Vocations
- Spiritual Direction
Spiritual direction is an interpersonal relationship in
which one person helps another to reflect on his experiences in the light of the Gospel
and Christian wisdom.

COME FOLLOW ME
| PRAYER FOR
DIRECTION My Lord God, I have no idea where I am going. I do not
see the road ahead of me. I cannot know for certain where it will end. Nor do I really
know myself, and the fact that I think that I am following your will does not mean that I
am actually doing so. But I believe that the desire to please you does in fact please you.
And I hope I have that desire in all that I am doing.
I hope that I will never do anything apart from that desire. And I know that if
I do this, you will lead me by the right road though I may know nothing about it.
Therefore will I trust you always though I may seem to be lost and in the shadow of death.
I will not fear, for You are ever with me, and You will never leave me to face my perils
alone.
Thomas Merton |

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What Is Spiritual Direction?
Spiritual direction is an interpersonal relationship in
which one person helps another to reflect on his experiences in the light of the Gospel
and Christian wisdom. Through this process, individuals are led and encouraged to discover
their unique call in life.
What Is the Role of a Spiritual Director?
A spiritual director is one who willingly walks this faith journey with another. A
spiritual director listens, encourages, challenges and prays with the individual who
freely shares the movements of the Spirit in his life.
Not everyone is in need of spiritual direction in every phase of life. But it is a
helpful means of discernment, especially when an individual is seeking to discover the
will of God in his life. A time of special direction may be when a person is searching to
discover how to live out his Christian call to service.
How do I find a Spiritual Director?
Though spiritual direction can and does occur within every community in the Church, it
is not always easy to find a spiritual director. Here are some general hints:
- Talk to your parish priest. He could give you the names of qualified priests, religious,
or lay people in the diocese whom you could contact.
- Retreat centers, college Newman Centers, and ministries to young adults are primary
places to receive support and a list of individuals engaged in spiritual direction.
- Offices of continuing education for priests, deacon formation programs, seminaries, and
renewal centers for religious may offer additional names.
What Should I Look for in Spiritual Direction?
A spiritual director can help you to be more aware of and respond to God's revelation
as you experience it affectively -- in your emotions, not just in your mind. Thus,
spiritual direction deals not only with the intellect, but the heart as well. In this
sense, it is concerned with the whole person.
A spiritual director can help you express your struggles, pain, joys, and gratitude,
and to share these with God; to notice God's presence in your life and your prayers; to
savor, relive, and respond to your experience of God; and, finally, to notice interior
changes and the effects these changes have on your relationships and your life. Such a
task is not easy, even though God is present and active in spiritual direction and,
indeed, is the primary spiritual director.
What Should My Relationship Be with My Director?
For you to share openly about intimate relationships such as those you have with the
people and the God you love, you must have a solid relationship with your spiritual
director. The following five qualities can help to solidify that relationship.
- COMPANIONSHIP. You meet your spiritual director as a
companion, not as a teacher, a guru or a problem-solver. As a midwife facilitates the
birth of a child, so a spiritual director accompanies you in the growth of your
relationship with God.
- EMPATHY. As a companion, a spiritual director
relates to you with empathy. In fact, authors on spiritual direction speak of "deep
empathy." By this they mean the spiritual director engages wholeheartedly in your
experience, striving to enter your world as if it is his own.
This empathetic presence means the director allows your struggles, joys, hopes, and
experiences of God to touch him affectively. To do that, among other things, a spiritual
director listens actively with compassion, not passively with detachment.
- CARE. A good spiritual director cares for you deeply
and shows it. The director's love, as God's love, can heal. Almost always such caring will
free you to share your spiritual life more openly, for the director's care evokes trust
and confidence from you. From the beginning you need to have the feeling that your
director considers what you are sharing to be precious and sacred. As your meetings
continue, the feeling of love and reverence should deepen.
- NATURALNESS. Look for a spiritual director who can
laugh or cry spontaneously when something you share calls for such a response. If you
sense your director is not natural, not relaxed, it will no doubt become a roadblock to
the free sharing necessary for fruitful spiritual direction.
- COMMITMENT. A director's commitment to you and to
your relationship is essential. There are going to be ups and downs in a spiritual
direction relationship. These are most likely to occur as you make changes and as you grow
which, remember, is the goal of your encounters. For successful spiritual direction, you
must know your director will stand with you in times of such stress.
The more deeply these five qualities of relationship--companionship, empathy, care,
naturalness, and commitment -- are present in spiritual direction, the more likely it will
achieve its primary purpose: helping you grow in a personal relationship with a loving
God. Don't overlook the fact that you also have responsibilities -- to be open, honest,
and committed to your own growth.
What Atmosphere Should I Expect in Spiritual Direction?
Your spiritual director strives to create an environment where you can notice more
clearly God's communication to you and your reaction to it. Primarily, the spiritual
director will do this in two ways: by fostering a contemplative atmosphere and by using an
evocative approach.
- CONTEMPLATIVE ATMOSPHERE.
Your spiritual director will seek to create an atmosphere
where you can look at, become absorbed in, relive, and respond to your experiences of God.
In doing this, the director will try to help you focus on how God is present in your life
and prayer and not on how you think God should be present or will be in the future.
For example, a director might ask, "When you pray, who
are you conscious of -- God as Father, Creator, Friend, Jesus, Holy Spirit?" Or,
"How does God seem to be present with you now in your life?" The director will
invite you to look at what is actually happening and to spend time reflecting on it.
EVOCATIVE APPROACH.
You can expect your director to use an evocative rather than a didactic approach. Your
director will strive to draw out what is happening in your relationship with God. The idea
here is that the director is trying to allow God to stir your mind and heart instead of
instructing you about God and spiritual matters.
A spiritual director taking a didactic approach might teach
you about God as a loving God. A director taking an evocative approach will help you to be
open to the experience of God's personal love for you. Think of the spiritual director as
a stagehand helping to set the stage for God's activity to take place.
Through an evocative approach your spiritual director allows
you to move at your own pace. Further, this approach enables the director to help you
notice and feel your interior reactions to God's communication and to share these feelings
with God. To a person who has suffered a painful loss, a director using the evocative
approach might say, "How do you feel as you sense God wanting to be involved with you
in your sorrow?" If the person responds, "I feel comfortable and grateful,"
the director might continue, "Did you think of sharing your gratitude with God?"
In this way, the director evokes a dialogue between the person and God that can continue
in the person's prayer.
A Sacred Gift
Spiritual directors offer a sacred gift by being a caring
companion and fostering a contemplative presence. If spiritual direction is done well, you
will receive the support you need to pay attention to and respond to God who is already
present and active in your life. What's more, it's very likely that your relationship with
God will grow. And that's a very good thing.
Sources:
L. Patrick Carroll and
Katherine M. Dyckman, "The Emergence of Spiritual Direction," PRAYING;
Spirituality for Everyday Living, March-April 1989, pp 5-8.
Maureen Conroy, "What to Look for in Your Spiritual Director," PRAYING: Spirituality for Everyday Living, January-February 1990, pp 9-11.
Questions for Prayer & Reflection
| Does it feel like there has to be more to life? Wondering why your
life has been so blessed?
Curious about prayer, church, service?
- Talk to a brother, sister or priest
- Get in touch with a Vocation Director
- For more information call:

1-800-2200TOR
Bro. David Liedl, T.O.R.
Vocation Director
St. Bridget Friary
3811 Emerson Avenue N
Minneapolis, MN 55412
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