Thursday, 12 February 2026

Selected Poems - John Irvine

Selected Poems
John Irvine (1903-1965)
The Arden Press
Belfast
1948

Selected Poems - John Irvine

This volume will mark the eleventh volume of poems I have read by Irvine. I stumbled upon this author. I was reading one of the Vision Books for young readers, Irish Saints by Robert T. Reilly, and there was an excerpt of a poem from A Treasury of Irish Saints A Book of Poems. It was really intriguing and after reading that first volume I made it a mission to try and track down everything Irvine published. At first my dyslexia had me thinking it was John Irving, and I have read a few of his fiction books. But some quick searching put that idea to rest.  This author John Irvine lived from 1903-1965. This volume was originally published in 1948. 

About the author on a site with information about Irish authors states:

“John Irvine was born in Belfast and published several collections of poems: A Voice in the Dark, 1932; Willow Leaves: Lyrics in the Manner of the Early Chinese Poets,1941; Lost Sanctuary and other poems among others. He edited The Flowering Branch: An Anthology of Irish Poetry Past and Present.”

Another online description of the author states:

“Irvine, born in Belfast, published about six collections of lyrics between 1932 and 1954, mostly from small presses in Belfast and Dublin.  He also edited an anthology of Irish poetry, The Flowering Branch.”

This volume is different than the other ten I have read. It is a collection of poems all drawn from other volumes. The other volumes, year of print and number of poems from them are:

A Voice in the Dusk, 1932 – 11 Poems
Winds From the South, 1936 – 15 Poems
Willow Leaves, 1942 – 15 Poems
Nocture, 1943 – 14 Poems
From Fountain of Hellas, 1944 – 13 Poems
With No Changed Voice, 1956 – 25 Poems
Voces Intimae – 12 Poems

The volume Voces Intimae does not have a date so I wonder if it was forthcoming at the time of publication of this volume. There is a large acknowledgments at the beginning of the volume:

“I wish to tender my sincere thanks to the editors of the following publications for permissiqn to reprint poems which first appeared in their pages : "The Best Poems of 1938", "The Best Poems of 1942", "Northern Harvest", "The Cornhill", "Country Life", "The Argosy", " Chambers's Journal", " Hellas ", " The Dublin Magazine", "The Irish Times", "The Irish Independent", "The Irish Weekly Independent", "Lagan", "The Northman", "T he New York HeraldTribune" and the American poetry magazines "Wings" and "The Lyric".

I am also indebted to the following publishers : The Quota Press, Belfast; Wm. Mullan & Sons, Belfast; The Orwell Press, Dublin; The Talhot Press, Dublin; The Runa Press, Dublin; The Three Candles Press, Dublin; Mr. G. Morrow, and to Messrs. Boosey & Co. Ltd., for permission to reprint "·Spring" and "In the Faery Hills'' which first appeared in the song cycle "A Voice in the Dusk", the musical setting by C. Armstrong Gibbs. The poem "Highways and Byways" appears in this collection by the courtesy of The Ulster Tourist Association.”

But there is no mention or explanation for Voces Intimae. Each section has the original Title Page and Dedication before the selected poems.  As such the sections and poems in this volume are:

From "A Voice in the Dusk''

Enchantment 
To One Gone Hence 
Quest 
Sanctuary 
Nightfall 
Pity 
Three Cinquains 
The Lovers 
I Could Have Loved Thee 
Invocation 
Last Night's Wind 

From "Wind from the South"

Sorrow In Spring
Heartsease
To The Unfaithful Beloved
Captive
Canticle Of Spring
Four Cinquains 
Song -
Evensong -
The Prisoner
Moon Magic
Leavetaking
In The Mournes 
Night Piece
The Quiet Night
Unending Quest

From "Willow Leaves"
(Poems in the manner of the early Chinese poets)

Tu Li-Po
Nocturne 
Dusk 
We Are As Dust 
The Sorrow Of Ming Huang 
Spring 
Wu
To Yuan (In The South)
The Soldiers
The Dancing Girl
Impatient For The Spring
Meeting With Friends
Music At Dusk
Cheng
Farewell 

From "Nocturne"

Chopin
Trees 
At The Coming Of Night
October
By A Riverside
Mairi
All Lovely Things
The Island 
Craigey Woods
Spring
Jean
In The Faery Hills
Migration 
Valediction

From "The Fountain of Hellas," 1944
(Adaptations from the Greek Anthology)

The Grecian Garland
The Poet' S Ascent
Enduring Wealth
The End Of Beauty
A Bower
A Dead Child
The Unfairness Of Wine
A Bumper 
Erinna
A Dead Herdsman
To A Virgin
Astronomy
The Pastoral Pipe

From "With No Changed Voice"

Song
The Swans -
The Throstle
To A Blackbird -
Lines Addressed To A Great Artist
Lyric 
Sic Transit Gloria Mundi -
The Undying Dream -
London Sketches
A Lost Cause
Beyond
Sibelius
Dark Red Roses 
Sea-Haunted
Hellas
The Mother
Carrowdore
The Barley Field
The Changeling 
Faery
To One Grown Old 
Restless Woods 
Night
The Heart Remembers Morning 
Vale 

Voces Intimae

Romance
To A Poet In Early Youth
The Rebuke
Highways And Byways
Padraig
Winter Sorrow
April
The Burden Of Unrest
Invocation In Winter
Pastoral
Lebanon
Transience

I will only share a few poems from that final section as I have shared three poems from each of the other volumes when I have reviewed them. This section begins with this quote:

“The waves of the sea have spoken to me; the wild birds have taught me; the music of many waters has been my master.”
     -Kalevala

This final section is dedicated to W.H. Conn. Three sample poems from this section are:

     TO A POET IN EARLY YOUTH

     Poet, listen while I speak
     Now that youth is on your cheek,
     And the dream within your eyes,
     Tell me all the ancient lies.
     Tell me you have found love fair
     You who have not known despair.
     Tell me life is kind and sweet
     You who have not known defeat.
     Tell me of unclouded years
     You who know not bitter tears.
     Poet, you are dreaming yet
     Things that gladly I forget.

