Archive for the Dating God Book Category

Book Signing at Barnes & Noble, New Hartford, NY, 7pm Tonight

Posted in Dating God Book, Uncategorized with tags , , , on May 24, 2012 by Daniel P. Horan, OFM

Many of you are probably aware of this, but for those who might have missed it and happen to be in the Central New York, greater-Utica area, consider stopping by the Barnes & Noble Bookstore in Consumer Square in New Hartford, NY this evening, beginning at 7:00pm, for a book signing of my recently published Dating God: Live and Love in the Way of St. Francis (St. Anthony Messenger Press, 2012)!  Here is the information as explained on the Barnes & Noble website (consult this link for directions and additional information):

Author Signing
Meet Utica native Dan Horan and pick up a copy of his new book Dating God: Live and Love in the Way of St. Francis. A new look at the timeless condition of human desire for a deeper relationship with God, using the model of the Franciscan tradition.
Thursday May 24, 2012 7:00 PMNew Hartford
Consumer Square, 4811 Commercial Drive, New Hartford, NY 13413, 315-768-1075

Hope to see you there! I will also be in the Utica area to celebrate the Eucharist on Pentecost Sunday, May 27th, at my home parish of Our Lady of Lourdes in Utica, NY at the 11:15 am Mass. A public reception will follow.

Photo: Barnes & Noble, New Hartford, NY

Book Signing in Triangle, Virginia This Weekend

Posted in Dating God Book, Uncategorized with tags , , , , , on April 28, 2012 by Daniel P. Horan, OFM

For those who happen to live in the greater Washington, DC area or Northern Virginia, just wanted to let you know that in addition to preaching at all the Masses this weekend at St. Francis of Assisi Church in Triangle, Va., the parish will be hosting a book-signing event throughout the weekend where you can purchase a copy of Dating God: Live and Love in the Way of St. Francis for the discounted price of $10 (that’s 33% off the list price!).  The signing will take place in the vestibule of the church after each of the masses this weekend. Here are the times

  • Saturday Vigil (4/28) 5:30 pm
  • Sunday (4/29) 8:00 am
  • Sunday (4/29) 9:30 pm
  • Sunday (4/29) 12:00 pm
  • Sunday (4/29) 5:30 pm

Looking forward to the weekend — hope to see you at Mass and afterward at the book table!  Peace and good!

 Photo: Br. Dan signing at St. Bonaventure University

Video Clips from Franciscan Mission Service ‘Souposium’

Posted in Dating God Book, Franciscan Spirituality, Social Justice, Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , on April 27, 2012 by Daniel P. Horan, OFM

Back at the end of February I gave a public talk at Franciscan Mission Service (FMS) in Washington, DC, titled, “What Does it Mean to ‘Date’ God? Prayer as Relationship in the Franciscan Tradition.” It was part of the regular Souposium series that FMS sponsors throughout the year, which offers a public lecture hosted at the FMS main building and includes a homemade dinner of various soups, breads and desserts. FMS has recently published a few video excerpts from my talk, and you can find earlier videos on the FMS website from other talks. Here is the description of my talk as posted on the FMS website.

The idea of “Dating” God is a rather unusual concept. For many people such an image can be a challenge or even a problem, just as images used to describe God throughout the Christian tradition (“Father,” “Friend,” “Lover,” etc.) assist the spiritual lives of some, while hindering the pilgrimage of prayer and faith for others. In this reflection, Br. Dan shared what he means by this new image for imagining one’s relationship with God as it is presented in his new book, Dating God: Live and Love in the Way of St. Francis (St. Anthony Messenger Press, 2012), and explained how it ties into the rich and inspiring Franciscan tradition. Central to appreciating this different way of viewing spirituality is an embrace of the notion that our prayer can be more than something we simply do, but could be imagined as a more dynamic relationship with the Divine.

Enjoy these videos!

Video Clip One

Video Clip Two

Video Clip Three

“Young Franciscan Author Says Getting to Know God is Like Dating”

Posted in Dating God Book, Uncategorized with tags , , , , , on April 3, 2012 by Daniel P. Horan, OFM

The following is a Catholic News Service (CNS) article that was published on the CNS wire on 2 April 2012.

Young Franciscan author says getting to know God is like dating

By Beth Griffin, Catholic News Service

NEW YORK (CNS) — Getting to know God is akin to entering a dating relationship, according to Franciscan Brother Daniel P. Horan.

When two people already like one another, they devote copious amounts of time and energy to learning everything they can about each other and joyfully anticipate spending time together, he explained.

“Dating requires intentionality, planning and effort,” Brother Horan said.

Brother Horan, a member of the Order of Friars Minor, is the author of “Dating God: Live and Love in the Way of St. Francis.” At 28, he is not very far removed from the more traditional understanding of dating.

