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Contemplative at Home
Lissy Clarke
40 episodes
2 weeks ago
Inspired by Lectio Divina and the Collatio, this podcast offers the listener sessions of guided, meditative, listening prayer around different passages of scripture.

Each episode will take you in to a deep place of listening in the Lord's presence where you will hear a gospel story read very slowly so that you can savour each word, imagine the scene vividly and perhaps even discern what the Holy Spirit is speaking into your own life through the text.

This prayer experience is ideal if you would like to interact with the Bible in a new way, deepen your prayer life, or understand Gods love for you more fully.

If you find Lectio Divina beneficial in a group but struggle to do it on your own, this podcast will provide the guidance you need.


Each episode will begin with a brief introduction to the text, guide the listener into a deep place of prayer, read the passage very slowly, twice, and then offer some questions for reflection or journaling.

For more information visit our website at contemplativeathome.com

I wish to thank and acknowledge Fr Finbarr Lynch SJ of Manresa House, Dublin who introduced and instructed me in the Collatio, from which all that I share with you in this podcast is derived.
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Christianity
Religion & Spirituality,
Spirituality
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All content for Contemplative at Home is the property of Lissy Clarke and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Inspired by Lectio Divina and the Collatio, this podcast offers the listener sessions of guided, meditative, listening prayer around different passages of scripture.

Each episode will take you in to a deep place of listening in the Lord's presence where you will hear a gospel story read very slowly so that you can savour each word, imagine the scene vividly and perhaps even discern what the Holy Spirit is speaking into your own life through the text.

This prayer experience is ideal if you would like to interact with the Bible in a new way, deepen your prayer life, or understand Gods love for you more fully.

If you find Lectio Divina beneficial in a group but struggle to do it on your own, this podcast will provide the guidance you need.


Each episode will begin with a brief introduction to the text, guide the listener into a deep place of prayer, read the passage very slowly, twice, and then offer some questions for reflection or journaling.

For more information visit our website at contemplativeathome.com

I wish to thank and acknowledge Fr Finbarr Lynch SJ of Manresa House, Dublin who introduced and instructed me in the Collatio, from which all that I share with you in this podcast is derived.
Show more...
Christianity
Religion & Spirituality,
Spirituality
Episodes (20/40)
Contemplative at Home
The Principle and Foundation : Lectio Divina : Teachings of St Ignatius

A 19-minute audio guided meditation on the Ignatian ‘Principle and Foundation,’ using Lectio Divina.



In his “Spiritual Exercises”, Ignatius invites us to consider who God is, who we are, and how we therefore invited to relate to God and all of the created order.



In the Principle and Foundation, with which you are invited to pray in this meditation, Ignatius assumes that the pilgrim is already comfortable with the fact that God is the source of all love, life, goodness and flourishing.



With this in mind, he infers that the path to human flourishing is to be as free and open to relationship with God as possible.



Therefore, he invites us to consider how our other relationships might be helping or hindering us on this path to flourishing. He invites us to be ‘indifferent’ to all created things – not with a lack of care – but with a mindfulness about our attachment, and how our attachment may be encouraging an increase in the flow of Divine Love in our lives, or hindering this flow.



Ignatius is big on discernment, and here we get one of his keys to good discernment: does it help or hinder the growth of my true aim: the love, service and praise of the Source of Life?



As you pray with this text, I’m not asking you to agree with it all, or even to fully wrap your head around it today. I’m simply offering these words to you as a potential vessel through which the Holy may have something to say to you.



I invite you to pray with an open heart.



Every blessing.



Today’s text:



“Human beings are created to praise, reverence and serve God our Lord, and by means of doing this to save their souls.



The other things on the face of the earth are created for the human beings, to help them in the pursuit of the end for which they were created.



From this it follows that we ought to use these things to the extent that they help us towards our end, and free ourselves from them to the extent that they hinder us from it. 



To attain this it is necessary to make ourselves indifferent to all created things, in regard to everything which is left to our free will and is not forbidden. Consequently, on our own part we ought not to seek health rather than sickness, wealth rather than poverty, honor rather than dishonor, a long life rather than a short one, and so on in all other matters.



Rather we ought to desire and choose only that which is more conducive to the end for which we are created.” 



