Novena to St. John of the Cross, Day 6: Guided through the dark night
Scripture
To you, O Lord, I lift up my soul.
I trust you, let me not be disappointed;
do not let my enemies triumph.
Those who hope in you shall not be disappointed,
but only those who wantonly break faith.
Lord, make me know your ways.
Lord, teach me your paths.
Make me walk in your truth, and teach me:
for you are God my savior.
In you I hope all day long
because of your goodness, O Lord.
Remember your mercy, Lord,
and the love you have shown from of old.
Do not remember the sins of my youth.
In your love remember me.
(Psalm 25:1-7)
Reading
A soul ordinarily needs instruction pertinent to its experience in order to be guided through the dark night to spiritual denudation and poverty. Without this instruction a person, even without wanting such things, would unknowingly become hardened in the way of the spirit and habituated to that of the senses, in which these communications are partly experienced. The spiritual father should instead proceed with much kindness and calm.
The Ascent of Mount Carmel: Book Two, Chapter 22
Prayer
O St. John of the Cross
You were endowed by our Lord with the spirit of self-denial
and a love of the cross.
Obtain for us the grace to follow your example
that we may come to the eternal vision of the glory of God.
O Saint of Christ’s redeeming cross
the road of life is dark and long.
Teach us always to be resigned to God’s holy will
in all the circumstances of our lives
and grant us the special favor
which we now ask of thee.
Mention your request
Above all, obtain for us the grace of final perseverance,
a holy and happy death and everlasting life with you
and all the saints in heaven.
Amen.
Let’s continue in prayer…
All scripture references in this novena are from the New Revised Standard Version Bible: Catholic Edition, copyright © 1989, 1993 the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America as accessed from the Bible Gateway website.
Don’t become discouraged and give up prayer, says St. John of the Cross. We offer varying novenas to Our Lady of Mount Carmel, as well as novenas to St. Teresa of Avila, St. John of the Cross, St. Thérèse of Lisieux, Sts. Louis and Zélie Martin, St. Elizabeth of the Trinity, and St. Joseph.
#ascentOfMountCarmel #carmel #carmelitas #carmelitasDescalzas #carmelite #darkNight #denudation #discalcedCarmelite #instruction #novena #poverty #secularCarmelites #spirit #spiritual #spiritualDirection #spiritualLife #spiritualPoverty #spirituality #stJohnOfTheCross #teresianCarmel
St. Edith Stein Novena 2025, Day 7: Oppression and dryness
SCRIPTURE READING
Psalm 131
O Lord, my heart is not proud
nor haughty my eyes.
I have not gone after things too great
nor marvels beyond me.
Truly I have set my soul
in silence and peace.
A weaned child on its mother’s breast,
even so is my soul.
O Israel, hope in the Lord
both now and forever.
MEDITATION
The Science of the Cross, Chapter 1
Oppression and dryness
It was mentioned earlier that the active entrance of the soul into the dark night is only possible for her because God’s grace anticipates her, draws her, and supports her along the entire way.
But for beginners this anticipatory and enabling grace does not as yet have the character of the dark night. Rather, God treats them the way a tender mother treats her tiny children—carrying them in her arms and feeding them with sweet milk: in all their spiritual exercises—in prayer, meditation, and mortifications—they receive abundant joy and consolation. This joy then motivates them to devote themselves to spiritual exercises. They are unaware of the imperfections that lie therein and how many faults they commit in their practice of virtue.
In order to be freed from all these defects we must be weaned from the milk of consolations and be fed with strengthening nourishment….
“After beginners have exercised themselves for a time in the way of virtue and have persevered in meditation and prayer and through the delight and satisfaction they experience in this have become detached from worldly things and have gained some spiritual strength in God, which helps them to restrain their appetites for creatures, and for God’s sake are able to suffer a little oppression and dryness without yearning to return to those better times when they experienced more pleasurable satisfaction and gratification… then… God darkens all this light and closes the door and the spring of sweet spiritual water they were tasting as often and as long as they desired…. Now he leaves them in such darkness that they do not know which way to turn in their discursive imaginings.”