The oldest of four boys, Brother Horan attended Catholic schools and was an altar server, lector, eucharistic minister and sacristan at Our Lady of Lourdes in Utica, in the Diocese of Syracuse. He felt drawn to the priesthood in high school and studied theology and journalism in the honors program at St. Bonaventure University, a Franciscan school in Olean.

“Over the course of four years, I got to know the friars’ intellectual traditions and spiritual life and develop personal relationships with the friars themselves,” he said in an interview with Catholic News Service.

In college, Brother Horan ran a photography business, specializing in sports and news coverage. He called it “a hobby that got out of control.” His freelance clients included CNS, Associated Press and Getty Images.

After graduation in 2005, Brother Horan entered the Franciscans. He is one of five men from his parish who became Franciscans.

Brother Horan earned a master’s degree in systematic theology at Washington Theological Union and will complete a master’s in divinity in May. He expects to be ordained May 19 in Silver Spring, Md. After a summer assignment to St. Francis of Assisi Parish on Long Beach Island, N.J., he will begin studies for a doctorate in systematic theology.

The dating imagery occurred to him during a Franciscan workshop on the writings of Sts. Francis and Clare during his novitiate. “Their expressions of their relationship with God, while not quite love letters, evoked images of the tenuousness, ambivalence, excitement, energy and passion of dating,” Brother Horan said.

“Like other images for the human-divine interrelationship, it won’t be helpful for everybody. Any language to talk about our relationship with God always falls short, but this one is shocking and startling enough to get people thinking about their relationship with God in a new way,” he said.

Traditionally, God has been referred to as parent, companion, friend, even lover, in the Song of Songs, Brother Horan said. “I like the dating metaphor, because it’s an active verb,” he said.

Dating has a romantic connotation, which works for the metaphor, Brother Horan said, because the beginning of a romantic relationship is a more rarified, focused and intense version of the beginning of all healthy relationships.

“Christian tradition has always emphasized making a date with God, but you won’t find it in the Gospels that way. It’s a focus on solitude and the distinction between loneliness and being alone. The idea that we would set aside time to be alone with someone in order to get to know them better and allow ourselves to be known” is common to both dating and prayer, he said.

Brother Horan reflected on the connection during a five-day hermitage experience. A self-described extrovert, he said it is easy to get distracted by noise and technology, rather than acknowledge the merit of quiet and solitude. Many people are afraid of silence and equate being alone with depression, sadness and boredom. Seeing it as being alone with God changes the dynamic, he said.

“We can learn about who we are and our relationship to God by looking at our relationships with people. This is off-putting to some who want to make God removed from creation,” Brother Horan said.

“We bring our entire selves to all our relationships,” including fears, joys, emotions, anxieties and happiness, he said.

All relationships require work, Brother Horan said. Early on there is energy, intensity and effortlessness “and you might change because of the other person,” he said, but the ease does not continue. Friends, couples and believers need to devote time to reconnect and be alone with one another in shared experiences.

“We still need to go on dates with God. There has to be an intentionality to our prayer life,” he said. “Going to church once a week in a crowd doesn’t cut it. It’s good, but it’s not enough. You can’t have a relationship if you don’t spend time alone together.”

He cautioned the dating image is only a starting point for a new way to see things.

In addition to his studies and service as a deacon, Brother Horan delivers talks on topics as diverse as Franciscan spirituality and “The Digital Christ: Communion in a Technological Era.” And he knows he must make the time himself to maintain his relationship with God.

Brother Horan is eagerly anticipating his ordination and recommends that other young people consider whether they have a religious vocation.

“I love this way of life and I would encourage others to give it a try,” he told CNS. “There’s so much competition for our attention that religious communities get drowned out by the noise. I’m grateful that the spirit has led me to this way of life and I’d encourage others not to write it off.”

Photos: CNS/Bob Roller

On SiriusXM Channel 129 today at 2:20pm!

Posted in Dating God Book with tags , , , on March 2, 2012 by Daniel P. Horan, OFM

Hello everybody, just a quick note to say that I’m scheduled to be on the radio program “The Catholics Next Door with Greg and Jennifer Willis” on The Catholic Channel SiriusXM channel 129 around 2:20pm this afternoon. If you subscribe to SiriusXM, tune in and enjoy! Check out my new book, Dating God: Live and Love in the Way of St. Francis and check out the Website for “The Catholics Next Door.”

