The Love of Thousands: How Angels, Saints, and Ancestors Walk with Us toward Holiness
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About this ebook
Is it possible that angels, saints, and even our departed ancestors support and inspire us throughout our lives? How can we connect with them in a real way?
Christine Valters Paintner, popular spiritual writer and abbess of the online Abbey of the Arts, says these sacred beings are paving the way for our journey toward God’s love, even as we pass through a world rife with struggle, discord, and violence. In The Love of Thousands, she helps us open up our spiritual imagination to encounter our heavenly helpers, allowing us to become everyday mystics.
Paintner describes saints, angels, and our ancestors as sacred beings who surround us like concentric circles, watching over us with compassion and offering us spiritual guidance throughout our lives.
In The Love of Thousands, she guides us to see the ways these beings support us, from the care of our guardian angels, to the wisdom of the mystics, to the witness of our loved ones who have crossed the threshold to the light of God’s presence.
Paintner’s gentle guidance reveals that we can be inspired and sustained when we are open and attentive in exploring our connections to these holy companions walking alongside us. Transformed by the encounter, we can grow into the kinds of ancestors—part of the Communion of Saints—who offer spiritual support and wisdom to others in turn.
Throughout The Love of Thousands, we are led to explore and better understand
- the teachings from scripture and tradition about the four archangels, the protection offered by our guardian angels, and what it might look like to wrestle with angels as Jacob did in the Old Testament;
- the witness of the saints and mystics, with an exploration of how we are all called to be mystics;
- the tradition of relics and the practice of pilgrimage;
- the presence of our ancestors, inviting us first to claim the blessings of our family heritage and then to embrace grief and explore healing the wounds of our lineage.
Each chapter includes a reflection, practice, meditation, and creative exercise that will help cultivate an ongoing relationship with angels, saints, and our ancestors. Paintner also suggests various ways to engage with this book to reflect more deeply on the spiritual content, such as reading it over the course of a year or with others as a form of spiritual pilgrimage.
Christine Valters Paintner
Christine Valters Paintner is the online abbess for Abbey of the Arts, a virtual monastery offering classes and resources on contemplative practice and creative expression. She earned a doctorate in Christian spirituality from the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley, California, and achieved professional status as a registered expressive arts consultant and educator from the International Expressive Arts Therapy Association. She is also trained as a spiritual director and supervisor. Paintner is the author of numerous spirituality titles, including The Love of Thousands; Birthing the Holy; Sacred Time; Earth, Our Original Monastery; The Soul’s Slow Ripening; The Wisdom of the Body; Illuminating the Way; The Soul of a Pilgrim; The Artist’s Rule; Water, Wind, Earth, and Fire; and three collections of poetry. She is a Benedictine oblate living in Galway, Ireland, with her husband, John. Together they lead online retreats at their website AbbeyoftheArts.com.
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The Love of Thousands - Christine Valters Paintner
"Christine Valters Paintner invites us to experience a more authentic way of being and teaches us how to live from there. Warm-hearted, its wisdom keeps us company whether we are in grief’s wilderness, a joyful time, or another liminal place. Making space for our true, loving self to awaken and reawaken, it shares ways to travel soulcraft’s healing path together and walks us home."
Carmen Acevedo Butcher
Poet and translator of The Cloud of Unknowing and Practice of the Presence
"Reading a book by Christine Valters Paintner is like going on a retreat in your own home. She tells meaningful stories, offers insightful guidance, and presents practical ways to bring spirituality into your heart, body, and soul. With The Love of Thousands, she invites readers into one of the most beautiful elements of Christian spirituality: the Communion of Saints (and angels and ancestors). But this is no mere abstract doctrine—the wisdom offered here can help make the love of our heavenly companions truly an embodied presence in our lives."
Carl McColman
Author of The New Big Book of Christian Mysticism
"Reading The Love of Thousands is like gathering around a campfire on a clear starlit night or plunging into a cold refreshing stream. It awakens what we know by heart, lifting up simple practices that help us cultivate mystical presence. Drawing deeply from the well of human experience, Christine Valters Paintner once again gives us a reliable hope, not just for our individual lives but for the collective wounds plaguing our planet."
Dori Grinenko Baker
Coauthor of Another Way
With her trademark commingling of erudite research and compassionate intimacy, Christine Valters Paintner gently pulls back the veils of both time and space that we might see all those who have come before us looking lovingly upon us in the shadow of every tree, in the echo of every bird’s song. Contemplative prayers and practices invite us into a sacred experience of the love that came before us, the love that surrounds us still, guiding us into the profound peace of knowing that we never walk alone.
