needs before your own. By caring for others and taking responsibility for them you are picking up the cross to follow Jesus.

In the following pages, walk the Stations of the Cross with Jesus. Open your mind and heart and allow him to speak to you, to teach you. In doing so you will lose nothing. Indeed, you will gain everything.”

A sample Station for this edition:

Third Station
Jesus Falls the First Time

The worst thing that can happen to us is to fall flat on our faces in front of others: when we do or say something stupid, when we're not accepted for who we are, when we're laughed at for not looking right or dressing right. To be shut out is the worst way to fall flat. At school games or dances, we know there are kids who are on the outside looking in. But we don’t invite them in. What would our friends think? Jesus fell flat in front of the soldiers, in front of people who had believed in him, in front of his own mother. He was in this situation because he had spoken out and taken risks for others. Look where it got him. What must he have been thinking as he lost control and fell under the cross?

(Pause for silent reflection.)

Jesus, forgive us for the times we have shut others out and refused to help. Help us to be aware of their needs and to respond to them. Teach us how to follow you.”

The volume ends with:

An Easter Prayer

Jesus, we know that your story didn’t end on Good Friday. Your “failure” was turned into victory on Easter morning. “Jesus is not here,” your messenger said: “he has been raised from the dead.”

As your followers, we know that rejection, loss, even death and dying, don’t necessarily mean failure. With your help, we can move through these experiences toward new life and resurrection. We can be turned around—as you were. Give us the courage, please, to accept the reality that life will always have its bright sides and dark sides, its joys and sorrows. And help us to believe that God has good things in store for us, too.

Amen. Alleluia.”

Overall am impressed with the series, especially after this fourth volume, and will give others in the series a try. This one was released my final year of secondary school and I am sure it could have been used there for the benefit of many. This was a good stations of the cross. I have a few stations I return to again and again. I am always willing to give another version of this devotion a try. I wish the other in the series were available digitally. With my dual form of dyslexia I greatly prefer eBooks so I can change the font, font and page colour to make reading easier. 

I will read and review the others from the series I have tracked down and try to find the reaming few of the other volumes in the ‘Praying The Stations Series’ from Twenty-Third Publications. I try and pray a stations each Friday throughout the year, and every day during Lent. I do not see myself returning to this one often, even if a digital edition because available. But I did benefit from praying through it.

Note: This book is part of a series of reviews: 2026 Catholic Reading Plan!  For all Stations of the Cross review click here. 

Praying the Stations with Teenagers - Gwen Costello Rebranded

Praying the Stations with Teenagers - Gwen Costello sample 1

Praying the Stations with Teenagers - Gwen Costello sample 2

Praying the Stations with Teenagers - Gwen Costello sample 3

Books in the Praying The Stations With Series:
A Way of Reconciliation for Teens - Colleen Rainone 
Praying the Stations for Healing - David M. Knight 
Praying the Stations of the Cross for Seniors -  John van Bemmel 
Stations of the Cross for Older Adults - John Van Bemmel  
Praying the Stations for the Suffering, Ill, and Disabled - Holly B. Clark 
Praying the Stations of Mercy with Pope Francis - Bill Huebsch 
Praying the Stations Today’s Disciples - Sr. Christine Kreshko 
Praying the Stations with Catechists - Gwen Costello 
Praying the Stations with Children - Gwen Costello 
Praying the Stations with John Paul II – Bill Huebsch 
Praying the Stations with Pope Francis - Bill Huebsch 
Praying the Stations with Seniors – John Van Bemmel 
Praying the Stations with Young Children - Diane Abajian 
Stations of the Cross for Today's Disciples - Christine Kresho 
The Mystery of the Cross: Praying the Stations with Pope Francis - David M. Knight 
Walking the Via Dolorosa Today - Laurin J. Wenig 

Other Stations from Twenty-Third Publications:
A Mother's Way of the Cross - Deborah McCann 
A Personal Way of the Cross - Isaias Powers 
An Illustrated Stations of the Cross - James Nisbet 
Stations of Strength Praying the Stations of the Cross in Times of Suffering - Alice Camille 
The People of the Way of the Cross - Marci Alborghetti 
The Stations of the Resurrection - Sister Catherine Duenne 
The Way of the Cross - William V Coleman 
The Way of the Cross for Parents - Susan Jones 
Via Lucis The Way of Light: Praying the Stations of the Resurrection - Glenn Byer
Walking with Jesus on the Way to Calvary - Kathy McGovern 
Way of Cross Religion Teachers - Gwen Costello 
...