Speaking this Weekend at Spiritual Direction Workshop

Posted in Dating God Book, Uncategorized with tags , , , , , on March 1, 2012 by Daniel P. Horan, OFM

Just a little “FYI” for those in the greater Washington, DC/Baltimore, MD areas, I’ll be speaking at a Spiritual Direction workshop sponsored by the department of spiritual direction at the Washington Theological Union in Washington, DC, this weekend. The event is scheduled to take place on Saturday March 3rd from 10:00am  to around 11:30am.  The title of the program is “Attending to the Spiritual Landscape of the Millennial Generation,” and includes two presentations: one by me on an overview of the spiritual sociological characteristics of the Millennial Generation and one by Patience Robbins on the practice of spiritual direction for Millennials. The event is free and open to the public with refreshments available.

‘Dating God’ Events This Weekend

Posted in Dating God Book, Uncategorized with tags , , , , on February 19, 2012 by Daniel P. Horan, OFM

So it’s been a wonderful time so far this weekend at my alma mater St. Bonaventure University, where I came to visit yesterday during the annual “homecoming” or alumni weekend. I was in town for a book signing (see the photo) and to cheer on the SBU women’s and men’s basketball teams — two excellent victories, by the way — as well as to join the campus music ministry this morning for a guest appearance as the liturgical accompanist on piano. All were great fun.

This evening I head up to St. Joseph University Parish at The University at Buffalo to preach at the 8:00 pm Mass and spend some time with folks afterwards for a late dinner and to talk about my new book, Dating God: Live and Love in the Way of St. Francis. If you are in the greater Buffalo area, stop on down, it’s open to all. There will be an opportunity to pick up copies of the book at a discounted rate and to have them signed by the author if you are interested.

For those readers of DatingGod.org who are students at St. Bonaventure University, the campus ministry office has announced today at the campus masses that the first 25 people to come by the Thomas Merton Center (University Ministries) on Monday can receive a free autographed copy of the book! Can’t beat that deal! Thanks to the generosity of the campus ministry office at SBU for that!

The Original ‘Dating God’ — Happy Valentine’s Day

Posted in Dating God Book, Franciscan Spirituality with tags , , , , , on February 14, 2012 by Daniel P. Horan, OFM

Here is my original article titled “Dating God: A Young Friar’s Experience of Solitude,” published in the Jesuit magazine America in 2007. On this Valentine’s Day, as you celebrate the loved ones in your life, don’t forget to include your Divine Relationship! For more, check out my new book, Dating God: Live and Love in the Way of St. Francis (2012). Happy Valentine’s Day!

“Go to your room!” It is no wonder that solitude is a scary experience when, from one’s earliest years, time alone or “time out” was a common consequence of childhood shenanigans. Time out, however, was nothing compared with the dreaded “being grounded,” which not only required solitude but also limited one’s use of the Internet, telephone and television. In our modern prisons and schools, too, the final response to bad behavior often entails forced solitude and ostracism, in the form of solitary confinement or a trip to the principal’s office. It may not be surprising, then, that I had mixed feelings about the idea of spending 10 days in solitude secluded from the modern world in a hermitage.

I am a Franciscan novice. Both of those words are open to misinterpretation, so let me clarify. I am a Franciscan friar, a member of the religious order of men founded by St. Francis of Assisi. As such I live following the Rule of St. Francis, which outlines a way of life modeled after the Gospel. A friar is neither a monk nor a secular cleric, but a man who lives in a community of brothers who profess to live with nothing of their own (poverty), without marrying (chastity) and under the direction of their superiors (obedience). While this outline does little justice to the complexities of Franciscan life, it is at least a foundation.

Novices, quite literally, are beginners. In our way of life a novice is one in his second year of what totals five to seven years of formation, or training. I am not only a beginner in my second year, but at 23 I am young, which earns me the title “novice” twice over: I am also a novice at life. I mention my relative youth because it directly affects my hermitage experience and future experiences of solitude. Having entered the Order of Friars Minor immediately following my graduation from college, I am a child of the technological age, or, as we have been dubbed, a “millennial.”

Being a millennial is an important factor for a person in religious life. We millennials have grown up bombarded by stimuli too varied to count. With satellite television, satellite radio, MP3 players, the Internet and cellular phones, silence is a rarity; and with communication technology always a reach or click away, loneliness can easily be masked. None of these devices or activities is inherently bad; on the contrary, appropriately used, they are all good and useful. But because of them and our predisposition to fear solitude (like a time out), the embracing of solitude can be difficult for a millennial. So when my novice master informed me that I would spend 10 days in the woods of eastern Pennsylvania on a hermitage experience, apprehension and anxiety soon followed.

Dating God

If you never spend time with another person, you can hardly describe yourself as being in a relationship with the other. To foster a healthy and meaningful relationship with someone, you must set aside time during which the other person is your focus and your presence to each other takes priority. Understandably, such effort can be a challenge. With all the distractions of life and the pressures of work and society, it seems sometimes nearly impossible and often improbable that time can be made just to be and to be with another.