The Spiritual Exercises of Saint Ignatius, SE23: Translated by George E Ganss SJ



Contemplative at Home offers guided meditative prayer – space to slow down and listen to the truth that is being born out of God’s love for you today – drawing on Ignatian spirituality and at times, Lectio Divina.



Sign up for Lissy’s monthly-ish newsletter “The Contemplative Window”



You can support the show by sharing it with a friend, rating it on your preferred podcast platform, making a one-off donation or becoming a member. Thank you so much!



All music by Pete Hatch. 



Photo by Show more...
2 weeks ago
18 minutes 39 seconds

Contemplative at Home
I Must Turn Aside: Lectio Divina: Exodus 3 – The Burning Bush

A 23-minute audio guided meditation with Exodus 3:1-15, using Lectio Divina.



Contemplative at Home offers guided meditative prayer – space to slow down and listen to the truth that is being born out of God’s love for you today – drawing on Ignatian spirituality and at times, Lectio Divina.



Sign up for Lissy’s newsletter “The Contemplative Window” or join our Facebook group here



You can support the show by sharing it with a friend, rating it on your preferred podcast platform, making a one-off donation or becoming a member. Thank you so much!



All music by Pete Hatch. 




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4 months ago
23 minutes 10 seconds

Contemplative at Home
The Surpassing Value of Knowing Christ: Lectio Divina: Philippians 3:4-16

An 18-minute audio guided meditation with the letter to the Philippians, Phil 2:4-16, using Lectio Divina.



When we read Paul we get a sense of his intensity, his high energy, his focussed mind. But he can also be read contemplatively. Here you are invited to connect with Paul’s faith, the great experience he has had with the love and life of Christ. This Love sees and holds and knows him, and that has become more compelling to him than any other thing in all creation.



What is your vision of Christ? Of Love? At this moment in your life, what desire do you have to journey further into the love and life of Christ?



Contemplative at Home offers guided meditative prayer – space to slow down and listen to the truth that is being born out of God’s love for you today – drawing on Ignatian spirituality and at times, Lectio Divina.



Sign up for Lissy’s newsletter “The Contemplative Window” or join our Facebook group here



You can support the show by sharing it with a friend, rating it on your preferred podcast platform, making a one-off donation or becoming a member. Thank you so much!



All music by Pete Hatch. 




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4 months ago
18 minutes 11 seconds

Contemplative at Home
Twenty Minute Body Scan – Be Still and Know That I Am God

A 20-minute audio guided body scan, resting in God’s love, Psalm 46:10



A deeply restorative meditation in the body, for the mind and spirit.



You will emerge feeling calmer, more centred and more deeply connected with the Spirit of God.



This kind of meditation is known as yoga nidra, and I love to offer it to groups in-person. It is best experienced lying flat on your back. Tuck up with a blanket if you’re in a cool environment. If you can stay awake you’ll get the most benefit!



This recording has been much-requested, and I trust you will find it beneficial.



Every blessing.Lissy



Contemplative at Home offers guided meditative prayer – space to slow down and listen to the truth that is being born out of God’s love for you today – drawing on Ignatian spirituality and at times, Lectio Divina.



Sign up for Lissy’s newsletter “The Contemplative Window” or join our Facebook group here



You can support the show by sharing it with a friend, rating it on your preferred podcast platform, making a one-off donation or becoming a member. Thank you so much!



All music by Pete Hatch. 




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5 months ago
20 minutes 8 seconds

Contemplative at Home
When God is Absent: A Meditation for Holy Saturday

A 21-minute audio guided meditation, with text from John 19:38-42



Though it is wildly tempting to rush to Easter morning, I invite you to tarry a while with me, to stay here in the holy, devastating moments as the body of Jesus is removed from the cross.



As Michael Rosen so wisely said: we can’t go around it, we can’t go over it, we can’t go under it. We have to go through it.



My prayer is that we will all gently grow in our capacity to attend the loss, absence, and bewilderment that will inevitably consume us from time to time. Not because the wilderness is an end in itself, but because our healing and our hope, can only be as deep as the depths to which we have explored our pain.



In this meditation I use the text from John 18:38-42 NRSV.