Praying the Stations with from Twenty-Third Publications

Monday, 6 April 2026

357 Sunset - Jude Hardin - The Jack Reacher Experiment Book 5

357 Sunset 
Jack Reacher Experiment Book 5
ISBN 9781984984333
ASIN B077TNNTBY

357 Sunset - Jude Hardin - The Jack Reacher Experiment Book 5

First I want to state I really enjoyed this book and look forward to the rest in the series and the other two Reacher Series Jude has penned. Second a few years ago I read my first Reacher novel. I had picked up one for my dad, and after giving the back a read, I grabbed the eBook for myself. In under a year I had read all the Reacher Novels in print and all the books in the Hunt for Jack Reacher by Diane Capri. Since then I have read 58 books in the Reacher universe and am expanding out to the three series by Jude Hardin now.

The description of this book:

“About The Jack Reacher Experiment series

Rock Wahlman: Forty-one years old, United States Navy Master at Arms, E-8, retired.

DOB 14 October 2057.

Grew up in an orphanage, recently discovered that he is the product of a human cloning experiment, an exact genetic duplicate of a former army officer named Jack Reacher.

Now someone wants all evidence of the experiment to be erased, which means that someone wants Wahlman to be erased.

He’s on the run, desperate to survive, desperate to learn the truth about why all this is happening…

Note: The use of the name Jack Reacher, along with the use of story situations and supporting characters from the Jack Reacher universe, authorized by Lee Child. While sometimes referenced in the context of the story, the Jack Reacher character remains offstage in Kill Shot: The Jack Reacher Experiment Book 4.”

This volume like some of the others begins with:

“Rock Wahlman: Forty-one years old, United States Navy Master at Arms, E-8, retired. DOB 14 October 2057. Grew up in an orphanage, recently discovered that he is the product of a human cloning experiment, an exact genetic duplicate of a former army officer named Jack Reacher. Now someone wants all evidence of the experiment to be erased, which means that someone wants Wahlman to be erased. He’s on the run, desperate to survive, desperate to learn the truth about why all this is happening…”

Based on the page count this volume is more of a novella, the book in this series are available as 9 stand-alone stories or in 3 omnibus editions. I will continue to read and review the stand-alone editions because that is how I started the series. Back to the book at hand. I used adaptive technology and listed to the volume before this while travelling, this one I worked through while home sick. 

Even death can’t keep Reacher down, in a manner of speaking. Rock Wahlman is a clone of Reacher, but he was not the only one. In the first volume, on the night his life goes sideways, he tries and saves a man after his rig goes off the road and into water. The man he pulls from the water looks just like him. Having been raised in an orphanage this raises some questions. After an attempt on his life, he starts putting together the pieces. His life may have been different than Reacher’s but his determination when he is threatened is the same. 

Wahlman Is working to find info he needs to clear his name, and get his life back. He now has plans and hopes for a life. He wants a home a family, things he had never desired before. But before that can happen he needs evidence on the corrupt general that is trying to have him taken out. And now is he not only running from a rogue element in the Military, and the New Orleans’s Police, he is now on the run from a professional tracker, that has been brought in as a subcontractor. But a subcontractor with his own plan and eye on the prize.

Much like his generic source material, trouble just seems to find Wahlman. And in this one it hits in triplicate. Can he keep all the lines of defence straight? Can he watch his back and work towards a future? To find out read this excellent novella!