The difficulty in finding time and space to be present to another seems to occur more frequently in a relationship that is taken for granted or in a complacent relationship that has been relegated to a lower status on one’s priority list. It is different from the time when one first began to know a person, what in romantic relationships we call dating. Dates are specific times reserved solely for experiencing the presence of another, to learn about him or her and to build a history of shared experiences.

Transcending the stereotype of the romantic encounter, an experience like dating can be found in all types of relationships. When we first get to know a new friend, we want to spend time exclusively with that person; we desire to be around him or her. We want to learn all we can about the other and to include this new and exciting person in all of our activities. Doesn’t this sound like dating minus the romantic nuances? Read more »

Guest Post Over at AmericanCatholic.org Blog

Posted in Dating God Book, Franciscan Spirituality, Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , on February 13, 2012 by Daniel P. Horan, OFM

Hello fans of DatingGod.org! No post here today, instead I want to share a link to my guest post over at the AmericanCatholic.org blog. The post is titled, “What Do You Get God for Valentine’s Day?” Here’s an excerpt, enjoy!

Does God like chocolates? Would a dozen roses make God feel special? What is it that you get God for Valentine’s Day?

If these question appear silly, then you’ve probably not given much thought to the ways in which our relationship with our Creator is, in so many ways, similar to our other relationships with those most close to us, with those with whom we are most intimately connected, with those who love us.

See, it’s true, God is not our boyfriend or girlfriend, nor is God our spouse (sorry to all those fellow brother and sister religious who like to say, “I’m married to God!”—we’re not), but, God does know us, love us and even like us in ways that might be more familiar than we at first think…

Read the rest HERE!

Photo: Stock

Great Blog Post at AmericanCatholic about ‘Dating God’

Posted in Dating God Book, Franciscan Spirituality, Uncategorized with tags , , , , on February 11, 2012 by Daniel P. Horan, OFM

Below is a blog entry written by Mark Lombard of Franciscan Media the parent company of St. Anthony Messenger Press. In his post he reflects on the subject and content of my new book Dating God: Live and Love in the Way of St. Francis and shares some of our interview from last month. To read more from the blog, visit blog.AmericanCatholic.org

VALENTINE FOR YOUR GOD RELATIONSHIP

By Mark Lombard

Many of us who are married or in a committed relationship look to Valentine’s Day as a special time once a year to profess our love, our closeness, the intimacy that we share with that significant other in our lives.

That relationship is different from loving relationships with parents, siblings, other family members and friends.

But what about our relationship with God? Do we really love God? How can we describe that love? Scary, confusing questions put us face-to-face with how we understand our connection with and the presence of God our lives, and how we understand ourselves.

Franciscan Daniel P. Horan, OFM, helps us wrestle with these issues, drawing on St. Francis’ spirituality, in the newly released Dating God:Live and Love in the Way of St. Francis.

In an interview I did with the friar in the Franciscan Media offices last month, Brother Dan, who has taught at Siena College, has led retreats with young adults and who writes for the blog “Dating God: Franciscan Spirituality for the 21st Century,” stressed that the desire, the uncertainty, the passion and time set aside with those most important to us should resemble our relationship with God.

“One of the things that I want to stress from the book,” he says, “is that we become so focused on our relationship with God as different from that of other people, whether it’s our spouse, our friends, our co-workers.

“But,” Dan says, “our relationship with God is a human relationship like it is with anything else.”

He pointed to different images people use to understand their relationship with God: parent, brother, guide on a journey or, as some Christian mystics have suggested, lover. But he stressed that any image we use for God, who is so different from us, “will be helpful for some people and not for others.”

But while many Christians speak about loving God, oftentimes that love seems devoid of connection, of real relation to our lives, of intimacy, of the impossibility of anything but difference between us and the divine.

The image of dating for Brother Dan is one way to break through that. “This will allow somebody to think about God as somebody we can relate to, not unlike somebody we are dating.

“And in good relationships, dating relationships, when you’re getting to know somebody, we’re very excited and energetic about that,” he says. “The same is true about God.”

But it becomes “unnerving … to pause and think about somebody who knows all of the deep, dark secrets of our hearts and at the same time knows the joys of our lives.

“So what this book I hope does,” he says, “is get people to a good glimpse of what Francis and Clare of Assisi and their followers offer us in way of inspiration, wisdom and insight in helping us to understand our relationship to God in a contemporary way in the 21st century.”

What a special Valentine’s Day gift for us and our beloved – to enter into a fuller, a closer relationship with the source of all life and hope.

*****

About the Author

Mark Lombard

Mark Lombard, Product Development Division director, has worked throughout his career in Catholic publishing. A marathon runner, he is the father of two and a grandfather. Mark is an avid jazz lover, traveling with his musician wife to catch jazz performances throughout the East Coast or picking up his stand-up bass to play music with her.

Photo: Mark Lombard.
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