     Listen poet once again,
     Songs like yours are sung in vain.
     Such unquestioning belief
     Ends in bitterness or grief.
     Youth is ecstasy but blind.
     Life will teach you, you will find,
     That above our puny sighs
     Each slow dusk the J?leiads rise,
     And behind his prison bars
     Man looks upward to the stars.
     Each day that dawns, each sun that sets
     Brings its yearnings and regrets,
     But wisdom draws the veils aside.
     Then the eyes are opened wide,
     And suddenly the truth will ring
     In every stanza that you sing . . .
     And may be when a long time dead
     Your verse will be admired and read.
     I who keep a silent tongue
     Once felt like you, when I was young,
     And loved the beautiful and true,
     But then, I was a poet too.

          HIGHWAYS AND BYWAYS

          Meadows I love, and orchards and tall trees,
          The little burns that sparkle and are bright,
          And fields of barley in the sunny breeze,
          And curlew calling in the dim half-light.

          Old villages that lie among the hills,
          The lonely glens and rivers that are slow,
          The fuchsia hedges, and the fairy thorns,
          And cottage doorways where the roses blow.

          The little fields of Antrim and of Down,
          The mountain paths and woodlands by the sea,
          The rocky headlands and the sheltered bays,
          And moorlands where the winds are blowing free.

          The dusty· roads are waiting for our feet,
          The country inns and many a leafy lane,
          Oh come then, for the sake of old desire
          And walk with me the Irish roads again.

     WINTER SORROW

     Even if the heart be numb with grief
     There will be sweet days c0me again,
     Of daffodil and fluttering leaf,
     Of bird song and the silver rain.
     Of childrens' voices and the sun,
     Of whispering winds and twilights grey,
     And quiet peace when day is done
     And memories of yesterday.
     The well-loved hills eternal stand,
     White in the moon the meadows lie;
     In life and death we are at one
     With wind, and sun, and earth, and sky.

This final section is the only volume I am not able to track down in some library around the world. And I do not know if it was ever published. This collection was published 17 years before Irvine passed, so I do hope to track it down some day. I enjoyed this eleventh collection of poems that I have read from the pen of Irvine. 

I was able to track down a copy of this thanks to the National Library of Ireland. The NLI has all volumes I have found written by Irvine and 5 of the 8 edited by him; which I will now be tracking down to review. I am now trying to hunt the remaining volumes down. These poems were very enjoyable, and I am certain they would be to you as well, if you give them a chance. It is the largest collection of Irvin’s work. 
If you can track down a copy to read it is well worth it! Another great collection of poems I can easily recommend it.

Note: This book is part of a series of reviews: 2026 Catholic Reading Plan

Books by John Irvine:
A Voice in the Dusk Lyrics  
By Winding Roads 
Fountain Of Hellas: Poems From The Greek Anthology 
Two Poems 
Voces Intimae 

Edited by John Irvine:
A Christmas Garland - as J. Pennington Irvine
The Flowering Branch: An Anthology of Irish Poetry Past and Present 
The Poems of Robert Burns 
The Poems of Robert Louis Stevenson 
The Poems of Tennyson 
The Poems of Thomas Moore  
… 


Selected Poems - John Irvine

Selected Poems - John Irvine

Wednesday, 11 February 2026

No Greater Love Stations of the Cross for Teens and Young Adults - Amy Welborn

No Greater Love 
Stations of the Cross for Teens and Young Adults

No Greater Love Stations of the Cross for Teens and Young Adults - Amy Welborn

This past Advent I read two devotional books from the pen of Welborn intended for families and both were excellent. The first; Wonders of His Love Family Devotions and Activities for Advent, was a new read. The other was a reread Prepare Him Room: Advent Family Devotions, which I had a read a decade earlier but had not reviewed. This year Welborn promoted two volumes for Lent:

With Your Whole Heart: Family Devotions and Activities for Lent
No Greater Love Stations of the Cross for Young People

While looking into them I also discovered I had read Daybreaks: Daily Reflections for Lent and Easter, 9 years ago but had not reviewed it. So I read both volumes over a few days in order to review them and promote them for Lent this year. And I read this Stations that same Friday.

I picked up this volume for two reasons. The first it was by Amy Welborn and I have loved everything I have read from her masterful pen. And the second I was looking for a few new books for Lent reading in 2026 I picked it up a month before Lent with the plan of adding it into my regular rotation of ‘Stations of the Cross’. I try and pray a stations each day during Lent, and every Friday the rest of the year. I have read over 50 different versions. And I absolutely love this one from Welborn! It is a wonderful little volume with clear concise reflections; it is theologically sound, and very moving.