This is another well written story. That stays true to the original character and universe. It is a fun read in a good series. Even if this volume had not been set in the Reacher Universe I would have enjoyed it. The fact that it is only adds to the mystique that is Jack Reacher. It was good read and leaves you desperate for the next instalment in this series. This is a book and series I can easily recommend to fans of Reacher or anyone who love a good action thriller.

Books by Jude Hardin:
Books in the Jack Reacher Experiment Series:
Redline
End Game
Ricochet
Gone
The Reacher Experiment Books 1-3 
The Reacher Experiment Books 4-6 
The Reacher Experiment Books 7-9
The Reacher Experiment: The Complete Series Books 1-9

The Reacher Code Series:
Timestream 1
Timestream 2
Timestream 3

Jack Reacher Files Series:
Fugative
Choke
Hostage
Velocity
The Girl from the Wrong Side of Cordial 

Nicholas Colt Series:
Pocket-47
Crosscut
Snuff Tag 9
Rattled
Colt
Key Death
Blood Tattoo
The Blood Notebooks
...

Nicholas Colt Crossover Books:
Racked (with J.A. Konrath)
Lady 52 (with J.A. Konrath)
Sycamore Bluff
...

Midnight Creek Series:
The Cold Gray Adiós
A Single Red Alibi
...

Stranded in the Old West:
Frifter
lawless
...

Pickin' & Grin Inn Mystery Series:
Dead Ain't Your Color 
Friends in Freshly Dug Places
...

iSEAL Series:
iSeal
iSEAL 2
...

Other Books:
Codename: Hollowpoint
   aka Fused
A Thin Ribbon of Smoke
   aka Witness
Rocked
   aka Cage Fight
Au Revoir from a Bridge to Nowhere 
Fire and Ice
Choke
The Blood Notebooks
...

Dead Ringer - Jude Hardin - Jack Reacher Experiment Books 1-9

Sunday, 5 April 2026

A prayer to Our Lady of Guadalupe

A prayer to Our Lady of Guadalupe
Prayer of the Day  

A prayer to Our Lady of Guadalupe

O Sacred Virgin of Guadalupe, show us that you are our Mother! Defend us in our temptations, console us in our griefs, and help us in all our needs! In danger, in sickness, in persecution, in bitterness, in abandonment, in the hour of our death, look upon us with compassionate eyes and never depart from us!

Amen. 
  
Note: Every so often I post a prayer I use as part of my daily prayers. I have been praying this one for a few years I do not recall where I originally came across it. 



Saturday, 4 April 2026

15 Days of Prayer with Thomas Merton - André Gozier

15 Days of Prayer with Thomas Merton
André Gozier
Victoria Hebert (Translator)
Denis Sabourin (Translator)
ISBN 9781565483309
ISBN 9780764804915
ASIN B00378LISA

15 Days of Prayer with Thomas Merton - André Gozier - rebranded Cover

Last year I stumbled upon a different volume in this series, 15 Days of Prayer with Saint Pier Giorgio Frassati by Père Charles Desjobert, OP, and really enjoyed it. I did some research on the series and this was the sixth volume I decided to work through. In my research to date there have been at least 40 volumes in this series. Many written in French and then translated, including this volume, this book was first published in French in 1996, the English edition appeared 1999. Then in 2010 the book and series were rebranded, at that time there was an eBook edition but it appears to not be available currently. 

I believe as of the writing of this review there have been 40 volumes in the series; the earliest I found was from 1999 through to a volume which was published in 2025. Only about a dozen seem to be in print currently and of those only a handful appears to have eBooks. With my dual form of dyslexia this is disappointing. I greatly prefer eBooks so I can change the font, and the colour of font and page to make reading easier. I have added all the eBook editions I could find to my wish list. About the Series we are informed:

15 Days of Prayer Series

 On a journey, it’s good to have a guide. Even great saints took spiritual directors or confessors with them on their itineraries toward sanctity. Now you can be guided by the most influential spiritual figures of all time. The 15 Days of Prayer series introduces their deepest and most personal thoughts.