I also quote Etty Hillesum, who died at Auschwitz, from her book An Interrupted Life and Letters from Westerbork “And that is all we can manage in these days and also all that really matters: that we safeguard that little piece of You, God, in ourselves. And perhaps in others as well. Alas, there doesn’t seem to be much You Yourself can do about our circumstances. About our lives. You cannot help us. But we must help You, and defend your dwelling place inside us to the last.” A profound reflection for the darkest of days. Thank you to Val for sharing this with me last week.



In the closing blessing, I use words that are very close to Jan Richardson’s poem Beloved is Where we Begin. This poem lives inside of me and sometimes emerges. Jan has lots of helpful blessings for Holy Week and Easter. Do sit with them. 



Thank you for trusting me to accompany you on your journey, in your sacred moments. It is a great honour to be here with you. 



All blessings.



Contemplative at Home offers guided meditative prayer – space to slow down and listen to the truth that is being born out of God’s love for you today – drawing on Ignatian spirituality and at times, Lectio Divina.



Sign up for Lissy’s newsletter “The Contemplative Window” or join our Facebook group here



You can support the show by sharing it with a friend, rating it on your preferred podcast platform, making a one-off donation or becoming a member. Thank you so much!



All music by Pete Hatch. 
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6 months ago
21 minutes 27 seconds

Contemplative at Home
Arrest: Lectio Divina: John 18:1-14

A 21-minute audio guided meditation in John’s Gospel, John 18:1-14, using Lectio Divina.



A meditation with John’s account of the arrest of Jesus.



Contemplative at Home offers guided meditative prayer – space to slow down and listen to the truth that is being born out of God’s love for you today – drawing on Ignatian spirituality and at times, Lectio Divina.



Sign up for Lissy’s newsletter “The Contemplative Window” or join our Facebook group here



You can support the show by sharing it with a friend, rating it on your preferred podcast platform, making a one-off donation or becoming a member. Thank you so much!



All music by Pete Hatch. 



Art: Duccio di Buoninsegna, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons




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6 months ago
21 minutes 9 seconds

Contemplative at Home
Jesus and Judas: Imaginative Contemplation: John 13:21-30

A 23-minute audio guided meditation in John’s Gospel, John 13:21-30, using Imaginative Contemplation.



Everyone has gathered in Jerusalem for the passover, and Jesus knows that his hour has come. As he sits around the table with his disciples, he becomes visibly distressed before he says aloud “One of you will betray me.”



This meditation brings us to this room, to this table, joining Jesus and his friends for 10 minutes, as a moment between Jesus and Judas unfolds.



Blessings as you continue on through Lent.



Blessings.



Contemplative at Home offers guided meditative prayer – space to slow down and listen to the truth that is being born out of God’s love for you today – drawing on Ignatian spirituality and at times, Lectio Divina.



Sign up for Lissy’s newsletter “The Contemplative Window” or join our Facebook group here



You can support the show by sharing it with a friend, rating it on your preferred podcast platform, making a one-off donation or becoming a member. Thank you so much!



All music by Pete Hatch. 



Photo by Pedro Domingos on Unsplash




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7 months ago
22 minutes 55 seconds

Contemplative at Home
Are You Going to Wash My Feet?: Imaginative Contemplation: John 13:1-17

A 22-minute audio guided meditation in John’s Gospel, John 13:1-17, using Imaginative Contemplation.



In this meditation on John’s Gospel, I invite you to join me in taking a ‘long, loving look’ at a few verses of text, beholding the words as living, shimmering, life-giving containers which hold endless layers of wisdom, mystery, beauty and truth.



Here we have Jesus, at a meal with his friends just before the passover. He knows that his hour has come, that Judas intends to betray him. He gets up from the table, takes off his outer robe and ties a towel around himself, and begins washing the disciples feet – a task typically undertaken by the servants of the house as you enter.



Just for these few minutes, I invite you to leave your dogma, your creed, your thoughts, and your rational mind aside, and become present to your deeper self, your true self or essential self. I invite you to a way of unknowing, a place of deep being. 



Contemplative at Home offers guided meditative prayer – space to slow down and listen to the truth that is being born out of God’s love for you today – drawing on Ignatian spirituality and at times, Lectio Divina.



Sign up for Lissy’s newsletter “The Contemplative Window” or join our Facebook group here



You can support the show by sharing it with a friend, rating it on your preferred podcast platform, making a one-off donation or becoming a member. Thank you so much!



