Spiritual Disciplines

    Woman practicing the Rite of Reconciliation.

    Reconciliation: The Grace Of Not Explaining Yourself

    Posted on February 19, 2026
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    One of the most remarkable things in the bulletin at St. Laurence Anglican Church is the Saturday worship schedule, which reads: When I first came to St. Laurence, this line caught me off guard—both unfamiliar and quietly unsettling. Over time, it has come to feel like an invitation to restoration, calling me back into belonging….

    Anglican Spirituality

    Book Review: Anglican Spirituality: An Introduction by Greg Peters

    Posted on January 29, 2026
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    Greg Peters, Anglican Spirituality: An Introduction. Cascade Book, 2024. 108 pp. For many of us, the look and feel of being Anglican is as attractive as anything else it has to offer. Prayer Book spirituality is marked by modesty and calm, and methodical ways of speaking and thinking. There is a commitment to a discipline…

    A Garden Enclosed hero

    A Garden Enclosed

    Posted on November 18, 2025
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    Anglican Compass is proud to announce the republication of the 1907 spiritual classic A Garden Enclosed: Practical Studies in Religious Life by Sister Frances Anna, writing anonymously as “A Sister of the Community of St. Mary.” This community is the oldest Anglican religious order in the United States. Below is an introduction by the Rev….

    A Long Obedience in the Same Direction

    Book Review: A Long Obedience in the Same Direction by Eugene Peterson

    Posted on October 29, 2025
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    A Long Obedience in the Same Direction: Discipleship in an Instant Society (Commemorative Edition) by Eugene Peterson. Intervarsity Press, 2024. “Spiritual formation.” “discipleship.” “Christian living.” One can walk into a Christian bookstore and find plenty of glossy covers promising secrets to growth in forty days, seven steps, three keys, or one weird trick Paul forgot…

    A Little Theology of Exercise Mathis

    Book Review: A Little Theology of Exercise by David Mathis

    Posted on October 7, 2025
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    David Mathis’s A Little Theology of Exercise: Enjoying Christ in Body and Soul is a concise book on the benefits of exercise for the Christian life. The subtitle “enjoying Christ in body and soul” is at the heart of the book. Mathis, a pastor at Cities Church in Saint Paul, Minnesota, and an adjunct professor…

    Brother Roger of Taizé

    Taizé: Brother Roger’s Vision of Christian Unity

    Posted on August 12, 2025
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    Taizé is the name of a small village in France, which is home to a monastic community of ecumenical Christian brothers and hosts many thousands of pilgrims from all denominations who visit each year. When these pilgrims return to their homes, they carry with them the spirit of Taizé, expressed in song, silence, and a…

    Outdoor communion. For "The Church Offers what the Culture Can't"

    The Church Offers What the Culture Can’t

    Posted on May 16, 2025
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    As a youth minister, summer camp is a regular part of my life. Every year, we load up the church van and head into the middle of nowhere for a week of sleepless nights, camp food, sunburn, and ruthless competition. While I love all the craziness that comes with camp, there is one experience I…

    Beyond Lent: Spiritual Disciplines for the Whole Year

    Posted on March 12, 2025
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    For Anglicans and other liturgical Christians, Lent is the time we set aside each year to focus on the spiritual disciplines of prayer, repentance, almsgiving, and fasting. In the weeks leading up to Lent, it is not uncommon to encounter folks criticizing the Lenten practices as unbiblical. Typically, the criticism is that we should not…

    Hands holding Bible. For Lectio Divina.

    46 Theses on Lectio Divina

    Posted on September 17, 2024
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    There are many excellent books on Lectio Divina, the sacred reading of Scripture. The problem with these books is that they are books—long and easily divorced from the actual contemplative practice. Instead, I offer a list of 46 “theses” or “chapters” on Lectio Divina. Each thesis is short, distilling thoughts and quotations into a single…

    Praying with Open Hands and Bible. For Lectio Divina RAG.

    What is Lectio Divina?

    Posted on
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    How do we read Scripture? What happens when we sit down with our Bibles and begin to pore over the wisdom God has given us through its ancient authors? In our rationalistic world, we often find it easy to study the Bible but not as easy to meditate upon and absorb it. We’re tempted to…

    An Anglican Rosary held by a person on a book.

    What is the Anglican Rosary?

    Posted on September 11, 2024
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    For over a thousand years, people of faith have used various methods to keep track of their prayers. The Rosary actually finds its roots in the British Isles. The first Christians to use beads with their prayers were in the Irish community of St. Colomba in the ninth century. Though the practice of using stones…

    Gethsemani at sunset. For Silence.

    Stepping into Silence

    Posted on September 3, 2024
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    Stepping into a rhythm of silence is counterintuitive to everything we practice in our society, but it has many gifts to impart.