The description of this volume is:

“Catholic youth will respond to this Way of the Cross written by Amy Welborn, a syndicated columnist and author of several books for young Catholics. Presenting each of the traditional stations with a brief meditation and prayer, Welborn addresses the concerns and hopes of young people in a simple, direct style. Bold new illustrations in this redesigned Stations of the Cross capture the somber yet hope-filled mood of this devotion.”

Some online descriptions begin with ‘For Teens!’ but it can easily be used by individuals, in small groups or even corporately. I ordered 4 copies, one for each of my youngest two children, one for me, and one for their High School Chaplain. I worked through the physical edition of the book, and I found a digital copy of just the text on Welborn’s site. I really wish there was an eBook edition. I know I would use it far more often and I know a few who would pick it up who just do not do physical books anymore. The chapters in the volume are:

No Greater Love
Prayer Before the Altar
First Station Jesus Is Condemned to Die
Second Station Jesus Carries His Cross
Third Station Jesus Falls the First Time
Fourth Station Jesus Meets His Mother
Fifth Station Simon Helps Jesus
Sixth Station Veronica Wipes Jesus’ Face
Seventh Station Jesus Falls the Second Time
Eighth Station Jesus Meets the Women
Ninth Station Jesus Falls a Third Time
Tenth Station Jesus Is Stripped of His Garments
Eleventh Station Jesus Is Nailed to the Cross
Twelfth Station Jesus Dies on the Cross
Thirteenth Station Jesus Is Taken Down from the Cross
Fourteenth Station Jesus Is Laid in the Tomb
Closing Prayer 

There is no Stabat Mater, and no prayers at the end of each station, but they can easily by added personally. Each station has three parts:

Meditation
Prayer
Bible Verse 

A sample station is:

“THIRD STATION
Jesus Falls the First Time

Meditation
The streets of Jerusalem are narrow and winding. Crowds have gathered to watch Jesus make his way to
the place of crucifixion. Under the weight of the cross and pressed by the crowds, Jesus stumbles and falls.

Prayer
Jesus, the cross you carry is not just made of wood. It is made of the sadness of the world’s sin and all its
consequences in human suffering. That is a heavy burden to carry, and under its weight, you fall.
Sin brings me down to the ground, too. I may think I can handle it at first, but after a while, I find that my lies
or my casual cruelty or my closed heart is making it hard for me to walk upright. I fall.

I see you fall under all the weight, but I also see that you refuse to let the heaviness of the world’s sin keep
you down. You rise and keep walking out of love. Help me to rise, too, and find the path of love once again.

No one has greater love than this,
To lay down one’s life for one’s friends.
(John 15:13)”

In the introduction Welborn states:

“Love is important to all of us. We spend our time on earth engaged in so many activities, but in the end, it all comes down to love. We are seeking a place in life where we can safely love and be loved. We were made for love, and we all hope for a love that never ends and that accepts us just as we are.

What is love, though? The wrong idea of love can take us down sad or even dangerous paths. The Stations of the Cross are, above everything else, about love. When we journey with Jesus on the Way of the Cross, we learn what real love is, what it requires of us and how it gives us hope for the future.

The Gospel of John tells us that at the Last Supper, Jesus told his disciples that they were no longer servants but friends of his-which means friends of God. "No one has greater love than this," he said, "To lay down one's life for one's friends." In this Way of the Cross, we see what this "laying down" means for Jesus-and for us.”

I hope that sample meditation and the introduction gives you a feel for this volume. This was a Way of the Cross I am very thankful I have worked through and look forward to praying it again. If it was available as an eBook it would be one I used often.

This is an excellent Lenten resource, a great volume. I can easily recommend that Way of the Cross. I encourage you to pick it up and give it a try!

No Greater Love Stations of the Cross for Teens and Young Adults - Amy Welborn Sample 1

No Greater Love Stations of the Cross for Teens and Young Adults - Amy Welborn Sample 2

Note: This book is part of a series of reviews: 2026 Catholic Reading PlanFor all Stations of the Cross review click here

Books by Amy Welborn:
Reconciled to God Daily Lenten Devotions
Wish You Were Here: Travels Through Loss and Hope
A Catholic Woman's Book of Days
de-Coding Da Vinci: The Facts Behind the Fiction of the Da Vinci Code
Loyola Kids Book of Saints
Loyola Kids Book of Heroes: Stories of Catholic Heroes and Saints throughout History
Here. Now. a Catholic Guide to the Good Life
The Words We Pray
Praying the Rosary: With the Joyful, Luminous, Sorrowful, and Glorious Mysteries
Decoding Mary Magdalene: Truth, Legend, and Lies
Come Meet Jesus: An Invitation from Pope Benedict XVI
Be Saints! An Invitation from Pope Benedict XVI

Friendship with Jesus: Pope Benedict XVI talks to Children on Their First Holy Communion
Mary and the Christian Life: Scriptural Reflections on the First Disciple
Adventures in Assisi: On the Path with St. Francis: On the Path with St. Francis
Prepare Him Room: Advent Family Devotions
Daybreaks: Daily Reflections for Lent and Easter 
Parables: Stories of the Kingdom
The Absence of War
Relatable and Authentic, Transparent, So Real
All Will Be Well
Nothing Else Occurs To Me
A Reason for Everything

Prove It Series:
Prove It! God
Prove It! Church
Prove It! Jesus
Prove It! Prayer
Prove It! You
Prove It! The Catholic Teen Bible

...
 