All music by Pete Hatch. 
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7 months ago
22 minutes 16 seconds

Contemplative at Home
The Glory that Comes from God: Lectio Divina: John 12: 27-43

A 22-minute audio guided meditation in John’s Gospel, John 12:27-28, 34-36, and 42-43, using Lectio Divina.



Glory.



Light.



An access to eternity that doesn’t look like the power and longevity we might have imagined.



I think that Jesus is inviting us to listen very deeply here. I remember my high school French teacher setting out to teach us a tense that doesn’t exist in English. “I need you to open your minds and put aside your current understanding of language,” she began.



Jesus asks us to open our minds and put aside our understanding of glory.



This glory is not about power, control or success.



When have you tasted the glory of the Lord? What did it feel like in your heart? What did it feel like in your bones?



To me it is a kind of deep down resonance with goodness and mercy and love. A wholeness and fullness that comes from the bottom up, not something that can be applied to the surface of things like a sticking plaster. It has to do with true healing and generous justice. A hopeful, grace-filled reverberation.



How would you describe it?



Blessings as you pray.



Contemplative at Home offers guided meditative prayer – space to slow down and listen to the truth that is being born out of God’s love for you today – drawing on Ignatian spirituality and at times, Lectio Divina.



Sign up for Lissy’s newsletter “The Contemplative Window” or join our Facebook group here



You can support the show by sharing it with a friend, rating it on your preferred podcast platform, making a one-off donation or becoming a member. Thank you so much!



All music by Pete Hatch. 



Photo by Thomas Kinto on Unsplash
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7 months ago
20 minutes 2 seconds

Contemplative at Home
We Want to See Jesus: Lectio Divina: John 12:20-26

A 19-minute audio guided meditation in John’s Gospel, John 8:12-20, using Lectio Divina.



In this meditation on John’s Gospel, I invite you to join me in taking a ‘long, loving look’ at a few verses of text, beholding the words as living, shimmering, life-giving containers which hold endless layers of wisdom, mystery, beauty and truth.



Just for these few minutes, I invite you to leave your dogma, your creed, your thoughts, and your rational mind aside, and become present to your deeper self, your true self or essential self. I invite you to a way of unknowing, a place of deep being. 



Contemplative at Home offers guided meditative prayer – space to slow down and listen to the truth that is being born out of God’s love for you today – drawing on Ignatian spirituality and at times, Lectio Divina.



Sign up for Lissy’s newsletter “The Contemplative Window” or join our Facebook group here



You can support the show by sharing it with a friend, rating it on your preferred podcast platform, making a one-off donation or becoming a member. Thank you so much!



All music by Pete Hatch. 



Photo by Anita Austvika on Unsplash




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7 months ago
19 minutes 13 seconds

Contemplative at Home
Mary Anoints Jesus’ Feet: Imaginative Contemplation: John 12:1-11

A 24-minute audio guided meditation in John’s Gospel, John 12:1-11, using imaginative contemplation.



In this meditation on John’s Gospel, I invite you to join me in taking a ‘long, loving look’ at a few verses of text, beholding the words as living, shimmering, life-giving containers which hold endless layers of wisdom, mystery, beauty and truth.



Just for these few minutes, I invite you to leave your dogma, your creed, your thoughts, and your rational mind aside, and become present to your deeper self, your true self or essential self. I invite you to a way of unknowing, a place of deep being. 



Contemplative at Home offers guided meditative prayer – space to slow down and listen to the truth that is being born out of God’s love for you today – drawing on Ignatian spirituality and at times, Lectio Divina.



Sign up for Lissy’s newsletter “The Contemplative Window“



You can support the show by sharing it with a friend, rating it on your preferred podcast platform, making a one-off donation or becoming a member. Thank you so much!



All music by Pete Hatch. 



Photo by Anna Keibalo on Unsplash




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8 months ago
24 minutes 19 seconds

Contemplative at Home
Jars of Clay: Lectio Divina

A 16-minute guided audio meditation on 2 Corinthians 4:5-11, using Lectio Divina.



