Prayer Cycle / Soul of a Pilgrim/ Introduction
Introduction to the Soul of a Pilgrim Prayer Cycle
Table of Contents
Introduction to the Prayer Cycle
Abbey of the Arts is a virtual monastery and global community of monks, artists, and pilgrims dispersed all over this beautiful globe. The Abbey was founded by Christine Valters Paintner in 2006 with a vision of supporting people to integrate contemplative practice and creative expression. In 2013 she and her husband John moved to Ireland and he joined her in co-shepherding this community. They are joined by a team of treasured Wisdom Council members who support this work with their own gifts.
We are not affiliated with any particular institution and open our doors to people from any denomination or none at all. We strive to create a place of welcome and hospitality where we might dialogue with one another and grow. Our spirituality is steeped in the rich Christian mystical tradition, and three strands of monasticism: desert, Celtic, and Benedictine, all of which profoundly influences our ways of praying.
We are an open and affirming community and strive to be radically inclusive. We delight in being joined by people like you, who are seeking to be monks in the world and artists of everyday life, seeking kindred spirits, a community committed to contemplative rhythms and creative expression.
Poetry is our nourishment. Art inspires our souls. We dance and sing for the joy of it.
Morning and evening prayer nourishes many monastic communities and we have integrated this rhythm of prayer into our live retreat and pilgrimage programs. Our participants expressed a hunger for a prayer cycle that could be used by community members no matter where they were, that reflected our values and emphasis.
We are thrilled to present you with the fourth week of our Abbey of the Arts Prayer Cycle which takes as its theme The Soul of a Pilgrim, inspired by Christine’s book The Soul of a Pilgrim: Eight Practices for the Journey Within.
Each day you are invited to morning and evening prayer with an essential practice for pilgrimage. These prayers bring together the rich tradition of monastic prayer, the wisdom of ancient mystics, songs from our album compilations, embodied prayers to accompany each song, contemporary versions of the psalms, and poetry and blessings.
You are welcome to pray through on your own or with a group. We provide all of the written texts for seven days of morning and evening prayers on our main Prayer Cycle page. Duplication is permitted with attribution. The songs are available to purchase as a CD or mp3 download and the dances are available for purchase on DVD or streaming format. Your purchases help to support our ability to offer these resources and continue to develop more weeks of the prayer cycle on different themes.
How to Pray with the Prayer Cycle
Make some time each morning and evening to pause and join with us by entering into the prayers offered. You can pray with the songs and movement, or leave them out if you want to keep a simpler focus. If you are praying on your own, read through each section aloud, pausing between each one to allow a few moments to rest and integrate what has been said.
You can also pray this with a small group local to you by gathering together at a regular time. Divide up who reads which parts aloud, again leaving some quiet between each section.
Notes About the Music
All the songs are recorded and published by Abbey of the Arts, so you can listen to the pre-recorded podcast that includes the songs, or access the songs on your own. For complete lyrics to the Opening and Closing songs, you can download the free PDF versions (available on the Abbey of the Arts website) for each of the CD collections.
The five CD collections from which the Opening and Closing Songs are drawn are
Singing with Monks & Mystics (2015)
The Soul’s Slow Ripening: Songs for Celtic Seekers (2018)
Earth, Our Original Monastery: Singing Our Way to the Sacred (2020)
Monk in the World: Songs for Contemplative Living (2021)
Birthing the Holy: Singing with Mary and the Sacred Feminine (2022)
Notes About the Dances
We at Abbey of the Arts are committed to the path of sacred embodiment as a deepening of our spiritual practices. Along these lines, each of the songs included in the prayer cycle has a dance or gesture prayer to accompany it.
The gestures for the Responses (O Love, Doxology and O God of Love,) remain consistent for the entire prayer cycle, so they can become trusted friends as you return to them each day.
If you are praying the Prayer Cycle in a live group, (and if you are comfortable leading movement,) you can learn and lead the gestured responses. You could also lead the Opening and Closing Dances, (but this would clearly be dependent on the level of comfort of both you and the group.)
Our intention at Abbey of the Arts is to create resources that are multi-layered that you can adapt for your own solo or group setting. Sometimes, just witnessing an embodied prayer which was filmed in a natural setting can lift our spirits, invoking our own memory of glorious outdoor sacred spaces, even when we are at home with our computers or gathered in indoor sanctuaries.
The three DVD collections from which the Opening and Closing Dances are drawn are
Dancing with Monks & Mystics (2015)
The Soul’s Slow Ripening: Dancing the Sacred on a Celtic Path (2018)
Earth, Our Original Monastery: Dancing Our Way to the Divine (2020)
Monk in the World: Moving with Mystery (2021)
Birthing the Holy: Dancing with Mary and the Sacred Feminine will be available in Spring 2023
Conclusion
We are delighted that we can pray through the seasons with you in song, dance, poetry, blessing, and quiet contemplation. For all of us, may the principles of living as a monk in the world be a place of deep encounter with the mystery of the Divine One, embracing us, challenging us, and calling us to awe and intimacy in every breath we take.