Starting Spiritual Direction
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About this ebook
Are you about to start spiritual direction? Would you like to get the most out of your sessions?
In spiritual direction, two or more seekers enter sacred space to dream, explore, and discern a path toward personal wholeness and deeper intimacy with the Divine. Along the way, they talk about just about everything that happens in life—work, play, relationships, personal struggles == but always the focus comes back to a central question: How is the Divine wooing us, calling us into deeper and deeper intimacy?This book is written specifically for new clients -- sometimes called directees. If you are new to spiritual direction, then this book is written for you. In it you will find everything you need to know before stepping into a spiritual direction session for the first time. By the time you finish it, you will have a good grasp on what this ministry is about, what a typical session is like, what you can expect from your spiritual director, and how to make the best use of your time.
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Book preview
Starting Spiritual Direction - John R. Mabry
Introduction
When Sally came into my office, she looked a little lost. Where should I sit?
she asked.
Anywhere you like...
I said, but then I lowered my voice, "...although I usually sit there." I pointed to a chair.
She smiled and took the other, but she didn’t look any more at ease.
I lit a candle and said, This will remind us that there are three of us here.
The large window of my office looked out onto the busy Berkeley street, but inside there was a feeling of spaciousness and calm. Let’s just take a few minutes to truly arrive and find our center,
I invited her. I closed my eyes and relaxed, offering a quick prayer asking the Divine to fill the space between us, and to help me pay attention—both to Sally and to the Divine. After a couple of minutes of delicious silence, I said, Amen.
I opened my eyes and saw Sally sitting just as rigidly as before, looking twice as anxious.
Welcome to spiritual direction,
I said.
Thanks,
she said, What do we do here?
That is a million-dollar question—one that everyone has the first time they enter a spiritual direction session, whether spoken or unspoken. Sally’s question snagged me, though, and wouldn’t let me go. Sally should have something to read to prepare her for this work,
I thought. I looked around for something of the sort, but while there are lots of books out there for spiritual directors, there didn’t seem to be any user-friendly guides for spiritual direction clients.
That’s hardly a challenge any writer can ignore, and so this book is for Sally and for everyone else new to spiritual direction who would like to be better informed about the ministry, what it can do for them, what they can expect, how they can feel safe, and how they can get the most out of their sessions. If that’s the position you’re in, then this book is for you.
Spiritual direction is an amazing ministry, completely unlike any other. It is personal, intimate, and non-coercive. In your spiritual director, you will find a soul friend, a fellow companion who will walk beside you on your spiritual journey, and help you unpack your spiritual experiences, discern important choices, parse long-held beliefs, and nudge you gently toward growth.
Spiritual direction isn’t always comfortable—anytime we get close to a truth we’d rather not see, a part of us wants to run screaming. That’s okay. Spiritual direction provides safe space to uncover such truths. It also gives us the only place in modern society where we can talk about our mystical experiences without people thinking we’re crazy! In fact, it is in spiritual direction that we learn that such experiences are normal, and we can begin to explore what they mean, and the kind of life they are inviting us to.
And that’s just the tip of the iceberg. When I say, Welcome to spiritual direction,
I’m saying a lot. I’m saying welcome to the place where your soul is well and truly cherished and safe.
A Couple of Things About This Book
I intended this book to be short, but I also tried to include everything in it that you need to know before stepping into a spiritual direction session for the first time. By the time you finish it, you will have a good grasp on what this ministry is about, what you can expect in a session, what you can expect from your spiritual director, and how to make sure you make the best use of your time. It was a balancing act to include all that was needed while still keeping it short and user-friendly! I may not have done it perfectly, so if you have questions I didn’t answer (or didn’t even think of) please don’t hesitate to email me. I will send you an answer and may address your question in a subsequent edition of the book.
One thing that people who are very familiar with spiritual direction may find strange is that I don’t use the word directee
to refer to those receiving spiritual direction (folks like you, presumably). That was a very conscious choice. Directee
is an insider
word—outside of the world of professional spiritual directors the word is not used and has no meaning. One might argue about whether it is a legitimate word at all. Certainly, people who have never been to a spiritual direction session will not be familiar with this word. Instead, I use the word client,
with which everyone is familiar and most people are comfortable. The only people not comfortable with it are old-time spiritual directors, but that’s okay because this book is not for them! No doubt some of them will argue that I could just explain what the word means. I have done so, but…I am still not going to use it. The truth is I can’t stand the word directee
—I find it clunky and obscure and elite.
One of my early readers objected to the use of the word training,
preferring formation.
While I agree that formation is a much better word for what we do in a spiritual direction certificate program, it is also an insider
word that may not be familiar to those who are being introduced to this ministry for the first time. Again, I choose to opt for the word that will be immediately understandable to the widest number of readers.
Another choice I made was to refer to spiritual directors throughout using the feminine gender. I was about a quarter of the way through this manuscript when I wrote the mind-bogglingly awkward sentence, He or she is a professional, and if his or her space is not professional, his or her business will suffer.
That’s when I started thinking, This may not be the way to go about this.
To avoid such unnecessary clunkiness in the prose, I decided to speak of all spiritual directors using the pronouns she
and her
rather than he or she
or his or her.
The fact is that there are far more women than men doing spiritual direction—and most of us men who do it are pretty in touch with our inner feminine—so I don’t expect many protests. I apologize to any of my fellow male spiritual directors who might take offense, and invite them to write their own books full of awkward and clunky prose.
Finally, some thank-yous are in order. Great thanks to the Rev. Anne Jensen, Rev. James Ford, and Ravi Verma for reading the first draft of this book and offering much helpful feedback.
Now that such housekeeping is out of the way, let’s talk about spiritual direction…
Let’s Talk About Spiritual Direction
What is Spiritual Direction?
There isn’t one answer to this question. And any answer I could give would be incomplete. A poetic answer might be: two souls basking in the Divine Presence. A clinical answer might be: a helping profession in which the director assists the client in his or her spiritual flourishing. A theological answer might be: one beggar showing another beggar where to find bread (Martin Luther’s definition of ministry in general ).
But for the purposes of this book I’m going to say: In spiritual direction, two or more seekers enter sacred space to dream, explore, and discern a path toward personal wholeness and deeper intimacy with the Divine. Usually this journey is a one-to-one, face-to-face meeting, with one seeker acting in service to the other. Often, they speak. Often, they don’t.
Along the way, they talk about just about everything that happens in life—work, play, relationships, personal struggles—but always the question comes back to a central question: how is the Divine wooing us, calling us into deeper and deeper intimacy?
As we go deeper, more questions emerge: What is the Divine up to
in all of our daily ups and downs? How is the Divine moving and nudging and forming us, through both our triumphs and our defeats? How do we resist the Divine call? How does the Divine’s desire for intimacy threaten us and push us beyond our comfort zones? What does this intimacy require of us? What is it calling us to? In what ways are we out of congruence with the deepest truth of our souls—with this Divine calling—and how does this imprison us and limit us? How can we move into deep places of interior freedom that are transformative and healing and liberating, not only for us, but for the