PRAYER
Saint Edith Stein,
faith in the holy angels gives me confidence—
confidence to believe, in the midst of all suffering,
in the divine life-force we all share,
which flows through all creation
as the sap flows from the vine into its branches.
We do not stand alone
in this fierce struggle between life and death.
“When my enemies press in on me…” (Ps 56:2),
“…then God fights for me.” (Josh 23:10)
In this valley of tears,
I lift my eyes in trust to you,
you holy angels and saints:
your task is to pass on that Love
whose “beginning and end is the triune God.”
(Edith Stein, Complete Works)
We are held and drawn into this radiant stream
of light and love, of life and truth.
The more we are united with you
through surrender to the divine will,
the more your love becomes our love,
your light our light.
If we believe in this communion,
we already walk in the light.
Intercede for us,
that we may take part in the restoration of all creation.
Here mention your intentions
Our Father, Hail Mary, Glory Be
℣. Saint Edith Stein,
℟. Pray for us.
Stein, E 2002, The Science of the Cross, The Collected Works of Edith Stein, Book 6, translated from the German by Koeppel, J, ICS Publications, Washington D.C.
All scripture references are from The Jerusalem Bible Reader’s Edition, copyright © 1966, 1967 and 1968 by Darton, Longman & Todd, Ltd and Doubleday & Company, Inc. as accessed from The Internet Archive website.
Don’t become discouraged and give up prayer, says St. John of the Cross. We offer varying novenas to Our Lady of Mount Carmel, as well as novenas to St. Teresa of Avila, St. John of the Cross, St. Thérèse of Lisieux, Sts. Louis and Zélie Martin, St. Elizabeth of the Trinity, and St. Joseph.
Dunkelheit und Farbenpracht vereinten sich am Freitag im Schuppen 2 zur Planet Queer Dark Night! Mit Evelyn Paradise in einem atemberaubenden Neon-Kostüm erlebten die Partygäste eine Nacht voller energiegeladener Beats und queerer Sichtbarkeit. Verpass nicht die Highlights dieser unvergesslichen Nacht!
#PlanetQueer #DarkNight #QueerCulture
Mehr erfahren: https://www.szenenight.de/party-berichte/planet-queer-dark-night-im-schuppen-2-14041.html
Marie du jour, 6 May: St. Edith Stein
Divine virginity has a characteristic aversion to sin as the contrary of divine holiness. However, this aversion to sin gives rise to an indomitable love for sinners.
Christ has come to tear sinners away from sin and to restore the divine image in defiled souls. He comes as the child of sin—his genealogy and the entire history of the Old Covenant show this—and he seeks the company of sinners so as to take all the sins of the world upon himself and carry them away to the infamous wood of the cross, which thereby precisely becomes the sign of his victory.
This is precisely why virginal souls do not repulse sinners. The strength of their supernatural purity knows no fear of being sullied. The love of Christ impels them to descend into the darkest night.
And no earthly maternal joy resembles the bliss of a soul permitted to enkindle the light of grace in the night of sins. The way to this is the cross. Beneath the cross, the Virgin of virgins becomes the Mother of Grace.
Saint Edith Stein
Exaltation of the Cross, 14 September 1941
Stein, E. 2014, The Hidden Life: hagiographic essays, meditations, spiritual texts, translated from the German by Stein, W, ICS Publications, Washington DC.
Featured image: The Crucifixion with Saints and a Donor (detail), Joos van Cleve and a collaborator, oil on wood, ca. 1520. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.
⬦ Reflection Question ⬦
How does Mary’s strength beneath the cross shape my view of purity, suffering, and love?
⬦ Join the conversation in the comments.
#CrossOfChrist #darkNight #ExaltationOfTheHolyCross #purity #sinners #StEdithStein #VirginMary #virginity #vows
Blessed Chiquitunga: Misery Meets Mercy
“How could I not tremble, Jesus, before the immensity of Your mercy toward this miserable one, a thousand times unworthy, chosen by You!”
Blessed Maria Felicia of Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament, Chiquitunga
A cracked-open door.
Two hinges: humility and wonder.
