Stephen Barany

Stephen Barany
Stephen is a freelance designer and illustrator, a dreamer, and a thinker. He's ever-playful at heart and maintains (and frequently amends) a mental list of nonessential life goals that includes writing and illustrating a children's book, designing a deck of playing cards, and building a canoe.

Recent Posts

How to pray with a labyrinth, a walking meditation

Posted by Stephen Barany on May 22, 2019 10:31:21 AM

Praying with a labyrinth is a form of walking meditation, a physical expression of the interior journey towards Christ that characterizes all Christian meditation. Like a pilgrimage, forms of walking meditation evoke our earthly journey towards heaven while simultaneously giving us time and space to listen and respond to the Lord.

Read More

Topics: prayer, spirituality, downloadable resources, prayer enrichment series

How to practice centering prayer, to pray and be with God

Posted by Stephen Barany on May 15, 2019 7:04:00 AM

Centering prayer cultivates a disposition of interior silence intended to make room for God. It is a way of disposing ourselves to receive the gift of contemplation, an encounter with God’s presence. As St. John Vianney said of his time in Eucharistic Adoration, “I look at him and he looks at me.” This contemplative gaze or time of being with God is at the heart of centering prayer.

Read More

Topics: prayer, spirituality, downloadable resources, prayer enrichment series

How to pray the Examen, praying with your experiences

Posted by Stephen Barany on May 8, 2019 8:50:22 AM

The Ignatian Examen is a prayer that helps us to identify and pay closer attention to God’s activity in everyday life. When fully adopted, the Examen becomes a habit, a daily inventory of the ways God has been at work in our lives and of the ways that we either have or have not responded to this activity of God.

Read More

Topics: prayer, spirituality, downloadable resources, prayer enrichment series

How to practice lectio divina, pray with Scripture

Posted by Stephen Barany on May 2, 2019 7:01:00 AM

The phrase lectio divina means “divine reading” in Latin and is a fitting name for this prayer practice of listening to Scripture with the ear of the heart. Lectio divina (often called “lectio” for short) is a dialogue with God through Scripture that includes the whole self: thoughts, images, memories, desires, etc. The movements within lectio divina involve reading, listening to, responding to and resting in the Word of God. It can be practiced alone or with a community.

Read More

Topics: prayer, spirituality, lectio divina, downloadable resources, prayer enrichment series

The Feast of the Chair of St. Peter and how to observe it

Posted by Stephen Barany on Feb 22, 2019 3:20:13 PM

Every year on February 22, the Church celebrates the Feast of the Chair of St. Peter. Confusing to many, this feast is less about an ancient piece of furniture than it is about the office of the pope and his role as a sign of unity and peace.

Read More

Topics: traditions, feast days, universal call to holiness

Living and Handing on the Faith

The McGrath Institute Blog helps Catholics live and hand on their faith in Jesus Christ, especially in the family, home and parish, and cultivates and inspires everyday leaders to live out the fullness and richness of their faith in the simple, little ways that make up Church life.

Connect with us!

Subscribe Here

Most Popular

Posts by Tag

See all