With Your Whole Heart: Family Devotions and Activities for Lent - Amy Welborn

Daybreaks: Daily Reflections for Lent and Easter - Amy Welborn


Tuesday, 10 February 2026

True Serenity 30 Days with Thomas à Kempis - John Kirvan - Great Spiritual Teachers Series

True Serenity 
30 Days with Thomas à Kempis 
Great Spiritual Teachers
John Kirvan
ISBN 9781594711572
ASIN B005JD1M6Y

True Serenity 30 Days with Thomas à Kempis - John Kirvan - Great Spiritual Teachers Series

This is the fourteenth volume in the Great Spiritual Teachers series I have read. It is one of the older titles in the series, it was originally released in 1995, and was part of the rebranding in 2000’s, it has not been updated to the rebranding that started in 2024. Over a year ago I read my first book in the series, it was Born to Do This: 30 Days with Joan of Arc by Jaymie Stuart Wolfe, and loved it and the concept of the series. I have read one almost every month since that first one, and if I can track down all the out of print, will do so until I finish all 24 released to date in the series.

The description of this volume states:

“Hailed as Christianity’s second bestseller, The Imitation of Christ by Thomas Kempis is made accessible to the modern reader in condensed and accessible form. This attractively redesigned edition of True Serenity presents the wisdom of Kempiss fifteenth-century classic in a months worth of daily devotions."”

About the series we are informed:

“Each book in the Great Spiritual Teachers series provides a month of daily readings from one of Christianity's most beloved spiritual guides. For each day there is a brief and accessible morning meditation drawn from the mystic's writings, a simple mantra for use throughout the day, and a night prayer to focus one's thoughts as the day ends. These easy-to-use books are the perfect prayer companion for busy people who want to root their spiritual practice in the solid ground of these great spiritual teachers.”

I believe there are 16 volumes in this series currently in print. There are also a number that are currently out of print, The oldest I have seen are from the mid 90’s and it looks like they went through a rebranding and format change in the mid 00’s, and they have undergone yet another rebranding in the 2020’s including some new titles available in the series. I must admit I do not recall running across this series prior to that first volume on Joan. I have however added all of them to my ‘to be read list’. I love the most recent rebranding, and hope Ave Maria completes the rebranding across all volumes, and brings back into print some of the volumes currently not available; specifically the volumes on John of the Cross, Evelyn Underhill, Mother Theresa and others. This specific volume was released in 1995, making it one of the oldest in the series. 

The sections in this volume are:

Foreword 
Thomas A Kempis And The Imitation Of Christ  
How To Pray This Book 
Thirty Days With Thomas A Kempis 
One Final Word 

While reading this I several a few passages, some of them are:

“Life is an ongoing journey of change and choice, a surrendering of the old and a trust in new beginnings. What these saints ultimately realized-and revealed to others-is that refining a relationship with God is the life choice on which all else is built.”

“As Teresa of Avila taught her nuns so well, "Learn to see God in the details of your life, for He is everywhere."”

“Life is an empty journey without the companionship ship of God. And developing a sense of divine intimacy requires time set aside to be with God in prayer, reflection, and contemplation.”

“But in our own times, we must admit, many have never even heard of The Imitation of Christ and many others have relegated it to history as propagating a spirituality that is out of date and out of touch.”

“We have gotten used to a life centered on a search for self. I read a Kempis is to be challenged to turn that world inside out, upside down. Our search for self, he insists, must give way to a search for God. In God alone, we are told, we will finally find ourselves.”

“A second theme runs through the meditation passages. sages. It is God's promise of everlasting, true peace and rest to anyone who loves and serves him. The cost of this peace will be to put God above everything else, above the "world," above self. Any other peace is illusory, any other price is not enough.”

“The purpose of this book is to open a gate for you, to make accessible one of the world's great spiritual masterpieces, The Imitation of Christ, and the spiritual experience and wisdom of its writer, Thomas a Kempis. This is not a book for mere reading. It invites you to meditate and pray its words on a daily basis over a period of thirty days.”

“My friend, let not the world’s fair and subtle words move you, for the kingdom of heaven lives not in their words but in virtuous works.”

“Do not read and study just to be thought wise, but rather to still the world in your spirit and to hear more clearly my voice. This shall be more profitable to you than the knowledge of many difficult and subtle questions.”

“Inflame my heart and enlighten my understanding. Bring sorrow to my heart for the sins of my life and comfort to my soul. Let the only wisdom I seek be yours, 0 Lord.”

“My friend, you shall never be safe from temptation and tribulation in this life. Therefore you will need to protect your spirit as long as you live. For you live and walk among spiritual enemies who will trouble and vex you from every side; Unless you use at all times and in all places the shield of patience, your spirit shall very soon be wounded.”

“Grant me a night of silence with you. Keep me in your embrace through the night, give me quiet rest and your peace, now and forever. Amen.”

“O Lord, you have been with me all through the day. Now evening has come. The shadows have lengthened into darkness. Let my busy world now grow quiet, the feverish concerns of my day be stilled, my work put away.”

“Lord you know what is best for me. Give me what you will, as much as you will, and when you will. Do with me as you know best, as it most pleases you, and as is most to your honor.”

“Take heart, Turn to me for comfort And put your whole trust in my mercy”

“I must remember that you are the source of comfort for all those who call on you, and that without you there is no real comfort in our times of trouble. Let me never forget that you are always near. Let me take heart and turn to you and put my whole trust in your mercy.”