Through this door, we catch a glimpse of Blessed Maria Felicia of Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament — Chiquitunga — a young Carmelite whose soul was shaped by trust in the night and total surrender to Love.
🎙️ Listen to this final episode of Season 2: Blessed Chiquitunga: Misery Meets Mercy.
As we close this season of Carmelite Quotes Podcast, thank you for listening, praying, and walking with us. Stay tuned for Season 3 — coming soon!
#BlessedMariaFeliciaOfJesusInTheBlessedSacrament #Chiquitunga #darkNight #humility #mercy #misery #Podcast
Quote of the day, 28 April: Blessed Chiquitunga
During her postulancy at the Carmel of Asunción, Blessed Maria Felicia of the Blessed Sacrament (Chiquitunga) passed through a dark night that tested her vocation.
After a month of “heaven” in her new Carmelite life, during Lent of 1955, Sister Maria Felicia began to feel profound insecurity about her choice, made against the advice of almost everyone she knew. She thought: Wasn’t my decision to enter a cloistered monastery simply an act of self-will?—an opinion expressed strongly by the newly appointed Auxiliary Bishop of Asunción, Monsignor Ramón Bogarín.
From this insecurity came the fear that she had taken the wrong path; the fear produced deep spiritual dryness; and from all of this arose the obsessive temptation: I must leave the cloister… and if I don’t, it’s because I’m a coward.
The community confessor, the same one who had actively resisted her entrance into Carmel, pressured her to decide once and for all. Finally, on 9 August, Sister Maria Felicia made her decision—to leave. She recounts it herself:
Today, I was resolved to leave, but with the anguish of bearing the cross of my infidelity without any merit. The confessor flatly told me to say whether I was leaving or staying. I told him I would leave. A coldness of death came over me, an anguish so deep it even choked back my tears (Spiritual Diary, C, folio 15).
Before giving her final word, Sister Maria Felicia suggested they cast lots—and the confessor, eager to settle the matter once and for all, agreed. Accompanied by the Prioress at that supreme moment, they prayed before the Blessed Sacrament and placed two folded papers at the feet of a statue of Mary.
Sister Maria Felicia drew one. The confessor opened it. It read: I want to die in Carmel.
Immediately, she cried out, convinced and determined: Jesus, my Jesus! Yes, this is Your will.
At the same time, she experienced her weakness and poverty: You see my weaknesses, my cowardice, my fears, my miseries! Alone I can do nothing!
She entrusted everything to the Lord: Jesus, into Your hands I entrust my vocation!
She knew that only He could give her the strength needed to overcome herself, for at times: The weight of Your will is so heavy that I would rather die! I fear sacrifice, I fear the Cross. Help me, Blessed Virgin! Little Jesus of Prague, miracle worker of my vocation! (Spiritual Diary, C, folios 15–16).
Supported by this conviction, trust, and surrender, she renewed the offering she had made from her early youth:
Father! My Father, God of my life. My nothingness—so truly Yours—I offer it back to You today, not knowing how many times I will yet snatch it away again, desperately kicking and screaming to do my own will and not Yours.
In reality, she had never truly withdrawn her will from God. The anguish before the Cross is not a rebellion—just as it was not rebellion in Jesus at Gethsemane.
Still, she renewed her complete surrender:
Here I am, Lord! Your will! But aided by Your strength, Your love, and Your mercy, my God!
Thus, even in the midst of the “dark night,” without emerging from it, in faith, hope, and love, God’s will triumphed.
The Carmelite postulant had died to herself, united to the death of Christ.
Father Julio Félix Barco, o.c.d.
Enseñanzas desde el Carmelo (Lessons from Carmel)
Monte Carmelo 2018, Enseñanzas desde el Carmelo. De los escritos de María Felicia de Jesús Sacramentado-Chiquitunga, no. 1, vol. 126, Monte Carmelo, Burgos. Available at: https://bcd.digicarmel.com (Accessed: 26 April 2025). Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International.
Translation from the Spanish text is the blogger’s own work product and may not be reproduced without permission.