Cameron Bellm
Catholic author and speaker
"If Christine Valters Paintner simply took us on a journey in her book, The Love of Thousands, that would be enough. In this magical and mystical work, which contains the quotes from a fantastic array of sages, she also opens the space for us to robustly experience our own spiritual pilgrimage as well. Her book is actually a retreat on knowing life more richly by revisiting such experiences as impermanence and vulnerability. By drawing from a breadth of spiritual traditions and personal insights, she also helps us understand time and attention not as mere concepts, but as lenses that need to be polished and intently looked through differently, honestly, hopefully. In encountering her words, I felt as if Paintner was sitting alongside me and encouraging me to breathe in life and become open to relics, sainthood, ancestry, meditation, angelic relationships, and feast days in ways that those whom I have admired did long before me. She constantly challenged me to calmly and humbly open myself to being on the edge of wonder and awe, to appreciate life’s ‘thin places,’ even when what I first encountered was, to my mind, darkness. My hope is that the new consciousness and meditative way of life that this spurred on in me will have a similar impact on you as well."
Robert J. Wicks
Author of Riding the Dragon
The Love of Thousands. How Angels, Saints, and Ancestors Walk With Us Towards Holiness. Christine Vallters Paintner. Sorin Books. Notre Dame, Indiana.Unless otherwise noted, scripture quotations are from New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright © 1989 National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
© 2023 by Christine Valters Paintner
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever, except in the case of reprints in the context of reviews, without written permission from Sorin Books®, P.O. Box 428, Notre Dame, IN 46556-0428, 1-800-282-1865. http://www.avemariapress.com/sorin-books
Paperback: ISBN-13 978-1-932057-33-1
E-book: ISBN-13 978-1-932057-34-8
Cover image Communion of Saints
© 2023 Elise Ritter, elise-ritter.pixels.com, @eliseritterartist.
Cover and text design by Samantha Watson.
Printed and bound in the United States of America.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available.
Walking, I can almost hear the redwoods beating. And the oceans are above me here, rolling clouds, heavy and dark. It is winter and there is smoke from the fires. It is a world of elemental attention, of all things working together, listening to what speaks in the blood. Whichever road I follow, I walk in the land of many gods, and they love and eat one another. Suddenly all my ancestors are behind me. Be still, they say. Watch and listen. You are the result of the love of thousands.
—Linda Hogan, Dwellings: A Spiritual History of the Living World
To my wise and well ancestors,
spanning New England, England,
Latvia, Austria, Slovenia, Hungary, and the Czech Republic,
who shower me with love and support
and cheer me on daily:
all I do is because of your courage and inspiration.
Contents
Introduction
Part One: Angels
1. Calling on the Archangels
2. Encountering Your Guardian Angel
3. Wrestling with Angels
Part Two: Saints
4. We Are All Called to Be Saints and Mystics
5. Embodied Love
6. Saints and Pilgrimage
Part Three: Ancestors
7. Blessings of Our Ancestors
8. Intergenerational Wounds and Our Responsibilities
9. Grieving Our Losses
10. Ancestral Pilgrimage
11. Cosmology, Myth, and Song
12. Becoming a Wise and Well Ancestor
13. Ancestral Earth and Deep Time
Conclusion: The Love of Thousands
Acknowledgments
Notes
Introduction
What is the knocking?
What is the knocking at the door in the night?
It is somebody wants to do us harm.
No, no, it is the three strange angels.
Admit them, admit them.
—D. H. Lawrence, excerpt from Song of a Man Who Has Come Through
The quote by Chickasaw poet and writer Linda Hogan I share as an epigraph to this book is one that has guided my journey more deeply into the world of angels, saints, and ancestors for many years.
At its foundation, it is a journey of opening our hearts to the love of all those sacred beings who dwell in spiritual form across the veil. Our Western minds may tell us that what we see is all there is, but the religious and mystical imagination knows a deeper truth.
Various religious traditions have taught about the existence of angels, saints, and ancestors for millennia. The God I believe in is a God of Love, a divine being from whom all of creation erupted out of this foundation of Love.
In a world so filled with struggles, discord, and violence, I know I need as many reminders of the Love that undergirds and infuses all of life. Those beings who dwell in the light of the Divine Presence extend themselves toward us in loving care and compassion. They are resources to help sustain and inspire us. All we need to do is look with eyes of the heart. All we need to do is open ourselves to an encounter.