“It is often asked whether one is rich, strong, fair, able, a good writer, a good singer, or a good laborer. But it is seldom asked whether that person is poor in spirit, patient, meek, devout, or inwardly turned to God. The world judges by appearances but we must look to the Spirit.”

“But our old enemies resist our turn to goodness in every way, and hour after hour assault us to see if they can catch us unaware. Therefore stay awake, and pray that you be not turned from your spiritual goals by temptation (3:49).”

“This book was created to be nothing more than a gateway-a gateway to the spiritual wisdom of a specific teacher, and a gateway opening on your own spiritual path. You may decide that Thomas a Kempis is someone whose experience of God is one that you wish to follow more closely and deeply. In that case you should get a copy of the entire text of The Imitation of Christ and pray it as you have prayed this gateway journey.”

Each day follows the same format with three main sections from a newer book in the series:

MY DAY BEGINS: “As the day begins set aside a quiet moment in a quiet place to do the reading provided for the day

The passages are short; they never run more than a couple of hundred words. They have been carefully selected, though, to give a spiritual focus, a spiritual center to your whole day. They are designed to remind you, as another day begins, of your own existence at a spiritual level. They are meant to put you in the presence of the spiritual master who is your companion and teacher on this journey. This is especially true of this journey with Catherine of Siena. The readings are her report of God’s words to her, God’s side of the dialogue. And since the purpose of the passage is to remind you that at every moment during you are in the presence of a God who invites you continually, but quietly, to live in and through him, what better source than the words of God himself?”

ALL THROUGH YOUR DAY: “Immediately following the day’s reading you will find a single sentence, a meditation in the form of a mantra, a phrase meant as a companion for your spirit as it moves through a busy day. Write it down on a 3" x 5" card or on the appropriate page of your daybook. Look at it as often as you can. Repeat it quietly to yourself, and go on your way.
It is not meant to stop you in your tracks or to distract you from responsibilities but simply, gently, to remind you of the presence of God and your desire to respond to this presence.”

MY DAY IS ENDING: “This is a time for letting go of the day, for entering a world of imaginative prayer … This exercise is not meant to last more than a few minutes. End it when you are comfortable doing so. It has two parts. The first, in keeping with Catherine’s model, is a personal response to the words spoken by God in the day’s reading. Just as God has spoken to you, so you speak to God. Second, you are invited to turn to the familiarity of a prayer based on Catherine’s own words. It is an act of trust and confidence, an entryway into peaceful sleep, a simple evening prayer that gathers together the spiritual character of the day that is now ending as it began—in the presence of God.

It is a time for summary and closure.”

A sample day is:

DAY 13
 My Day Begins 

My friend, says our Savior Christ,
here is how you should pray for what you desire:

Lord if it be your will, be it done as | ask;
and if it be to your praise, be it fulfilled in your name.
And if you see it good and profitable to me,
give me grace to use it in your honor.
But if you know it to be harmful to me
then take from me such desire.

Every desire does not come from the Holy Spirit
even though it may seem right and good,
for it is sometimes very difficult to judge
whether a good spirit or an evil one
is behind this or that desire;
or whether you are being moved
only of your own spirit.
Many are deceived in the end
who first seem to have been moved
by the Holy Spirit.
Therefore, with fear of God
and with meekness of heart,
you should desire and ask
whatever comes to your mind,
and forsaking yourself completely
commit all things to God and say:

Lord you know what is best for me.
Give me what you will,
as much as you will,
and when you will.
Do with me as you know best,
as it most pleases you,
and as is most to your honor.
I am your creature and in your hands.
Lead me where you will.
Iam your servant, ready to do all things
that you command,
for I desire not to live to myself but to you (3:15).

All Through The Day

You, Lord, know what is best for me.

My Day Is Ending

O Lord,
you have been with me all through the day.
Now evening has come.
The shadows have lengthened into darkness.
Let my busy world grow quiet,
the feverish concerns of my day be stilled,
my work put away.
Lord you know what is best for me.
Give me only what you will, when you will.
Do with me as you know best,
as it most pleases you, and is most to your honor.
I am your creation and I rest in your hands.
Lead me where you will.

I am your servant;
I desire to live not for myself but for you alone.
Grant me now a moment of silence with you.
Keep me in your embrace through the night,
give me quiet rest
and your peace,
now and forever.
Amen.”

A second that really impacted me is:

DAY 16
 My Day Begins 

My friend,
why do you complain?
Consider my passion and the sufferings of my saints,
and you shall see that you suffer very little.
Remember how greatly others have suffered
in my name so that you may the more easily
bear your little griefs.
But whether your sufferings be great or little,
learn to bear them with patience.

The more you learn patience the wiser you shall be,
the more merit you shall have,
and the lighter will be your burden.

The patient soul,
whenever any adversity or wrong comes its way,
no matter from whom or what it may be,
or how often,
receives it thankfully,
as though it came from the hand of God,
and considers it a rich gift and a great blessing.
For we know that there is nothing
that we might suffer
that need pass without great merit.

Be ready therefore to do battle if you seek victory.
Without battle you will not achieve the crown of patience.
Resist strongly and suffer patiently.
For without labor no one can come to rest,
and without battle no one achieves victory.

O Lord Jesus,
make possible to me by grace
that which is not possible to me by nature.
You know well that I suffer very little
and that I am easily cast down by the smallest adversity.
Therefore, I pray that trouble and adversity
may hereafter, for your sake and in your name,
be welcomed by me,
for truly to suffer and be vexed for you is very good
and profitable for the health of my soul (3:19).

