For Postulants and Aspirants in Local Formation
Psalm 84 gives us a vocabulary for faith that is often neglected in theological training: desire . Not duty. Not mastery. Not even conviction. Desire. “My soul has a desire and longing for the courts of the LORD; my heart and my flesh rejoice in the living God.” The psalmist does not separate interior faith from bodily life. Heart and flesh move together. Longing is not an embarrassment to be disciplined away; it is the very engine of pilgrimage. Faith here begins not with certainty but with ache—with a pull toward the presence of God that the psalmist knows is life-giving. That matters for seminarians, who are often trained to inhabit ideas about God more fluently than spaces where God is encountered. Psalm 84 refuses such disembodiment. God is not approached only through thought but through movement, practice, and shared ritual. The psalm imagines faith as a journey taken with others toward a real place, shaped by real rhythms—walking, resting, praying, singing. Even the ...