This popular series is perfect if you are looking for a gift, or if you want to be introduced to a particular guide and his or her spirituality. Each volume contains:

• A brief biography of the saint or spiritual leader 
• A guide to creating a format for prayer or retreat
• Fifteen meditation sessions with reflection guides”

The description of this specific volume states:

“One of the most prolific Cistercian authors, Thomas Merton was also one of the most humane and engaging spiritual figures of the twentieth century. He was a man of paradoxes: of words and silence, a comtemplative involved in the fight for social justice, and a man of solitude who, by keeping himself in the background, sought to deepen the fundamental human experience. Ultimately, he was a man with only one goal: union with God and communion with the humankind. Enjoy your time with Thomas Merton and be prepared to be surprised as you journey with one of the most fascinating figures of our time.”

Another ends with the above plus:

“Spiritual journeys are best experienced with a guide. Now you can receive guidance from some of the seminal spiritual figures of all time. Each volume in the "15 Days of Prayer" series contains: a brief biography of the saint or spiritual leader introduced in that volume; a guide to creating a format for prayer and retreat; and, 15 meditations sessions with focus points and reflection guides.”

There is no ‘about the author’ section in the book or on the back. But we are informed on the page with the book description that:

“Andre Gozier is a Benedictine monk known for his many publications dedicated to the spiritual life, to liturgy, to monasticism and to interreligious dialogue. --This text refers to an alternate paperback edition.”

The chapters in this volume are:

How to Use This Book

How to Use This Book 
A Brief Chronology of Thomas Merton's Life 
A Few Notes About Thomas Merton 
Introduction 
1. A Conflicted Being 
2. A Convert 
3. A Chosen One 
4. A Monk 
5. A Hagiographer 
6. A Singer of Psalms 
7. A Poet 
8. A Protester
9. A Meditator 
10. A Spiritual Master
11. A Precursor of Interreligious Dialogue 
12. A Pioneer of Intermonastic Dialogue 
13. A Mystic 
14. An Apostle of Contemplation 
15. A Traveling Companion 
Notes 
Bibliography 
Also available in the “15 Days of Prayer” series:

I highlighted a few of passages while reading this volume some of them are:

“I don't want to speak to you as an author, or a narrator, not even as a philosopher, but simply as a friend. I would like to speak to you as your alternate self ... if you listen, you will hear things that will be said that perhaps are not written in this book. And that will be coming, not from me, but from the One who lives and speaks inside both of us.”

“All friendships help us cross to the other shore, to enter the Kingdom on the other side of space and time. This book is not about the worship of holy images, relics, or souvenirs, but is a means to receive God's message. Certain books are true friends, or at least true meeting places, authentic meetings.”

“In short, lectio divina or spiritual reading, which is held dearly in the monastic tradition. That is what Merton's works could bring to us.”

“His books are easy to read; their style is pleasant, never overblown. He writes simply, because he was a simple man, that is, unified. He is warm, he wants to take us along with him. He believes in what he says and writes. He may at times appear a little naive, over-simplifying things, but he does this because he loves his reader. He writes so that the reader may grow, to show one's seriousness as a person and as a son or daughter of God. He wants to reveal to the reader what God calls to, to invite him or her to an inner life, the true source of wisdom. That is the secret of Thomas Merton's influence.”

“He also discovered, when he entered the Trappists, that God loved him. He believed that we are loved, that is to say, that God changes death into life, and that we live for someone else.”

“We hope that the reader will enjoy his or her fifteen days of retreat by following Thomas Merton step by step. Our journey will be an effort to help each one of us reach our inner self.”

“There was a conflict inside Thomas Merton - and even more than one - that he learned to integrate, to overtake by his search for the absolute, to resolve by apostolic fruitfulness.”

“It was from the time of his entering the Trappists that he could begin to hope for a certain harmony, thanks to the Rule of Saint Benedict, because it placed his concrete life in agreement with his deep conviction: God's absolute.”