Featured image: Blessed Maria Felicia of the Blessed Sacrament—Chiquitunga—on the day of her clothing in the Carmelite habit, 14 August 1955. Image credit: Discalced Carmelites (Used by permission).
⬦ Reflection Question ⬦
Where in my life is Christ asking me to entrust everything to Him, even when I cannot see the way forward?
⬦ Join the conversation in the comments.
#anguish #BlessedMariaFeliciaOfJesusInTheBlessedSacrament #Chiquitunga #darkNight #discernment #lottery #mercy #postulant #willOfGod
#Apocalypse also means #revelation. For many, the apocalypse is mother of invention giving rise to science of the modern day… #Endoftime also contains seeds of #rebirth: Good Friday -->Easter Sunday. #DarkNight --> #Breakthru & #rebirth, Via Negativa -->Vias Creativa & Transformativa. https://dailymeditationswithmatthewfox.org/2025/03/31/more-artists-on-evil-an-opera-on-the-anti-christ-playing-in-berlin/
#darknight #parabolicantenna #plains #tent #sunglasses #chick #cute #pixelart #AI
Goodnight, I'm tired. Thank you for today.
Come and have fun making our version of BATMAN ^^🦇
BATLIVE : https://www.twitch.tv/monster_ukyo
#batman #comics #illustration #fun #weekend #dccomics #comicsart #manga #chill #darknight #BruceWayne #TheBatman #hero #art #twitch #twitchstream
It is a topic that is often misunderstood or overlooked, yet it holds immense significance for personal growth and spiritual development.
Read more 👉 http://jo.my/gomqyv
#ProfoundSpiritualCrisis #FeelCompletelyDisconnected #DarkNight #IncrediblyChallenging #DarkNightOfTheSoul #Transformation #healing #akashicrecords #soulcoach
Quote of the day, 14 December: St. John of the Cross
1. One dark night,
fired with love’s urgent longings
– ah, the sheer grace! –
I went out unseen,
my house being now all stilled.
2. In darkness, and secure,
by the secret ladder, disguised,
– ah, the sheer grace! –
in darkness and concealment,
my house being now all stilled.
3. On that glad night
in secret, for no one saw me,
nor did I look at anything
with no other light or guide
than the one that burned in my heart.
4. This guided me
more surely than the light of noon
to where he was awaiting me
– him I knew so well –
there in a place where no one appeared.
5. O guiding night!
O night more lovely than the dawn!
O night that has united
the Lover with his beloved,
transforming the beloved in her Lover.
6. Upon my flowering breast
which I kept wholly for him alone,
there he lay sleeping,
and I caressing him
there in a breeze from the fanning cedars.
7. When the breeze blew from the turret,
as I parted his hair,
it wounded my neck
with its gentle hand,
suspending all my senses.
8. I abandoned and forgot myself,
laying my face on my Beloved;
all things ceased; I went out from myself,
leaving my cares
forgotten among the lilies.
Saint John of the Cross
Poetry, 2: The Dark Night
Songs of the soul that rejoices in having reached the high state of perfection, which is union with God, by the path of spiritual negation
ABOUT THE VIDEO:
From Central Washington University’s YouTube channel comes this stellar performance of Dark Night of the Soul by the noted Norwegian-American composer Ola Gjeilo. The video “liner notes” offer the following information:
“Dark Night of the Soul” (Ola Gjeilo) is sung by The Central Washington University Chamber Choir (Gary Weidenaar, director) joined by Ola Gjeilo on the piano and the Kairos String Quartet (comprised of CWU string faculty).
Composer Ola Gjeilo adds:
Dark Night of the Soul was written in 2010, and premiered that year by the Phoenix Chorale. The text, three stanzas from St. John of the Cross’ magical poem Dark Night of the Soul, was suggested to me by Joel Rinsema, Executive Director of the Phoenix Chorale, and I fell in love with its passionate spirituality right away. One of the things I wanted to do in this piece was to make the choir and piano fairly equal, as if in a dialogue; often the piano is accompanying the choir, but sometimes the choir is accompanying the piano (or violin) as well, with the choir kind of taking the role of a soft, but rich “string orchestra” texture. I just love the sound of voices humming chords, it creates a sound that can be so evocative and warm, especially when doubled by a string quartet. To me, that sound combination has a similar effect to a great synth pad, only it perhaps feels more organic and alive.