All Through The Day

My burden is light.

My Day Is Ending

O Lord,
you have been with me all through the day.
Now evening has come.
The shadows have lengthened into darkness.
Let my busy world grow quiet,
the feverish concerns of my day be stilled,
my work put away.

You have, Lord, taken this day to remind me
that without labor there is no rest,
without battle there is no victory.
Make possible to me, Lord Jesus, by your grace
that which seems impossible to me by nature.

It takes very little, the smallest adversity
to discourage me.
Let me by your grace,
begin again tomorrow.

But for now grant me a moment of your silence.
Keep me in your embrace through the night,
give me quiet rest
and your peace,
now and forever.
Amen.”

I hope those quotes and the sample days give you a feel for this excellent volume. This volume does not have the section Night Prayer to end the day that some have. But the My Day is Ending is mostly a prayer and as can be seen from the times I highlighted and shared them above. 

I have now read 14 volumes in this series, and currently working on a fifteenth and final that has an digital edition available currently, and I can state this is another great offering in the series. I find that some speak to me more than others. With one I did not highlight as much as in previous volumes, or even extensive highlights. I still greatly enjoyed it. I can state I benefited from the month with each person being profiled. And if I went back and did a volume again at a different point or season in life I might interact with it differently. I already plan to circle back to both this volume and the volume on Joan and reread them once I have completed the series, or at least those I can track down.

I will note the eBook formatting on this is terrible. You can only highlight full paragraphs, and even then when I went to export my notes of share on Goodreads most only showed the first word. Hopefully when they rebrand this to the current branding the formatting will be fixed up. 

This was one another of the volumes I connected with. This is a great read, it is one I really enjoyed reading it. I can easily recommend this volume and the series as a whole, and I look forward to reading others in the series. If you have not given any in this series a try this would be an excellent starting point or whichever one seems to call to you.

Note: This book is part of a series of reviews: 2026 Catholic Reading Plan

Great Spiritual Teachers Series from Ave Maria Press

Books in the Great Spiritual Teachers Series:
Abide in love: the Gospel spirituality of John the Evangelist – John Kirvan 
Fear Not the Night - John of the Cross and John Kirvan 
God Awaits You Based on the Classic Spirituality of Meister - Richard Chilson 
Grace Through Simplicity - Evelyn Underhill and John Kirvan 
Living in the Presence of God - Brother Lawrence and John Kirvan 
Love Without Measure - Mother Teresa and John Kirvan 
That you may have life: let the mystics be your guide for Lent - John Kirvan 
We Are Beloved - Thea Bowman and Karianna Frey MS 
Where Only Love Can Go - The Cloud of Unknowing and John Kirvan  

Monday, 9 February 2026

Daybreaks: Daily Reflections for Lent and Easter - Amy Welborn

Daybreaks: 
Daily Reflections for Lent and Easter 
ISBN 9780764826870
eISBN 9780764870996
ASIN B01N4QF53K

Daybreaks: Daily Reflections for Lent and Easter - Amy Welborn

This past Advent I read two devotional from the pen of Welborn intended for families and both were excellent. The first; Wonders of His Love Family Devotions and Activities for Advent, was a new read. The other was a reread Prepare Him Room: Advent Family Devotions, which I had a read a decade earlier but had not reviewed.  This year Welborn promoted two volumes for Lent:

With Your Whole Heart: Family Devotions and Activities for Lent
No Greater Love Stations of the Cross for Young People

While looking into them I also discovered I had read Daybreaks: Daily Reflections for Lent and Easter, 9 years ago but had not reviewed it. So I read both volumes over a few days in order to review them and promote them for Lent this year.

I decided to reread this volume for two reasons. The first it was by Amy Welborn and I have loved everything I have read from her masterful pen, including this title when I first read it 9 years ago. And the second I was looking for a few new books for Lent reading in 2026 I picked it up a month before Lent with the plan of reading the whole volume, then rereading it over Lent. It is a wonderful little volume with clear concise reflections; it is theologically sound, and very moving.

The description of this volume is:

“Jesus and Mary, from the crib to the cross. We started Advent with eager anticipation for Christmas, but we begin Lent with, perhaps, a bit more reluctance. Giving things up is inconvenient. Taking time for prayer interferes with an already busy schedule. Putting Jesus first means other things must be let go. This Lent and Easter season, author Amy Welborn shares her own struggles and triumphs of trying to live Lent and Easter spirituality year-round. She shares how small moments of frustration can turn into small lessons of grace. We carry our own crosses alongside Jesus this season. But as we drop worldly concerns to pick up our cross, we may realize our burden has actually been lightened.”

