AutisticFaith
-
Kneel. Hold. Heal.

Reverence in the Presence of Shared Grace “Sing a new song to the Lord, for he has done marvellous things.” — Psalm 98:1 Today’s rhythm begins with a trumpet blast of praise and ends in the quiet dignity of communal rising. Psalm 98 invites us to rejoice in the Lord’s victory—not our own cleverness or Continue reading
-
Rain. Silence. Mercy.

When silence becomes praise and mercy meets the rain-soaked soil, even the overlooked find their place in the liturgy of being seen. This week’s reflection honours the quiet dignity of showing up—without performance, without apology. Continue reading
AnglicanCommunion, AnglicanTradition, Autism, AutisticFaith, Benedictine, BenedictineRhythm, BenedictineRhythms, BenedictineSpirituality, bible, Christianity, ChronicIllness, ChronicIllnessCommunity, ChurchOfIreland, CompassionInCare, Contemplation, ContemplativeCare, ContemplativePrayer, DailyOffice, Dialysis, DialysisLife, DialysisSpirituality, Faith, FaithAndIllness, FaithInTheEveryday, god, HeldInLove, IrishAnglicanVoice, jesus, LiturgicalLife, LiturgicalReflection, LiturgicalRhythm, ModernMonasticism, MonasticWisdom, NeurodivergentFaith, NeurodivergentTheology, OraEtLabora, Prayer, QuietMoments, Routine, RuleOfStBenedict, SacredRoutine, SacredSpaces, ScriptureAndStillness, SmallMercies, Spirituality, SpiritualJourney, SpiritualReflection -
Rededicate. Rejoice. Repeat.

Lighting the lamp in a quiet chapel, this reflection weaves Psalmody, rededication, and resurrection into a rhythm of presence—where constraint becomes sacred, and the Psalter still glows with quiet light. Continue reading
-
Darkness. Tending. Awe.

Three women. One tomb. A psalm that ends in darkness—and a silence that trembles with the hint of resurrection. Continue reading
-
When the Word Stands Alone

Is the Word enough? A reflection on Scripture, Tradition, and Reason—and the danger of standing alone. #NeuroDivine Continue reading
-
Stitched into Silence

A quiet joy threads through covenant, rhythm, and persistence—where Alleluia waits, justice lingers, and presence becomes its own prayer. Continue reading
-
Let Them Come

Children aren’t distractions—they’re divine disruptions. Let them come, wiggle, wonder, worship. Church isn’t tidy—it’s alive with grace. Continue reading
AnglicanTradition, Autism, AutisticFaith, bible, Christianity, ChurchOfIreland, ContemplativePrayer, Faith, FaithAndHistory, FaithInAction, InclusiveChurch, IrishSpirituality, jesus, LiturgicalLife, NeurodivergentFaith, NeurodivergentTheology, Prayer, QuietMoments, Routine, SacredRoutine, SacredSpaces, ScriptureAndStillness, Spirituality -
Held in Pattern

Finding grace in constraint, cosmic signs, and the body’s vigil There is a rhythm to dialysis. Not unlike the rhythm of the Divine Office—structured, necessary, and at times, painfully honest. It is a rhythm that reveals what is hidden: toxins, fragility, dependence. And yet, in that exposure, there is mercy. Psalm 51 dares us to Continue reading
-
Stone Word Witness

Practices that steady the heart through beauty, warning, and faithful speech. I sit with these passages as someone formed by a rhythm of shared work, ordered days, and quiet liturgical practice, and also as someone whose senses and attention follow different pathways. Here the scriptures meet the landscape of island weather, the inward order of Continue reading
-
Faithful in exile

Grief, grace, and quiet endurance in the margins of scripture and life Reflection on the Sunday readings. Jerusalem sits empty. The psalmist weeps by foreign waters. Timothy is urged to rekindle a gift that feels fragile. The apostles beg for more faith, and Jesus answers with a story about a servant doing what is asked, Continue reading

