Spiritual Companions across the Centuries

Today’s post is by Margaret Benefiel

“Rebuild my church.”

God used these words from Francis of Assisi’s story to speak to me as I sat in prayer with two spiritual companions in Greensboro, North Carolina, after a heartbreaking disillusionment. I had left a job that I had thought was my dream job, my dream shattered.

“Oh God, what now?” I cried. My two companions, Quaker ministers like myself, sat with me in my pain and confusion.

As my friends sat with me in discernment, Francis of Assisi’s story came to me. When Francis heard those words as he prayed before the cross of the forsaken San Damiano chapel in Assisi, he understood God to be telling him to physically rebuild that church, which he began to do immediately. Only gradually did he realize that the more important calling for him was to spiritually rebuild the church of his time.

When those words came to me, I knew the call was spiritual (after all, I have no building skills, and unlike Francis, I had no aptitude for learning them). Yet, like Francis, I didn’t yet know the full extent of the call. I didn’t yet know what the “church” was for me, as I didn’t feel called to pastor a congregation. Over time, I gradually came to see that my calling was to rebuild the spirituality of congregations and organizations, across traditions.

A year and a half ago, fifteen years after I had sat with my two friends in North Carolina, I found myself in the chapel of San Damiano in Assisi. My heart stirred as I prayed in the place where Francis had received his call.  And I felt drawn into deeper and deeper contemplative prayer as I felt the prayerfulness of the simple, clear, uncluttered space. After Francis had rebuilt the chapel, Clare of Assisi and her community of sisters settled there. They formed a contemplative community, and they and their spiritual descendants bathed the space in prayer for centuries.  The walls reeked of prayerfulness. The space invited me to pray like I had never prayed before. I felt deeply grounded in God. Clare and her sisters became my spiritual companions, just as my two friends in North Carolina had been.

Across the centuries, across traditions, in different lands, God speaks. I was reminded in Assisi that our spiritual companions can come from any time or place.  God’s deep work in the lives of Francis and Clare touched my life and invited me to go deeper. I tasted a depth of prayer I had not tasted before. I have not been the same since.


This post originally appeared on the SDI Blog in December 2011.

Sensing the call to walk in this ancient place with a long and rich spiritual heritage? Join Shalem on our upcoming Pilgrimage to Assisi, April 4-14, 2018.

November 11, 2017 by Margaret Benefiel 4 Comments
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

4 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Julett Broadnax
Julett Broadnax
7 years ago

Margaret, as always your words stir my soul but in particular in the midst of all the havoc Trump is initiating. Blessings to you as you help us all to embrace the call to contemplative prayer.

Margaret Benefiel
Margaret Benefiel
7 years ago

Thank you so much, Julett.

Anita Davidson
Anita Davidson
7 years ago

Beautiful reflection, Margaret! No doubt that Shalem is all about rebuilding the Church from the inside out. I’m proud and privileged to be part of the journey.

Margaret Benefiel
Margaret Benefiel
7 years ago
Reply to  Anita Davidson

Thank you, Anita, for being part of Shalem’s work of rebuilding the church from the inside out.

Mission

Our mission is to nurture contemplative living and leadership.

Vision

In 2025, Shalem will be a dynamic and inclusive community, empowered by the Spirit, where seekers engage in transformation of themselves, their communities, and the world through spiritual growth, deep connection, and courageous action.

Cancel