Category: Community and Fellowship

  • My Soul Cries for a Wounded World

    My Soul Cries for a Wounded World

    When I look at the state of the world today, my heart aches. The division in our politics, the hatred and bigotry that pour out in our communities, the cruelty of homelessness in the midst of abundance—it all weighs heavily on me. I see people judged for simply being different, excluded because they do not “fit into” someone else’s mold of worthiness, and it cuts deep into my soul.

    I struggle because I know the pain of coming from traditions that did nothing to heal this suffering. In fact, too often, those traditions made the wounds worse. Instead of offering Christ’s mercy, they offered judgment. Instead of opening the doors of grace, they guarded them, deciding who was “in” and who was “out.” The Church, which should have been a hospital for the brokenhearted, became instead a fortress of exclusion. I saw the Sacraments used not as lifelines of God’s love but as weapons of control.

    And I carry repentance for my part in that. For the times my own words, thoughts, or actions mirrored judgment rather than mercy. For the times I stayed silent when others were excluded. For the times I thought God’s love was something to be earned instead of something freely given. I am sorry. Truly.

    My soul cries for the families who were denied the embrace of Christ because others acted as if they were the doorkeepers of salvation. I cry for those who were told they were unworthy of His love, when the truth is that His Sacred Heart has always burned for them. My soul cries for a world crushed under pain, hurt, hate, silence, and struggle.

    But in the midst of that grief, I have found another way. In the Independent Sacramental Movement, I have found a home where the grace of Christ is not rationed out or fenced in. Here, the Sacred Heart of Jesus and the Immaculate Heart of Mary overflow with love for all people—without exception. Here, the saints are not distant figures of judgment but companions of mercy. Here, the Sacraments are open to every soul who hungers and thirsts for God’s presence.

    This is the Church I want to serve. This is the ministry I commit myself to. My future will not be about gatekeeping, but about opening doors. Not about exclusion, but about radical welcome. Not about judgment, but about love—overflowing love.

    If you seek Christ’s love, you will find it here. If you hunger for His Body and Blood, the table is set for you. If you long for healing, the arms of the Church are open. Always.

    I can only say it plainly: My ministry will be for all who seek the love of God. Without exception. Ever.


    A Prayer for Healing

    Sacred Heart of Jesus, burn away the walls of hatred and fear that divide us.
    Immaculate Heart of Mary, hold close every soul who feels lost, rejected, or unloved.
    Holy Spirit, breathe new life into a weary world.

    May the Church become again what You intended it to be—a refuge for the broken,
    a fountain of grace for the thirsty,
    a table of welcome for the hungry,
    a home of mercy for all Your children.

    And may my life, Lord, be nothing more and nothing less
    than an instrument of Your endless love.

    Amen.


  • Coming Home: My Journey to the Shrine of Holy Wisdom

    Coming Home: My Journey to the Shrine of Holy Wisdom

    For much of my life, I have searched for a place where faith felt alive—where spirituality was not about fear or exclusion, but about love, healing, and truth. There were seasons when I thought I had found it, and others when I nearly gave up searching altogether.

    Life has not spared me from hardship. I have known loss that hollowed me out, brokenness that left me questioning God, and disappointments with religion that nearly extinguished my faith. There were times I walked away, convinced that church was not a place where I could ever truly belong.

    And yet, God has a way of calling us back when we least expect it. For me, that call came when I discovered the Shrine of Holy Wisdom in Tempe, Arizona.

    From my very first visit, I felt something I had longed for but thought I might never find again: peace. Not a surface peace, but a deep stillness that touched my soul. As I stood in the Sunday Divine Liturgy, surrounded by prayers that felt ancient and alive at once, I realized my faith was stirring again. It wasn’t just the beauty of the liturgy—it was the authenticity of the community, the compassion of the leadership, and the unmistakable presence of God’s Spirit moving among us.