This meditation emerged as a reflection on the human capacity for bringing both beauty and pain into the world. While this is true collectively, it is also true on an individual level. We are all capable of bringing forth beauty and harm, and I would imagine that if you took a few moments to reflect, you could several examples of your own action or inaction for each category.



Perhaps this is something of an early meditation for Lent. I hope that you find it illuminating and hopeful.



All blessings.



Lissy



 2 Corinthians 4: 5-11



In their case the god of this world has blinded the minds of the unbelievers, to keep them from seeing the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ, who is the image of God.  For what we proclaim is not ourselves, but Jesus Christ as Lord, with ourselves as your servants for Jesus’ sake. For God, who said, “Let light shine out of darkness,” has shone in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ. But we have this treasure in jars of clay, to show that the surpassing power belongs to God and not to us. We are afflicted in every way, but not crushed; perplexed, but not driven to despair;  persecuted, but not forsaken; struck down, but not destroyed; always carrying in the body the death of Jesus, so that the life of Jesus may also be manifested in our bodies.



Contemplative at Home offers guided meditative prayer – space to slow down and listen to the truth that is being born out of God’s love for you today – drawing on Ignatian spirituality and at times, Lectio Divina.



Sign up for Lissy’s newsletter “The Contemplative Window” or join our Facebook group here



You can support the show by sharing it with a friend, rating it on your preferred podcast platform, making a one-off donation or becoming a member. Thank you so much!



All music by Pete Hatch. 



Photo by roberta errani on Unsplash
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8 months ago
16 minutes 51 seconds

Contemplative at Home
Love was His Meaning: Lectio Divina with Julian of Norwich

A 20-minute meditation with the writings of Julian of Norwich, using Lectio Divina.



You are probably familiar with Mother Julian’s saying “All shall be well, and all shall be well and all manner of things shall be well.”



On her deathbed, Julian was given a vivid and powerful vision of Christ on the cross. She revived from this extreme illness, and went on to spend the rest of her life as an anchoress, enclosed in a cell, that she might meditate on the meaning of this vision. She lived in medieval Norwich and her writings are the earliest English language writings attributed to a woman.



In this meditation we listen prayerfully to some of these words, describing the understanding she was given after many years of meditating on the vision (see text below).



I am relatively new to Julian of Norwich and so I invite you to begin to explore her insights together with me as a beginner. 



If you’d like to explore more about Julian, I did read the fictional autobiography “I, Julian” by Claire Gilbert last year and can heartily recommend it. My friend Nikki, who has a great devotion to Julian, also commends “Anchorhold: Corresponding with Revelations of Divine Love” by Kirsten Pinto Gfroerer, a book of meditations on her words.



Blessings as you meditate with her words here today and thank you again for being here.



Text for meditation:



“Throughout the time of my showings I wished to know what our Beloved meant. More than fifteen years later the answer came in a spiritual voice. This is what I heard: Would you like to know our Lord’s meaning in all this. Know it well. Love was his meaning. Who revealed this to you? Love. What did he reveal to you? Love. Why did he reveal it to you? For love. Stay with this and you will know more of the same. 



You will never know anything but love, without end. And so what I saw most clearly was that love is his meaning. God wants us to know that he loved us before he even made us. And this love has never diminished and never will. All his actions unfold from this love and through this love he makes everything that happens of value to us. And in this love we find everlasting life. Our creation has a starting point. But the love in which he has made us has no beginning and this love is our true source. 



Thanks be to God!”



Julian of Norwich, Revelations of Divine Love, Chapter 86 (Mirabai Starr translation)



Contemplative at Home offers guided meditative prayer – space to slow down and listen to the truth that is being born out of God’s love for you today – drawing on Ignatian spirituality and at times, Lectio Divina.



Sign up for Lissy’s newsletter “The Contemplative Window” or join our Facebook group here



You can support the show by sharing it with a friend, rating it on your preferred podcast platform, making a one-off donation or becoming a member. Thank you so much!



All music by Pete Hatch. 




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8 months ago
19 minutes 47 seconds

Contemplative at Home
Filled with the Unknowable: Lectio Divina: Job 11 and Ephesians 3

A 19-minute guided audio meditation with Job 11:8-9 and Ephesians 3:17-19, using Lectio Divina.



