Author Kathleen Norris should have a blog because her book, The Cloister Walk, is a collection of blog posts. Her chapters may be long or short, mostly short. They're her thoughts along her spiritual journey. Although she chooses to be Presbyterian, she also chooses to be a Benedictine Oblate. She taught at the Benedictine Abbey Schools and went to their abbey, for retreats.
I think this is like the many Franicans, I know. They are professed Lay Domicans, but they feel attracted to Franciscan spirituality. It works.
A few of my favorite quotes, from the book:
...poetry, like prayer is a dialogue with the sacred.
Psalm reading becomes a heartbeat.
Poetry's function is not to explain but to offer images and stories that resonate within our lives.
Doubt--the grace of poetic sensibility.
To say or sing the psalms aloud within a community is to recover religion as an oral tradition.
Communal prayer--when you don't feel like it, others pull you along.
Life is a matter of perspective.
What may be most valuable in myths is the depth of psychological truth that they contain.
Good liturgy is a living poem and ceremony is the key.
Ceremony and tradition can be food for the soul,
Grieving involves touch, seeing, listening to stories, and forgiveness.
There is no way to avoid not having your heart broken, when you visit the widow, bring food, tears, hugs, and the three year old looks up at you and says, "My daddy died." You see and feel what the death of one person does to the world.
Yes, I see what the thoughts of Kathleen Norris does to me. She is food for the soul.