Let the fire of divine love illuminate your year-one quiet, contemplative day at a time.
John of the Cross is one of the greatest mystics in Christian history, a guide for souls seeking God not only in light but also in silence, longing, and holy darkness. His teachings reveal a path of surrender, trust, and transformation-a path that leads the heart into deeper love and radiant freedom.
365 Days with John of the Cross: Fire of Love, Night of the Spirit gathers these profound themes into a daily devotional of stillness and interior clarity. Each reflection offers a gentle invitation to listen, to yield, and to let God shape your soul through the rhythms of the year.
Written with simplicity and depth, these daily meditations help you walk with John of the Cross through the landscapes of desire, purification, surrender, and divine union. It is a companion for anyone longing for peace in God and a more grounded spiritual life.
In this book you will find:
365 daily readings inspired by the wisdom of John of the Cross, each one a moment of quiet guidance.
A month-by-month journey into trust, love, stillness, and inner transformation.
Gentle reflections to help you pray, surrender, and deepen your relationship with God.
A yearlong companion for contemplation, renewal, and spiritual growth.
Let this devotional accompany you through every season-toward a quieter mind, a freer heart, and a deeper experience of God's abiding love.
About the Author
365 Days Press in collaboration with Jonathan Hale Whitman
Jonathan Hale Whitman is an American writer, retreat facilitator, and lifelong student of contemplative spirituality. Growing up among the quiet pines and wide skies of rural Colorado, he discovered early a fascination with silence-the kind that awakens the heart, steadies the mind, and draws the soul toward God.
His path has woven through years of study in Christian mysticism, time spent living alongside monastic communities, and countless hours guiding individuals in the practice of stillness and surrender. He is especially drawn to the Carmelite tradition, where poets and mystics like John of the Cross speak with daring honesty about longing, darkness, purification, and divine union.
Jonathan's writing carries the marks of this deep formation: gentle yet profound, luminous yet grounded, contemplative yet accessible. He seeks to help modern readers rediscover the inner sanctuary where God meets the soul with tenderness-often in silence, often in simplicity, often when least expected.