I came to this text hoping to bring you a meditation on the depths of the love of God (Eph 3:18-19), but as I sat with a handful of translations, Greek words and Hebrew references, I was taken more mystically into the presence of God than I had imagined going.



I have knit a few verses together here (Job 11:8-9 and Eph 3:17-19), pulling from various translations and expanded Greek definitions, mixing the words from Ephesians into combinations that spoke most vividly to me. Please note that while I feel that I have been very faithful to the text, I am not a biblical scholar and this is not an authorised translation.



The words I have gathered from the NRSV, the Orthodox Jewish Bible and the Mounce Reverse Interlinear New Testament (at biblegateway.com) for this meditation are here:



Job 11:8-9



Can you find out the deep things of God… Can you find the limit of the Almighty?



It is higher than the heaven. What can you do?



Deeper than Sheol. What can you know?



Its measure is longer than the earth and broader than the sea.



Ephesians 3:17-19



I pray that Christ may inhabit, make his dwelling place in your heart.



I pray that you, being rooted and grounded in (agape) love,



may be empowered to grasp



the height and depth, the length and breadth…



and have knowledge of the Love of Christ, this Love which surpasses knowledge



that you might be filled, fully pervaded, with the fullness, the plentitude, of God.







Please note that I read the above text three times in this meditation, rather than the usual two.



I hope that this meditation transports you in the way that it has transported me, but more than that, however you find your prayer today, may the Lord accomplish the Spirit’s intentions through your faithfulness to prayer.



BLESSINGS and much love!!



Lissy



Contemplative at Home offers guided meditative prayer – space to slow down and listen to the truth that is being born out of God’s love for you today – drawing on Ignatian spirituality and at times, Lectio Divina.



Sign up here for Lissy’s newsletter “The Contemplative Window“



You can support the show by sharing it with a friend, rating it on your preferred podcast platform, making a one-off donation or becoming a member. Thank you so much!



All music by Pete Hatch. 



Photo by Thibault Mokuenko on Unsplash




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9 months ago
18 minutes 51 seconds

Contemplative at Home
Embodied Examen

A 19-minute guided meditation blending gentle physical movement (yoga), breath and the Ignatian Examen.



Ignatius of Loyola taught his followers that the one prayer they could never eliminate from their daily practice, is the prayer of review, or the Examen.



As Teresa of Avila (who for some time had a Jesuit confessor) said “I’ve gone on and on, here and elsewhere, about the damage we do to ourselves by failing to cultivate humility and self-awareness. Just remember: it is your most important task.” – The Interior Castle, First Dwelling, translation by M Starr



The Examen invites us to look back over the day, to notice when we felt most alive in Love, and when we felt least alive in Love, to see how God was travelling with us throughout the day, and to intentionally ask God to be near us tomorrow.



I personally find end of day prayer so difficult. I am usually well past the point of attentive concentration by the time I’ve settled the house and the teenagers and am getting myself in the direction of bed.



What does help me, however, is bringing some physical movement or embodiment to my prayer.



Here for the first time, I am incorporating some simple yoga postures into an audio meditation.



So this mediation is a little bit different. It is yoga asana (postures), breath awareness and the prayer of examen all folded together. This is something like my own personal practice, and I hope you find it helpful.



You may be helped by a couple of rolled or folded blankets to hand, and I recommend moving through these postures on the floor rather than on your mattress. You don’t need special clothes or a mat, just come as you are.



This prayer is traditionally prayed at the end of the day, but if the end of the day doesn’t work for you, feel free to pray it at noon, or 4pm, or just before or after dinner, or in the morning. Find what works for you in this particular season and go with that.



Blessings, blessings, blessings.



And much love



Lissy



Contemplative at Home offers guided meditative prayer – space to slow down and listen to the truth that is being born out of God’s love for you today – drawing on Ignatian spirituality and at times, Lectio Divina. Lissy Clarke is a Spiritual Director and yoga teacher (200CYT).



Sign up for Lissy’s monthly-ish newsletter “The Contemplative Window” for more contemplative nourishment, and to find out about any upcoming retreats.



You can support the show by sharing it with a friend, rating it on your preferred podcast platform, making a one-off donation or becoming a member. Thank you so much!



All music by Pete Hatch. 