I worked through the digital edition of the book, and I I found evidence of older physical booklets editions. But the eBook is available readily. The chapters in the volume are:

Ash Wednesday
Thursday After Ash Wednesday
Friday After Ash Wednesday
Saturday After Ash Wednesday
First Sunday of Lent
First Week of lent Monday
First Week of Lent Tuesday
First Week of Lent Wednesday
First Week of Lent Thursday
First Week of Lent Friday
First Week of Lent Saturday
Second Sunday of Lent
Second Week of Lent Monday
Second Week of Lent Tuesday
Second Week of Lent Wednesday
Second Week of Lent Thursday
Second Week of Lent Friday
Second Week of Lent Saturday
Third Sunday of Lent
Third Week of Lent Monday
Third Week of Lent Tuesday
Third Week of Lent Wednesday
Third Week of Lent Thursday
Third Week of Lent Friday
Third Week of Lent Saturday
Fourth Sunday of Lent
Fourth Week of Lent Monday
Fourth Week of Lent Tuesday
Fourth Week of Lent Wednesday
Fourth Week of Lent Thursday
Fourth Week of Lent Friday
Fourth Week of Lent Saturday
Fifth Sunday of Lent
Fifth Week of Lent Monday
Fifth Week of Lent Tuesday
Fifth Week of Lent Wednesday
Fifth Week of Lent Thursday
Fifth Week of Lent Friday
Fifth Week of Lent Saturday
Palm Sunday
Monday of Holy Week
Tuesday of Holy Week
Wednesday of Holy Week
Holy Thursday
Good Friday
Holy Saturday
Easter
Easter Monday
Tuesday, Octave of Easter
Wednesday, Octave of Easter
Thursday, Octave of Easter
Friday, Octave of Easter
Saturday, Octave of Easter
Second Sunday of Easter

Each week follows the same format, with reflections for each day, a Pray Together each day and a Grow Together section each week and a reminder to check in on it part way through the week. A sample day is:

Ash Wednesday

Years ago—years—friends cajoled me into attending an Eagles concert in Tampa.

As the date approached, I realized when it would be happening: Ash Wednesday.

Predictably, I was seized with guilt. Me, a long-standing and—dare I say—prideful Lenten rigorist, a firm critic, for example, of my mother’s habits of serving expensive cuts of fish or dining out on Fridays while I humbly dished out beans or macaroni and cheese to my own family, here I was at a pop concert.

Guilt mixed with something else that night—judgment—while I waited around outside the venue and watched a parade of lithe, tall, gorgeous young women climb out of limos. A surprising number of them had crosses smudged on their foreheads. Did those models realize how lucky they were to be on the receiving end of double judgment? They were evidently doing Ash Wednesday with even more panache and high style than I was but also without an ounce of shame, parading the dichotomy in front of the whole world, with me, on my high horse, remembering the Gospel:

“Take care not to perform righteous deeds in order that people may see them . . .” (Matthew 6:1).

Lent seems fairly straightforward, but Ash Wednesday’s Scripture readings reflect a tension. Joel calls God’s people to a fast. It’s a loud, urgent public call for the entire people to embark on a public penitential walk.

But then Jesus seems to tell us something different. That fast? Do it in secret. Wash your face. Smile. Pray in private. Don’t let anyone know what you’re doing. God knows. That’s enough.

It’s a dilemma we face when we pause at the church door after Mass on Ash Wednesday. We have that cross smudged on our foreheads. Our ashes witness to our sinfulness and our trust in God’s mercy. It’s good for us to publicly admit it, good for the world to see.

But Jesus says what he says, and so my hand reaches up to my forehead, tissue in hand. Do I wipe it off? Should it stay?

Wherever I find myself at Lent’s beginning these days, my first step is to accept that tension. I live in the world. The world needs Jesus. We are his witnesses. But Jesus tells me, repent, witness, pray, and give while fasting from the most deadly thing of all: pride.

Yet even now—oracle of the LORD—return to me with your whole heart, with fasting, weeping, and mourning. Rend your hearts, not your garments, and return to the LORD, your God.
JOEL 2:12–13”

I highlighted a number of sections my first time through this volume, and about another half dozen my second time through, some of them are:

“Some of us love Lent, others hate it. But, love or hate, here we are, celebrations tumbling into Ash Wednesday, feast giving way to fast.”

“For forty days we will fast more, give more, and pray more. Our motivations vary. We are sorry for our sins and our stubbornness in sin. Our sacrifices become acts of penance. We give God’s will more room to flourish by denying ourselves. We clarify. We prune. We focus. We realize how much we have crowded God out with silly, wasteful, or selfish things. Most of all, we seek to be like Jesus, to take up a cross.”

“Lent seems fairly straightforward, but Ash Wednesday’s Scripture readings reflect a tension. Joel calls God’s people to a fast. It’s a loud, urgent public call for the entire people to embark on a public penitential walk. But then Jesus seems to tell us something different. That fast? Do it in secret. Wash your face. Smile. Pray in private. Don’t let anyone know what you’re doing. God knows. That’s enough.”

“Wherever I find myself at Lent’s beginning these days, my first step is to accept that tension. I live in the world. The world needs Jesus. We are his witnesses. But Jesus tells me, repent, witness, pray, and give while fasting from the most deadly thing of all: pride.”

““That’s smart,” I thought. How often do we talk to each other, assume we’re noted and understood but aren’t?”

“How many times does God speak to me and I let the words drift around my heart but don’t actually hear them?”

“I am invited to enter more deeply into Jesus’ journey during Lent. This is a journey deep into our human life. It began in the Incarnation, but now I see what “Word made flesh” really means. The flesh suffers, dies, and finally rises.”

“No one likes to be sick, but as the saints remind us, illness can be an opportunity for spiritual growth. I know that for me, even a minor illness gives me a chance to grow in empathy and to offer my tiny bit of discomfort for those truly suffering.”

“A quick check of my life from the outside indicates everything is just fine. But in Lent’s focused, quiet space, distant from the cacophony of the daily storms, what do I hear? What is hidden and dripping steadily? What hints did I ignore? Now is the time to tend to that weakness so I don’t cause more damage but flourish with God’s life instead.”