“It was only little by little that Merton understood that the desire to be a Carthusian was placed by God in his heart, not with a view to switching orders, but to interiorize it there where he was, to allow him to have a greater union with God and to have his books radiate this enlightenment.”

“In fact, it was his "inner monk" that allowed him to achieve a certain unity, as his inner struggle, conflicts, and contradictions were reconciled, pacified, little by little.”

“Curious about everything, he read a great deal, in particular French literature.”

“In 1942, he pronounced his first vows; he was ordained a priest in 1949. At the time of his solemn profession, which was before his ordination, he became known as Father Louis. From then on, he dedicated his life to prayer, contemplation, and his mission as a writer. He became Master of Novices, and grew more and more attached to his monastic vocation. In doing so, he became a much loved spiritual father.”

“Under the influence of the Holy Spirit, conversion is more a ripening and deepening of the inner self, rather than an external incident. Christ's increase in Merton's soul, as in all of us, was, then, a progressive one; it happened amidst battles, difficulties, and falls.”

“Similarly, along the road of our own life, events occur which may cause us either pain or pleasure. Usually, at first we don't understand why they are happening or what significance they hold for us. Like Merton, it often is only later that we discern Christ's presence, God's hand, in them. We then see them as a reward for having believed while we did not see.”

“Thomas Merton knew how to describe this, but he was often a little long-winded. Edith Stein (a Carmelite who died at Auschwitz and was canonized by Pope John Paul II in 1998) wrote about this in fewer words:”

“Merton does not dramatize this situation; he treats it with good sense and humor. To be sure, his conversion means an upheaval of his freewheeling ways which he abandons along with sin, and by which he, under the influence of the Holy Spirit, is fully welcomed into the kingdom of God.”

“Do I believe that God has a preference for me, that in some way God has called me and I have responded to that call? Do I believe that God is in relationship with me and desires to be an integral part of my life or do I believe that such a relationship is reserved for a chosen few? Do I understand my response to God's call as vocation?”

“Vocation being a central theme in Merton's work, we do well to examine it, beginning with his book No Man is an Island, which was first published in 1955.”

“A vocation comes to us from deep within ourselves. It allows us to discover who we arc and what place we occupy in the world and in history. It builds us up using the fragments of our inner self, of our life.”

“To be a monk is more than the physical experience of being, it is a core experience of life, it is a way of seeing, it is a chosen way to interpret life and to respond to life.”

“A constant tradition in the practice of the spiritual life is to look to the lives of the saints. These men and women, who are more like ourselves than we might first imagine, can be a source of inspiration for us. When we spend time with the life of a saint we do not look for the extraordinary but rather for the ordinary. We do so because it is in the ordinary, made extraordinary by a life of faith, that we may discover practical nourishment for our spiritual journey”

“For the saints to which we are attracted become the projections of our deepest spiritual self, that is to say, the best of our inner self. And then, they will teach us who we seek to be and how we must go about it, so as to seek enlightenment. The light of God comes to us filtered through them. Through them, the light is more available. Through them, it is more tangible.”

“Thomas Merton showed us, in his studies of the saints' lives, just how much they were revelations of a living God who enters our lives, our daily lives. He knows God through experience which is, above all, a knowledge of his mercy.”

“In his poems which express his yearning for God, Merton helps us discover incomparable beauty. Their enlightenment and music fill Merton's soul. He poured his life into them, molding his most personal feelings by recapturing the verses that the intoned psalm offered him.”

“Also, a poem is never a conclusion, it is always a beginning, an attempt to say the words, and it should lead to silence. Poetry is a type of experience that is like death because poetic language throws itself at the unspeakable things of our reality.”

“Did Merton really "see" that changes based solely on economic infrastructures simply aren't enough? The monk sought to change consciousness of human beings because that 1s what was polluted and confused.”

“Further, Merton taught and wrote nothing other than what he tried to live as a monk. So, as a result, it is understandable that we read in his books about his own spiritual experience in detail.”