Photo by Sasha Freemind on Unsplash
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9 months ago
19 minutes 13 seconds

Contemplative at Home
15-Minute Meditation on Song of Songs

A 15-minute audio guided meditation with Song of Songs 2:8.



Song of Songs 2:8



The voice my beloved!



Look, he comes



leaping upon the mountains,



bounding over the hills.



In this guided meditation on John’s Gospel, I invite you to imagine that you are in the mountains, and that the beloved comes towards you with playfulness and joy. You are then invited to imagine an encounter between yourself and the Beloved.



May this open up a new understanding of how the Lord sees you and how the Lord is inviting you forward today.



All blessings.



Contemplative at Home offers guided meditative prayer – space to slow down and listen to the truth that is being born out of God’s love for you today – drawing on Ignatian spirituality and at times, Lectio Divina.



Sign up for Lissy’s newsletter “The Contemplative Window” or join our Facebook group here



You can support the show by sharing it with a friend, rating it on your preferred podcast platform, making a one-off donation or becoming a member. Thank you so much!



All music by Pete Hatch. 




Show more...
9 months ago
15 minutes 10 seconds

Contemplative at Home
Intimate Encounter: Finding Your Name in God’s Love

A 16-minute guided meditation, linked to Isaiah 42:1-3



This is what the Lord says…. “I have called you by name…”



This meditation is designed to help you pause, connect deeply with the Beloved, to imagine yourself beholding the LORD beholding you, and to hear the LORD calling you by name. It asks you to listen to your deep self, to hear “by what name do I call the LORD?” and “by what name does the LORD call me?”



You are invited into an intimate encounter with the LORD.



Come and see what might be in store for you here.



As with any guided meditation, please ensure that you keep yourself safe. If at anytime during the meditation you feel uncomfortable with where it is taking you, then please gently return to a place where you do feel safe.



Isaiah 43:1-3



But now, this is what the Lord says—    he who created you, Jacob,    he who formed you, Israel:“Do not fear, for I have redeemed you;    I have summoned (called) you by name; you are mine.2 When you pass through the waters,    I will be with you;and when you pass through the rivers,    they will not sweep over you.When you walk through the fire,    you will not be burned;    the flames will not set you ablaze.3 For I am the Lord your God,    the Holy One of Israel, your Savior.



All blessings dear ones!



Contemplative at Home offers guided meditative prayer – space to slow down and listen to the truth that is being born out of God’s love for you today – drawing on Ignatian spirituality and at times, Lectio Divina.



Sign up for Lissy’s newsletter “The Contemplative Window” or join our Facebook group here



You can support the show by sharing it with a friend, rating it on your preferred podcast platform, making a one-off donation or becoming a member. Thank you so much!



All music by Pete Hatch. 



Photo by Ilja Tulit on Unsplash




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9 months ago
15 minutes 41 seconds

Contemplative at Home
A Moment Aside with the Beloved: 12-minute Guided Meditation

This guided meditation offers you a quiet pause to reconnect with your breath, the Presence of Love, and the question “What is Your will for me for the next few hours?”



This might be a little prayer you make at midday, or a few times throughout the day, though there is no incorrect time to pause for this prayer.



The meditation has three movements




* To check in with yourself, feel your breath and your grounded connection in this moment



* To gaze at God as God Lovingly gazes at you



* To ask God: what is your will for me for the next few hours?




It is a little check-in, informed by these words which have caught my attention this week:



“A contemplative is never to be resigned to God’s will, but to will It. That is, to want It.” – Finbarr Lynch, SJ, “When You Can’t Pray”



“Be transformed by the renewing of your mind, so that you may discern what is the good, pleasing, and perfect will of God.” Romans 12:2



“Planted like a tree in the spring of life, a deeds of a soul in grace delight both the human and the divine.” – Teresa of Avila, The Interior Castle (Tr Mirabai Starr)



Sometimes we think of our our “deeds” or God’s “will” as pertaining only to big, sweeping actions, but as I navigate the movements of my ordinary days, I find that there is often a deep yes to be found in even the tiniest of decisions.



All blessings dearest ones.



Lissy



Contemplative at Home offers guided meditative prayer – space to slow down and listen to the truth that is being born out of God’s love for you today – drawing on Ignatian spirituality and at times, Lectio Divina.