    The Shrine’s clergy, led by Bishop Jorge Rodriguez Eagar, embody a vision of the Church I had almost given up hoping to find. They welcome without judgment, guide with humility, and teach with wisdom rooted in love. In their care, I began to see that the broken pieces of my faith could be gathered, healed, and made whole again.

    Week by week, the Shrine became more than a church I attended; it became a home for my soul. In the liturgies and feast day celebrations, I found joy. In the healing services, I found comfort. In community gatherings and conversations, I found belonging. Slowly, the faith I had lost began to awaken again—not in the way it once was, but in a way deeper, stronger, and truer.

    This reawakening has changed the course of my life. I have answered a call to seminary, beginning the path of preparation for ordained ministry. On August 15, 2025—the Feast of The Formation of the Theotokos and Holy Wisdom—I was ordained to the Order of Acolyte. Kneeling in the altar that day, vested and trembling with awe, I felt both the weight and the joy of stepping into service in a new way. The very Shrine that healed my faith is now the place where I am called to serve, to pray, and to help guide others into the same embrace I have found here.

    Now, as a seminarian and acolyte, I feel a deep responsibility—not only to tend the altar and assist in the liturgy, but to help open the doors of the Shrine wider, so that others who are searching might find what I have found. My heart is especially drawn to those who feel disillusioned with religion, those who have been hurt by churches, and those who quietly carry questions and longings with no safe place to bring them. To you I say: come and see.

    If you are weary, come. If you are seeking, come. If you are filled with joy, sorrow, doubt, or hope, come. At the Shrine of Holy Wisdom, you will find a community of welcome, a leadership rooted in compassion, and a Spirit that renews the soul.

    I came to the Shrine lost, grieving, and nearly faithless. I have found here healing, belonging, and joy. And now, I have found my vocation.

    The Shrine of Holy Wisdom is not just a place I go. It is my spiritual home. And perhaps, it could become yours too.


    Come Visit the Shrine of Holy Wisdom

    📍 Shrine of Holy Wisdom
    5025 S Ash Ave, Suite B-15
    Tempe, AZ 85282
    📞 (480) 219-9633

    ✨ Sunday Divine Liturgy – 10:30am, [9:30 from June – September]
    ✨ Feast Day Celebrations – as announced on the Shrine calendar
    ✨ Healing Services, study groups, concerts, and special gatherings – see the events calendar

    🕊️ For more information, visit: www.theshrineofholywisdom.org
    Calendar if Events: https://www.theshrineofholywisdom.org/events/calendar

  • A Manifesto for Sacred Leadership

    A Manifesto for Sacred Leadership

    Introduction

    There is a revolution stirring—not in the streets, but in the souls of those who can no longer lead from systems that suppress the sacred. We are the ones who have walked through fire, not to be consumed, but to be clarified. We’ve tasted religion’s beauty and its shadow. We’ve been burned by false authority and yet still feel the pulse of something holy calling us deeper.

    This post is my personal manifesto—born not in theory, but through lived experience. Through fatherhood and formation, heartbreak and healing, I’ve come to understand that true leadership does not begin with titles or traditions. It begins with sovereignty—the inner alignment with God’s voice within us that no institution can grant or revoke.

    What follows is not a set of rules, but a flame.
    May it ignite something ancient in you.
    May it remind you of the sacred leader you already are.

    I will lead from my essence, not my ego.

    There was a time when I thought leadership meant being strong, certain, and in control—qualities that had been modeled for me in both church and society. But life, with its unexpected initiations—divorce, grief, the vulnerability of fatherhood—stripped away those illusions. I came to understand that true strength comes from essence, not ego. My essence knows how to listen, how to serve, how to stand in truth without needing validation. Every time I let go of the need to impress or prove something, I come back into alignment with who I really am—and people respond to that presence more than any polished performance.


    I will honor my humanity as a vessel of the holy.

