Discernment involves finding the ways in which God speaks to us. God spoke to Elizabeth Seton in nature, daily events, and prayer. She constantly sought God’s will and discovered it using what we now delineate as male and female ways of knowing. This article pays particular attention to her discernment as she made the decision to become Catholic. It also offers guidelines for individual and group discernment
Judith Metz recounts all the principal events of Elizabeth Seton’s life and how she reacted to them....
Betty Ann McNeil imagines Elizabeth Seton speaking about her mission of education. Seton’s own words...
Elizabeth Ann Seton became the first North American-born saint in 1975 and her sainthood was a fruit...
This article does not address specific decisions and methods of decision making in Elizabeth Seton’s...
Elizabeth fulfilled many roles during her life: daughter and stepchild, wife, widow, convert, mother...
Jean Flannelly asserts that Elizabeth Seton was a mystic, although she probably would not have seen ...
Loretto Gettemeier defines discernment as “a prayer-filled process through which each of us can disc...
Vincent de Paul’s method of discernment had three parts: an openness to God’s will, an evaluation of...
Elizabeth Seton did not have our contemporary understanding of spirituality and mission. Nonetheless...
Unlike many saints who saw human relationships as distractions from spiritual life, Elizabeth Seton ...
Elizabeth Seton’s last words were “Be children of the Church.” Josephine Burns explores what she mea...
Elizabeth Seton was influenced by three men: John Henry Hobart, an Episcopalian minister; Louis Will...
Elizabeth Seton’s devotion to the Bible is explored using her writings from different times in her l...
This commentary on Elizabeth Seton’s spirituality is also Anne Harvey’s personal reflection on what ...
Parallels among Elizabeth Seton’s spirituality and Confucianism, Taoism, and Buddhism are explored. ...
Judith Metz recounts all the principal events of Elizabeth Seton’s life and how she reacted to them....
Betty Ann McNeil imagines Elizabeth Seton speaking about her mission of education. Seton’s own words...
Elizabeth Ann Seton became the first North American-born saint in 1975 and her sainthood was a fruit...
This article does not address specific decisions and methods of decision making in Elizabeth Seton’s...
Elizabeth fulfilled many roles during her life: daughter and stepchild, wife, widow, convert, mother...
Jean Flannelly asserts that Elizabeth Seton was a mystic, although she probably would not have seen ...
Loretto Gettemeier defines discernment as “a prayer-filled process through which each of us can disc...
Vincent de Paul’s method of discernment had three parts: an openness to God’s will, an evaluation of...
Elizabeth Seton did not have our contemporary understanding of spirituality and mission. Nonetheless...
Unlike many saints who saw human relationships as distractions from spiritual life, Elizabeth Seton ...
Elizabeth Seton’s last words were “Be children of the Church.” Josephine Burns explores what she mea...
Elizabeth Seton was influenced by three men: John Henry Hobart, an Episcopalian minister; Louis Will...
Elizabeth Seton’s devotion to the Bible is explored using her writings from different times in her l...
This commentary on Elizabeth Seton’s spirituality is also Anne Harvey’s personal reflection on what ...
Parallels among Elizabeth Seton’s spirituality and Confucianism, Taoism, and Buddhism are explored. ...
Judith Metz recounts all the principal events of Elizabeth Seton’s life and how she reacted to them....
Betty Ann McNeil imagines Elizabeth Seton speaking about her mission of education. Seton’s own words...
Elizabeth Ann Seton became the first North American-born saint in 1975 and her sainthood was a fruit...