Prayer & Spiritual Life
Four great Catholic spiritual traditions. Six weeks each. Their own words, their own practices, their own depth.
The Catholic tradition has more prayer methods than any other tradition in Christendom. These four are among the greatest. Each one was born not from theory but from the lives of people who actually prayed their way to God and wrote down what they found. You are not reading about prayer here. You are being invited into it.
Saint Ignatius of Loyola · 1491–1556
Discernment, the daily Examen, and the Spiritual Exercises. The most structured and practised retreat tradition in the Church.
Begin Pathway →Teresa of Ávila · 1515–1582
The Interior Castle, the Dark Night, and the Little Way. The Church's greatest map of the soul's journey to God.
Begin Pathway →Saint Dominic de Guzmán · 1170–1221
Lectio Divina, the Rosary as contemplation, and study as prayer. Contemplating and handing on the fruits of contemplation.
Begin Pathway →Saint Francis of Assisi · 1181–1226
The Canticle of Creatures, holy poverty, and prayer in creation. The most beloved charism in the Church's history.
Begin Pathway →| Tradition | Best for | Core practice | Key text | Daily time |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ignatian | Active people and decision-makers | The Examen | Spiritual Exercises | 15–30 min/day |
| Carmelite | Those drawn to deep interior life | Centring Prayer | Interior Castle | 20–30 min/day |
| Dominican | Intellectual seekers | Lectio Divina | Summa Theologiae | 30 min/day |
| Franciscan | People who struggle to feel prayer | Prayer in creation | Canticle of Creatures | 20 min/day |
There is no wrong choice. Many Catholics pray in multiple traditions across their life. Begin where you feel drawn — and see where God takes you.
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