John of the Cross, St. 1991, The Collected Works of St. John of the Cross, Revised Edition, translated from the Spanish by Kavanaugh, K and Rodriguez, O with revisions and introductions by Kavanaugh, K, ICS Publications, Washington DC.
Featured image: Bangladesh photographer Prottoy Hasan captures this striking image of a man looking at the starry sky. Image credit: Prottoy Hasan / Unsplash (Stock photo)
#StJohnOfTheCross #darkNight #light #solitude #darkness #poetry #selfForgetful #beloved #Lover #OlaGjeilo
Mary, the star of the dark night, tenderly guides souls through the purifying trials of the spirit. Blessed Marie-Eugène explains her maternal role in our darkest moments. #StJohnoftheCross #darknight
I give thanks to Providence for granting me the opportunity to come and venerate the relics and recall the figure and teachings of St. John of the Cross, to whom I owe so much in my spiritual formation. I came to know him in my youth and was able to enter into an intimate dialogue with this master of the faith, with his language and thought, culminating in the development of my doctoral thesis on Faith in St. John of the Cross. Since then, I have found in him a friend and teacher, who has pointed to the light that shines in the darkness, guiding me always toward God, “with no other light or guide / than the one that burned in my heart. / This guided me / more surely than the light of noon” (The Dark Night, stanzas 3–4, trans. Kavanaugh and Rodriguez).
The Saint from Fontiveros is the great teacher of the paths leading to union with God. His writings remain relevant and, in a way, explain and complement the works of St. Teresa of Jesus. He shows the paths to knowledge through faith, for only such knowledge in faith disposes the mind to union with the living God.
How many times, with a conviction born from experience, he tells us that faith is the most fitting and appropriate means for union with God! It is enough to cite a well-known text from The Ascent of Mount Carmel, book II, chap. 9, sec. 1: “Faith alone … is the only proximate and proportionate means to union with God. … Just as God is infinite, faith proposes him to us as infinite. Just as there are three Persons in one God, it presents him to us in this way. … Only by means of faith, in divine light exceeding all understanding, does God manifest himself to the soul. The greater one’s faith the closer is one’s union with God” (The Ascent of Mount Carmel, book II, chap. 9, sec. 1, trans. Kavanaugh and Rodriguez).
With this insistence on the purity of faith, John of the Cross does not wish to deny that the knowledge of God is attained gradually from the knowledge of creatures, as taught in the Book of Wisdom and echoed by St. Paul in the Letter to the Romans (cf. Rom 1:18–21; cf. Spiritual Canticle, st. 4, sec. 1). The Mystical Doctor teaches that in faith, it is also necessary to detach oneself from creatures, both those perceived through the senses and those reached through understanding, in order to unite oneself cognitively with God Himself. This path that leads to union passes through the dark night of faith.
Saint John Paul II
Homily, 4 November 1982
Convent of the Discalced Carmelite Friars
Segovia, Spain
John of the Cross, St. 1991, The Collected Works of St. John of the Cross, Revised Edition, translated from the Spanish by Kavanaugh, K and Rodriguez, O with revisions and introductions by Kavanaugh, K, ICS Publications, Washington DC.
Translation from the Spanish text is the blogger’s own work product and may not be reproduced without permission.
Featured image: At five in the afternoon on October 31, 1982, Pope John Paul II arrived at Barajas Airport in Madrid, kissing the ground upon his arrival. When the crowd erupted in excitement, officials began placing carpets along his path, which he bypassed to continue his custom of kissing the ground. That same day, before departing Rome, he had canonized two French nuns and led the Angelus prayer in St. Peter’s Square, as he did every Sunday. This marked his 15th official trip, covering sixteen locations in nine days at an intense pace. Image credit: Marisa Flórez / prisamedia.com
https://carmelitequotes.blog/2024/11/03/jp2-4nov82homly/
#darkNight #detachment #DoctorOfTheChurch #faith #inspiration #StJohnOfTheCross #StJohnPaulII #theology #unionWithGod
It is a lifelong journey that holds infinite possibilities for growth, healing, and spiritual awakening.
