What it is
The Prayer Pathways section offers structured entry into four of the greatest Catholic spiritual traditions: Ignatian, Carmelite, Dominican, and Franciscan. Each tradition has a six-stage pathway taking 15–30 minutes per day. The pathways do not summarise these traditions — they invite you into their actual practices using the Fathers and Saints’ own words.
The four traditions
Ignatian: Based on the Spiritual Exercises of Ignatius of Loyola. The most structured retreat tradition in the Church. Covers the daily Examen, discernment of spirits, and the movement through consolation and desolation. 15–30 minutes per day.
Carmelite: The tradition of Teresa of Ávila, John of the Cross, and Thérèse of Lisieux. Covers the Interior Castle, the Dark Night of the Soul, and the Little Way. 20–30 minutes per day.
Dominican: Based on Lectio Divina, the Rosary, and the Dominican charism of contemplation-in-action. Covers the slow prayerful reading of Scripture and the integration of study and prayer. 15–25 minutes per day.
Franciscan: The tradition of Francis of Assisi — radical Gospel living, prayer in creation, and fraternal charity. Covers the Canticle of Creatures, poverty, and encounter with the marginalised. 15–20 minutes per day.
How the six-stage structure works
Each pathway is divided into six stages, unlocked sequentially. Stage 1 is always available. Each subsequent stage unlocks when you complete the previous one. Completion means engaging with the stage content and logging your practice days — you need seven practice days per stage before moving on.
Your progress is tracked in My Formation. Completing stages updates your Discipline and Prayer vectors.
Which pathway to choose
Start where you feel drawn. The comparison table on the pathways index page shows each tradition’s best-fit personality, core practice, key text, and daily time commitment. There is no wrong choice — many Catholics engage with multiple traditions across their life.
Tips
Do not rush the stages. Seven practice days means seven real days of engaging with the practice, not reading about it once and clicking complete.
Keep a journal alongside the pathway. The Ignatian tradition especially is built around written reflection — the pathway will prompt this, but having a physical notebook makes the practice more durable.