
A Lectio Divina reflection on healing through brokenness — drawn from a burnt sandwich and a crumbled piece of carrot cake on a daughter’s birthday. Anchored in Julian of Norwich’s vision of a love that changes its working but never its love, this post traces the unexpected grace that arrives in our most ordinary…

Drawing on Karl Rahner’s image of the Silent Infinite, this Lectio Divina explores the ache of divine absence — the longing we feel when God seems far away, and the faith that sustains us through it. A meditation on the paradox at the heart of the contemplative life: that the love we feel is…

Drawing on Karen Kilby’s introduction to Karl Rahner, this Lectio Divina follows the image of divine breadcrumbs — the fleeting glimpses of truth God leaves before us and within us — as a meditation on how God speaks from all directions, calling us deeper into relationship, in spite of ourselves, and without ever stopping.

A Lectio Divina meditation on the ache of divine awakening — the experience of being drawn toward God, only to find him near yet unreachable, known yet beyond knowing. Drawing on John Calvin and the apophatic tradition, this piece traces the paradox of a love that gives itself freely while remaining just out of…