Sign up here for Lissy’s monthly-ish newsletter “The Contemplative Window”



You can support the show by sharing it with a friend, rating it on your preferred podcast platform, making a one-off donation or becoming a member. Thank you so much! 🙏🏽💙



All music by Pete Hatch. 



Photo by David Clode on Unsplash
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9 months ago
11 minutes 39 seconds

Contemplative at Home
Let the Earth Be Glad: Psalm 96: Lectio Divina

A 22-minute guided meditation with Psalm 96, using Lectio Divina.



Psalm 96 is a Psalm of rejoicing, celebrating in the greatness of the Lord. It is a Psalm for Christmas.



This guided audio meditation invites you to be aware of your body and your breath as you meditate, allowing the words of the Psalm to wash over you and through you.



“Tell it out among the nations: “The Lord is King! he has made the world so firm that it cannot be moved;he will judge the peoples with equity.”



Let the heavens rejoice, and let the earth be glad;let the sea thunder and all that is in it; let the field be joyful and all that is therein.



Then shall all the trees of the wood shout for joybefore the Lord when he comes, when he comes to judge the earth.



He will judge the world with righteousness and the peoples with his truth.” – Psalm 96:10-13



May the joy of the goodness of God infuse all of your days, Christmas or otherwise.



Blessings!



Lissy



Click here for more meditations on Christmas, click here for more meditations with the Psalms.



Sign up for Lissy’s newsletter “The Contemplative Window” or join our Facebook group here.



You can support the show by sharing it with a friend, rating it on your preferred podcast platform, making a one-off donation or becoming a member. Thank you so much!



All music by Pete Hatch. 



Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash




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10 months ago
22 minutes 28 seconds

Contemplative at Home
Finding Your O Antiphon: An Advent Meditation

A 15-minute guided meditation for Advent.



The Antiphons are short chants which appear throughout Christian liturgy, and feature in Ambrosian chant and Gregorian chant. The O Antiphons are sung in the final seven days before Christmas. Each short verse – one per day – calls on the Lord by a specific name (O Wisdom, O Adonai, O Key of David..), describes God’s character and attributes, and calls on the Lord to come and bring a gift anew. The modern version of these verses is the hymn O Come O Come Emmanuel.



There are many beautiful recordings of the O Antiphons, I always return to this one during Advent.



In this meditation I invite you to connect with your own O Antiphon – by what name do you address the Holy One? Why? And what do you hope the Lord will come and offer now?



By the end of this meditation you will have your own simple O Antiphon, and there is even an invitation to find a tune to hum it to if you wish. “The one who sings prays twice” St Augustine is credited with saying.



So as the birth of Christ draws near again — all blessings, dear ones.



For more Advent Meditations click this link. For Christmas Meditations, click this link.



Contemplative at Home offers guided meditative prayer – space to slow down and listen to the truth that is being born out of God’s love for you today – drawing on Ignatian spirituality and at times, Lectio Divina.



Sign up for Lissy’s newsletter “The Contemplative Window” or join our Facebook group here



You can support the show by sharing it with a friend, rating it on your preferred podcast platform, making a one-off donation or becoming a member. Thank you so much!



All music by Pete Hatch. 



Photo by Kent Henderson on Unsplash




Show more...
10 months ago
14 minutes 35 seconds

Contemplative at Home
Inspired by Lectio Divina and the Collatio, this podcast offers the listener sessions of guided, meditative, listening prayer around different passages of scripture.

Each episode will take you in to a deep place of listening in the Lord's presence where you will hear a gospel story read very slowly so that you can savour each word, imagine the scene vividly and perhaps even discern what the Holy Spirit is speaking into your own life through the text.

This prayer experience is ideal if you would like to interact with the Bible in a new way, deepen your prayer life, or understand Gods love for you more fully.

If you find Lectio Divina beneficial in a group but struggle to do it on your own, this podcast will provide the guidance you need.


Each episode will begin with a brief introduction to the text, guide the listener into a deep place of prayer, read the passage very slowly, twice, and then offer some questions for reflection or journaling.

For more information visit our website at contemplativeathome.com

I wish to thank and acknowledge Fr Finbarr Lynch SJ of Manresa House, Dublin who introduced and instructed me in the Collatio, from which all that I share with you in this podcast is derived.