“Having seen, however, the extensive mobility of cultures, we side with the specialists who believe that a great shock will occur: a confrontation between the religions of Buddhism, Islam, Hinduism, and Christianity. This confrontation will become the major problem of the coming years.”

“As we have seen, the work of the Gospel is to love our true selves ever more deeply and to help each other in a mutual way to deepen our faith. Christians know that if they have a great deal to give, they will also receive in return. They also know that there is still a great deal to recognize in and understand about Christ, the Word who enlightens every person who comes into this world.”

“If we are co-pilgrims with the others with whom we dialogue, we must bring to them the fullness of truth, the fullness of the revelation, because human persons define themselves, as we have seen, by the search for the ultimate. Pope John Paul II, following in the footsteps of Paul VI, strongly insisted on this dialogue of truth.”

“Thomas Merton read a great deal of the writings of Saint John of the Cross. In him he found a beacon to show the way to the Absolute.”

“Contemplation is the experience of being totally present to what you are doing at this very moment. If you are present to the now, and you are present in love, you are present to God.”

“He greatly liked the maxims of the Desert Fathers, the first monks who were full of sensible ideas and spirituality, and who gave their visitors certain "words for life," or wisdom of the desert.”

I hope those quotes give you a feel for this volume. I picked this volume because though I have had an off and on again encounter with Merton for almost 30 years now. I have read much by and about him, and even volunteered at The International Thomas Merton Society Conference, when I was a student. This was an interesting read and I loved the beginning but the further I got ... One of the big difference is of the 6 volumes in this series I have read most have fairly consistent page counts per day. They might vary by 1 or 2 pages, even accounting for different formats. This one however, they vary between 5 and 15 pages for a single day.

This is a good volume in an excellent series. Spending these 15 days with Thomas, was in some ways like a visit with an old friend. The written reflections and the discussion questions were engaging. I just really wish all of the 40 volumes were available as eBooks, I would work through them all if so.

A good read in a great series!

Note: This book is part of a series of reviews: 2026 Catholic Reading Plan!

15 Days of Prayer with Thomas Merton - André Gozier  - original cover

Books in the 15 Days of Prayer With Series:
Blessed Frédéric Ozanam - Christian Verheyde
Brother Roger Of Taize - Sabine Laplane
Charles de Foucauld - Michael Lafon 
Dietrich Bonhoeffer - Matthieu Arnold
Don Bosco - Robert Schiele
Henri Nouwen - Robert Waldron
Jean-Claude Colin - Francois Drouilly
Johannes Tauler - Andre Pinet
Meister Eckhart - André Gozier
Peter Joseph Triest - Brother René Stockman
Pierre Teilhard de Chardin - André Dupleix 
Saint Alphonsus Liguori - Jean-Marie Segalen
Saint Augustine - Jaime García
Saint Benedict - André Gozier
Saint Bernard - Pierre Yves Emery
Saint Catherine of Siena - Chantal van der Plancke 
Saint Clare of Assisi - Marie-France Becker
Saint Dominic - Alain Quilici 
Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton - Betty Ann McNeil
Saint Eugene de Mazenod - Bernard Dullier
Saint Faustina Kowalska - John Cleary
Saint Francis de Sales - Claude Morel
Saint Francis of Assisi - Thaddée Matura O.F.M.
Saint Jeanne Jugan - Michel Lafon
Saint John of the Cross - Constant Tonnelier
Saint Katharine Drexel - Leo Luke Marcello 
Saint Louis De Montfort - Veronique Pinardon
Saint Martín de Porres: A Saint of the Americas - Brian J. Pierce
Saint Philip Neri - Jean-François Audrain
Saint Teresa of Avila - Jean Abiven
Saint Therese of Lisieux - Victoria Hebert
Saint Thomas Aquinas - Suzanne Vrai and André Pinet
Saint Vincent de Paul - Jean-Pierre Renouard
The Curé of Ars - Pierre Blanc


15 Days of Prayer Series from New City Press