Thresholds and the Otherworld
Thresholds are potent doorways between the old and the new. When we step onto a threshold in our lives, we release an old identity or old patterns and await the new birthing. It can be uncomfortable at times to rest in this space of waiting, of not knowing what things will look like. But we can cultivate our capacity to breathe deeply and stay present to what is unfolding within us through retreat time.
To connect with the Otherworld—the world beyond the veil of appearances—means developing our intuitive skills and vision. It means trusting the messages from our heart and gut, rather than only what the mind shows us and our culture tells us is valuable. It means listening to daydreams and night dreams and paying attention to synchronicities—when a symbol or image starts to show up in multiple ways and places. It means spending time in the natural world and letting feather, fur, and fin reveal dimensions of our longing to us. It means listening for leaf erupting from branch and blossom emerging from stem without trying to figure things out. It means cultivating the capacity to let things be organic and emerge slowly.
For some it might mean suspending disbelief in the possibility of this kind of love and connection long enough for messages to be revealed. As Mark’s gospel tells us, The Spirit drove [Jesus] out into the desert, and he remained in the desert for forty days, tempted by Satan. He was among wild beasts, and the angels ministered to him
(1:12–13, NABRE). And this version from The Message by Eugene Peterson: At once, this same Spirit pushed Jesus out into the wild. For forty wilderness days and nights he was tested by Satan. Wild animals were his companions, and angels took care of him.
This is our starting place: going out into the wilderness of our lives, the threshold space where we release the old and anticipate the new, and in this liminal place we know that angels and other spiritual beings surround us and attend to us.
Journey of Writing This Book
In many ways I have been working on the materials in this book for almost twenty years. Or perhaps it is more accurate to say the subject matter has been working on me. The journey began in earnest two years after my mother died and I walked into the office of a Jungian analyst who is still my spiritual director all these years later. He introduced me to the concept of family systems theory and psychologist Carl Jung’s teachings about the wounds of our ancestors, which sparked many healing journeys.
During this season of grief, I also began to call on the angels and saints much more urgently than I had before to support me in my journey of loss. The story of Jacob wrestling with the angel, which I will explore in a later chapter, felt like an emblem of my own grappling with who God was for me in the wake of such loss.
I knew St. Benedict could help steady me and keep me grounded in my contemplative practice. St. Francis could invite me to befriend Death as a Sister. St. Hildegard could offer me her healing balms and elixirs through a reminder of God’s greening power flowing freely. The archangels offered their protection, healing, and guidance through that difficult terrain.
Over the years, the angels, saints, and mystics have been at the heart of much of my teaching and retreat work. Many pilgrims and seekers joined me who already had a connection to these presences, and many came who longed for some kind of relationship but didn’t have the language or experience to understand how that might be possible. My students and retreat participants have always been wise teachers for me, with questions that gently probe me deeper and their own wisdom and insights that inspire me to continue.
Overview of This Book
This book began in my mind as a book about relating to ancestors. My own ancestral healing journey has been such a significant part of my spiritual path that I wanted to invite others into that work.
As I developed the work, I realized that while many of us are drawn to ancestral work because of the generational wounds we are aware need healing, there is also a wide communion of what we might call the wise and well ancestors.
These are the ones who embody wholeness and love in their fullness already and can offer us blessings. They can help us to heal the parts of our family lines that need tending.
The Catholic Church teaches that there are officially canonized saints who have gone through a formal process of being recognized as having value for the whole community. But they also recognize the wider Communion of Saints
who have passed over and are fully wise, well, and ready to offer us in this earthly realm guidance and care. I realized the saints and ancestors are part of one wider circle of care that surrounds us.
Then came the angels, who I have always been drawn to in cemeteries, especially the large stone statues. For me, these statues symbolize their weight and density, albeit in spiritual form. As I started to expand my own awareness of the invisible world and cultivate a relationship with angels, I was delighted to discover these beings are recognized and honored not just in Christianity but also in Judaism and Islam. Somehow the way they have inspired so many faithful opened my heart to a deeper relationship with the ways they are present to us.
The book begins with three chapters on the angels, starting with exploring the four archangels, then understanding guardian angels, and finally wrestling with angels. Not all encounters with angels feel full of ease and clarity, and I want to honor that experience.
The next three chapters explore the saints and mystics, those who cultivated an expansive heart and vision of the Divine present everywhere. First, I explore how we are all called to this pathway of being mystics and saints. Then I explore the tradition of relics and how a connection to the physical remains of the saints helps us to celebrate the Incarnation and a faith that is deeply embodied. And finally, I consider the practice of pilgrimage, which has gained such popularity over recent years, as a way to connect with the saints through landscape.