    There was a long stretch of my life where I thought holiness meant perfection. I tried to live up to unrealistic ideals—spiritually, emotionally, even physically. But perfectionism led me only to burnout and shame. It was during one of the darkest seasons of my life, after the collapse of a marriage and the loss of a dear friend, that I realized God was not asking me to be perfect. God was asking me to be real. Now, when I make mistakes, I reflect and repair—but I don’t self-abandon. I see that my tears, my laughter, my flaws, and my healing journey are the holy things. My humanity is not in the way—it is the way.


    I will not shrink to keep others comfortable or puff myself up to be taken seriously.

    For most of my life, I oscillated between playing small so I wouldn’t be judged, and inflating myself so I could be seen. As a teacher, a spiritual seeker, and a man on the path, I often felt I had to choose between authenticity and acceptance. But neither shrinking nor posturing gave me peace. What did? Speaking the truth of who I am—even when it made others uncomfortable. Saying yes to priesthood formation, even when I feared I didn’t “fit the mold.” Owning my intuitive gifts, my sound healing, my sacred sexuality, and my calling, all at once. Now, I stand in the middle: grounded, not grasping—anchored, not apologizing.


    I will cultivate my inner flame through prayer, ritual, embodiment, and truth-telling.

    This isn’t just poetic language—it’s the path I walk every day. My inner flame dims when I neglect the sacred rhythms: breathwork, silence, movement, ritual. It reignites when I sit at my altar, when I play the singing bowls and feel vibration clear my chest, when I speak honestly in spiritual direction or pour my thoughts into a journal. Cultivating this flame is non-negotiable now. It’s what allows me to father from presence, to serve with clarity, and to stay resilient amid the chaos of the world. Truth-telling, especially to myself, is the spark that keeps that fire alive.


    I will create safe, sovereign spaces for others to remember who they are.

    This is the heart of my calling. Whether I’m guiding a sound meditation, mentoring a seeker, or simply sitting in sacred conversation, I want people to feel safe enough to unfold. I’ve known what it feels like to be in spaces where you have to hide parts of yourself to belong—especially in rigid religious settings. That’s why I’ve redefined leadership to mean sanctuary. I am building communities, offerings, and containers where all of you is welcome—your grief and glory, your confusion and clarity. You are safe here. And not just safe—you are sovereign. My work is to reflect that back to you.


    I will serve the Mystery, not the machine.

    When I first considered re-entering formal spiritual life through the Church, I feared the return of the “machine”—systems that grind down the soul in favor of appearances and dogma. But in discovering the Catholic Apostolic Church of Antioch, and in walking the path of independent spirituality, I have come to see that I can still serve something sacred without surrendering to soulless systems. I serve the Mystery now—the Living God, the Breath, the Sophia, the Christ within. My rituals are intimate. My prayers are raw. My theology is open-handed. I no longer serve out of fear or obligation. I serve out of awe.


    I will live as a priest of the everyday, blessing the sacred in all things.

    I used to think priesthood happened only at the altar—during Eucharist, or in formal robes. But now I see priesthood as a way of being. I am a priest when I hold my son close and whisper encouragement into his ear. I am a priest when I bring cacao into the room and open a circle in reverence. I am a priest when I sweep the floor in silence, feeling Spirit move through the mundane. This is not about titles or ordination alone—it’s about how I show up in the world. My life is the liturgy. My love is the blessing. Every breath, a holy act.

    Moving forward

    The Flame of Sovereignty is not a destination—it is a daily devotion. It is the quiet courage to live from the inside out, to let your life become the altar upon which love is offered, truth is spoken, and presence is made holy. I did not come to this way of being through ease or certainty, but through fire, failure, and fierce grace. And in that fire, I found not just myself—I found God again. The kind of God who lives in laughter and silence, in children’s eyes and sacred rituals, in the aching beauty of becoming. If this flame burns in you too, tend it. Share it. Let it light the way—not just for yourself, but for the world that is waiting to remember how sacred it truly is.