Read more 👉 http://jo.my/gomqyv
#ProfoundSpiritualCrisis #FeelCompletelyDisconnected #DarkNight #IncrediblyChallenging #DarkNightOfTheSoul #Transformation #healing #akashicrecords #soulcoach
Jesus Christ has redeemed us on the Cross. The Holy Cross is the sign of our Faith, the sign of hope and grace. We venerate it, and it gives us hope, but when it really comes close to us we are terrified.
Still, as we all know at the bottom of our hearts, we have to carry our own crosses in union with our Savior. The Cross is there, and we have to accept it in whatever form it comes to us.
Sometimes it takes time for us to recognize the loving and adorable face of the Crucified Lord in the horrible and tiresome sufferings that we encounter during our pilgrimage here on earth. Our Lady can help us to see Jesus in the cross of our own existence and in the cross of humanity.
She stood beside the Cross of Jesus, and she also stands beside us when we have to carry our own crosses. As a loving Mother taking care of her beloved child, she is always there.
For many people, it seems easier to look upon Mary standing at the foot of the Cross of Jesus than to look directly upon Jesus hanging on the Cross. Being the Mother of Jesus and of us, she can unite us to Jesus and help us to recognize and adore His holy Cross in our own little cross….
When we really suffer, words cannot console us, however pious and loving they might be. We cannot be consoled in any way whatsoever, except by the simple presence of another person simply sitting down with us or holding our hand.
That is important for us to remember when someone we know suffers. To be present, to sit down at the sickbed or deathbed, to hold someone’s hand is always immensely helpful for those who suffer.
This is also the way of Mary—to be present in our dark night of the soul. She is there. It is all very simple and natural.
She is our Mother and Sister who wants to help us to carry our crosses. She helps us to see Jesus in our night. Just by being there, she points to her Son and makes us aware of His constant presence in our life.
So have confidence. In the dark night of the soul, in our suffering, Mary will be with us, silent but fruitful, because she is the Mother of Christ, the Mother of us.
Cardinal Anders Arborelius, O.C.D.
To Be Responsive Like Mary (excerpts)
Arborelius OCD, A. 2020, Carmelite Spirituality: The Way of Carmelite Prayer and Contemplation, EWTN Publishing, Irondale, Alabama.
Featured image: Crucifixion sculptures like this early 16th-century French Calvaire are found in towns and along byways all throughout Brittany. The ancient village of Rochefort-en-Terre in the department of Morbihan is no exception. This historic Calvaire still stands in the plaza next to the 12th-century collegiate church of Notre-Dame-de-la-Tronchaye in the center of town. It is so picturesque that it has been featured prominently in paintings, such as Le calvaire de Rochefort-en-Terre (or, L’Office du soir) by Ferdinand du Puigaudeau (French, 1864–1930). According to legend, the church was built on the spot where a statue of the Virgin Mary nursing the Infant Jesus was discovered in the 12th century. It is said that the statue was hidden in the trunk of a tree two centuries earlier when the Vikings were attacking the region. Another historic image in the parish is a polychrome statue of Blessed Françoise d’Amboise, the 15th-century Duchess of Brittany who established the Carmelite nuns in France. Image credit: David Matthew Lyons / Adobe Stock (Stock photo)
https://carmelitequotes.blog/2024/07/22/anders-momsis/
#CardinalAndersArborelius #darkNight #faith #grace #HolyCross #hope #inspiration #JesusChrist #MaryOurSister #Mother #OurLady #presence #suffering
The Dark Night of the Soul is a profound, spiritual crisis that most of us go through at some point in our lives
Read more 👉 http://jo.my/gomqyv
#ProfoundSpiritualCrisis #FeelCompletelyDisconnected #DarkNight #IncrediblyChallenging #DarkNightOfTheSoul #Transformation #healing #akashicrecords #soulcoach