St. Catherine of Siena and Prayer

Prayer has been heavily on my mind these last few weeks.  It began on retreat when the question “how do you pray?” was posed and the group asked to respond.  Everyone who answered talked about the prayers they say each day such as the Rosary, Morning Offering, Divine Mercy Chaplet and other formal or memorized type prayers.

Then I read God’s word’s to Catherine of Siena “You see then, that perfect prayer is not arrived at through many words, but through affection of desire, when the soul raises itself to me, knowing itself and my mercy, seasoned one with the other.  Thus the soul will practice mental and vocal prayer together, of, even as the active and contemplative are one, so are they.”  God further goes on to explain vocal and mental prayer; vocal being the type of prayers I mentioned above while mental prayer is prayer without words, for being united with God.  He also explains that “mental prayer is reached by exercise and perseverance”  and that vocal prayer, practiced persistently will lead to “perfect mental prayer.”

There is much more about prayer, but I cannot quote the entire section.  What all this has led me to consider is this:  “Am I allowing myself time to practice mental prayer?”  Truthfully, I am not.  I do pray regularly and often, both prayers of the Church as well as personal prayers, but I spend too much time praying vocal prayers and not enough time praying mental prayers.  I think it’s time for a schedule adjustment.

Since we are in summer vacation time  and our schedules change, hopefully to be less ruled by time constraints and to do list, will you make time for mental prayer?  From what God told Catherine, it is important to our spiritual life and relationship with him.

Copyright 2015, Deanna Bartalini

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Deanna Bartalini

Deanna Bartalini

Deanna G. Bartalini, is a Catholic writer, speaker, and educator. She serves on the retreat team at Our Lady of Florida Spiritual Center. Deanna loves teaching about Catholicism and how it fits into our daily lives. She writes at DeannaBartalini.com, serves as the editor of the NewEvangelizers.com blog, and is a contributor there as well as at AmazingCatechists.com. Deanna contributed to A Catholic Mom's Prayer Companion published by Ave Maris Press. She is the author of “Invite the Holy Spirit into Your Life: Growing in Love, Joy, Peace, Patience, Kindness, Goodness, Faithfulness, Gentleness and Self-Control” published by Our Sunday Visitor. Deanna is available to lead retreats and speak at catechist and ministry events.

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