Finally, in the section on ancestors, I invite us first to claim the blessings the wise and well ones have for us and then to explore the journey of healing the wounds of our lineages, embrace grief, and find ways to connect more deeply with the ancestors through pilgrimage, stories, song, language, and food traditions. It closes with chapters on becoming wise and well ancestors ourselves and connecting to Earth as an ancestor.
The conclusion brings these threads together, weaving the love of thousands into a vision of support for our growing wholeness. While many of the ideas I draw from here are rooted in Catholic theological tradition, my hope is that this book will open up the experience of angels, saints, and ancestors to anyone, regardless of institutional affiliation.
Structure of the Chapters
Each chapter begins with a reflection on the theme to invite you into a deeper relationship with the angels, saints, or ancestors. These are followed by a suggestion for a specific practice or way of being you can cultivate to embody this theme. Then I offer a meditation to move the contemplation from your head into your heart space. Each chapter includes a suggestion for a creative exploration, such as creating altars for the invisible realm and various writing explorations to help you break open the material in a creative way. The creative practices are always meant as journeys of discovery rather than the pursuit of perfection. Let yourself get messy; enjoy the process. Finally, the chapters each close with a unique blessing for the work you’ve been doing as you traverse the pages.
How to Use This Book
As with most of the books I write, my suggestion is to move through the chapters slowly, making time to read, reflect, practice, contemplate, and create so that integration might have room to take root. You could do this over a series of fourteen weeks or even the span of a year, taking a chapter per week or one or two per month. You might consider inviting a group of other pilgrims together to gather regularly and share what you are discovering as you move through the materials.
Disclaimer
In this book I mention several people whose work has been influential to my development and the formulation of this book. However, the mention of their books and their work is not an endorsement of all of their work or of their personal lives. The spiritual guides whom I find helpful will not always be the ones who resonate with your journey. All our journeys will be different, and you will discern your own spiritual guides in addition to, or instead of, mine. Please do your own due diligence when considering what books and authors to explore next in your own journey.
Now, let’s begin.
Part One
Angels
1
Calling on the Archangels
Angels are central to that same history of yearning and the search to connect the visible with invisible. In cultures stretching back tens of thousands of years, there have been winged creatures who serve the gods and who make a bridge, or ladder, between the divine realm and the earthly one.
—Peter Stanford, Angels: A History
Angels appear throughout the Hebrew and Christian scriptures as well as in the Qur’an. All three Abrahamic traditions affirm the existence of these invisible beings who serve as protectors, messengers, healers, and bearers of wisdom.
According to the Talmud, the essence of angels is fire. Psalm 104 tells us God makes the winds [his] messengers, fire and flame [his] ministers
(v. 4). Angels are made of fire and sustained by fire. In Islam angels are made from light itself; they are light beings. Many Christians would ask what angels were made of. Light was St. Augustine’s clear response, emphasizing what we learn from both Hebrew and Islamic sources. Augustine, in the City of God, suggests that angels were created right at the start of the whole process of creation. When God proclaims Let there be light
(Gn 1:3), the sun, moon, and stars were called into existence, but the angels were as well. As intermediaries,
Augustine proposed, angels’ entire being was so designed as to allow God’s light to shine through them into humanity.
¹ Angels were translucent windows onto the sacred luminosity shimmering in the world.
In the Celtic tradition in Ireland, the Otherworld is the dwelling place of gods, other supernatural beings, and ancestors. It is an elusive place of beauty and abundance as well as a threshold place. There is no direct portal to it, but there are moments when the doorway appears, and we are able to experience a connection to the sacred in a more concrete way than in ordinary time. There are openings that break through our everyday vision so we can see angels at work in the world.
As author Peter Stanford writes in the opening quote of this chapter, angels create bridges and ladders between the heavenly and earthly worlds. We might think of the story of Jacob’s dream of a ladder in Genesis 28:11–12: He came to a certain place and stayed there for the night, because the sun had set. Taking one of the stones of the place, he put it under his head and lay down in that place. And he dreamed that there was a ladder set up on the earth, the top of it reaching to heaven; and the angels of God were ascending and descending on it.
God then appears in the dream and promises Jacob many descendants and that God will abide with him. When Jacob awakens from his dream he says, "Surely the
lord
is in this place—and I did not know it! (Gn 28:16). And goes on to say,
How awesome is this place! This is none other than the house of God, and this is the gate of heaven" (Gn 28:17).
In the dream, angels are ascending and descending the ladder that connects the Divine and human. Jacob’s dream reveals the place where