“Such mysteries lie in all of our histories. If we looked at every step that led to our current lives, we would see a confusing tapestry of good and horrible decisions. Accidents that brought us to this moment. Here we are, existing because of the strange things that happened to other people and ourselves.”

“For this reason, I welcome the focused spiritual practices of Lent. This more intentional praying, fasting, and giving gives me an opportunity to root out habits of avoidance and return to the Father’s loving embrace.”

“Like Naaman, our expectations of what God’s activity should look like can be off. The first problem is right up front: We have expectations. We look for emotional highs during private prayer or Mass. Or we disdain simple prayers in favor of complicated programs or spiritual systems.”

“My life is supposed to be like that. What my own eyes have seen is the mercy of God, hope for sinners, and the promise of eternal life. My call is to remember and to witness to that mercy in inviting, welcoming, and loving ways. To remember, to live, to stand witness.”

“In fact, putting my hope for joy in things can distract me from God’s love. God invites me to use the power of my hands, not to serve my own pleasure and existential anxiety, but to serve all those in need with gracious freedom and compassion.”

“Questions. I’ve grown from asking them and being asked. I’m asked, I ask, and in the midst of all the questions, I finally begin to see.”

“As various wise people have said, don’t judge my faith by how I act—I might even be worse without that faith.”

“Dealing with other human beings can be a chore, but if I can push back my self-centeredness and open my eyes, I can see signs. Signs of pain, hurt, loss, and concern. Jesus’ journey to the cross is one of patience, understanding, forgiveness, and of bearing burdens. Joining him on that journey, I see that my call is to look at others, not as problems or irritating objects, but as brothers and sisters giving me signs of the burdens they bear.”

“I pause. I listen humbly, not presuming anything. I welcome that startled disorientation, not as an end, but as the beginning of something more.”

“I have no doubt that Jesus, through the prayers his body offered for healing—consoled us in a real way. For that reason, when I’m asked to pray for someone, I always, always stop and do so. Every prayer, every little sacrifice is a step with him to console, gladden, and transform mourning into joy.”

“Today I continue the journey begun weeks ago, deepened on Palm Sunday and intensified through this Triduum. I may not be in Jerusalem, but wherever I am, in prayer with my brothers and sisters, I walk with Jesus. In this space I encounter this true sacrifice. I am moved by the humility of God and stripped of all the world offers. I walk. We walk on that path, in his footsteps, past and present erased in the eternal now of love.”

“Today has five names. It is the Octave of Easter, the Second Sunday of Easter, and Divine Mercy Sunday. Before the reforms of the Second Vatican Council, it was known as Low Sunday to indicate that it was the end of the eight days and that Easter had been duly celebrated and now it was time to bring the celebrating down a few degrees. Before Vatican II, it was also known as Sunday in White to indicate that this was the last day those who had been baptized during the Easter Vigil wore their white baptismal garment.”

I hope that sample day and those quotes give you a feel for this volume. This was a book I am very thankful I have worked through and look forward to reading it again during Lent. I really appreciated many of the reflections and almost all the prayers at the ends of specific days. The first quote I highlighted this time though was:

“Some of us love Lent, others hate it. But, love or hate, here we are, celebrations tumbling into Ash Wednesday, feast giving way to fast.”

It really got me thinking about I Don't Like Lent by Rev Daniel A. Lord S.J., which I am going to have to reread now as well. It should also be noted there is a companion Daybreaks Advent volume but it appears it has never been released as an eBook. I enjoyed this so much when I read it in 2017 I posted 2 of the reflections at the time:


Maybe that is why I did not get around to reviewing it. That being said, this is an excellent Lenten resource, a great volume. I can easily recommend it. This is a wonderful volume that will inspire and challenge. I encourage you to pick it up and give it a try!

Note: This book is part of a series of reviews: 2026 Catholic Reading Plan

Books by Amy Welborn:
Reconciled to God Daily Lenten Devotions
Wish You Were Here: Travels Through Loss and Hope
A Catholic Woman's Book of Days
de-Coding Da Vinci: The Facts Behind the Fiction of the Da Vinci Code
Loyola Kids Book of Saints
Loyola Kids Book of Heroes: Stories of Catholic Heroes and Saints throughout History
Here. Now. a Catholic Guide to the Good Life
The Words We Pray
Praying the Rosary: With the Joyful, Luminous, Sorrowful, and Glorious Mysteries
Decoding Mary Magdalene: Truth, Legend, and Lies
Come Meet Jesus: An Invitation from Pope Benedict XVI
Be Saints! An Invitation from Pope Benedict XVI

Friendship with Jesus: Pope Benedict XVI talks to Children on Their First Holy Communion
Mary and the Christian Life: Scriptural Reflections on the First Disciple
Adventures in Assisi: On the Path with St. Francis: On the Path with St. Francis
Prepare Him Room: Advent Family Devotions
Daybreaks: Daily Reflections for Lent and Easter 
Parables: Stories of the Kingdom
The Absence of War
Relatable and Authentic, Transparent, So Real
All Will Be Well
Nothing Else Occurs To Me
A Reason for Everything

Prove It Series:
Prove It! God
Prove It! Church
Prove It! Jesus
Prove It! Prayer
Prove It! You
Prove It! The Catholic Teen Bible

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With Your Whole Heart: Family Devotions and Activities for Lent - Amy Welborn