
In
the springtime of Depression-era New York City,
Brennan Manning -- christened Richard Francis
Xavier -- was born to Emmett and Amy Manning. He
grew up in Brooklyn along with his brother,
Robert, and sister, Geraldine. After graduating
from high school and attending St. John's
University (Queens, NY) for two years, he
enlisted in the U.S. Marine Corps and was sent
overseas to fight in the Korean War.
Upon
his return, Brennan began a program in
journalism at the University of Missouri. But he
departed after a semester, restlessly searching
for something "more" in life. "Maybe the
something 'more' is God," an advisor had
suggested, triggering Brennan's enrollment in a
Catholic seminary in Loretto, Pennsylvania.
In
February 1956, while Brennan was meditating on
the Stations of the Cross, a powerful experience
of the personal love of Jesus Christ sealed the
call of God on his life. "At that moment," he
later recalled, "the entire Christian life
became for me an intimate, heartfelt
relationship with Jesus." Four years later, he
graduated from St. Francis College (major in
philosophy; minor in Latin) I and went on to
complete four years of advanced studies in
theology. May 1963 marked his graduation from
St. Francis Seminary and ordination to the
Franciscan priesthood.
Brennan's ministry responsibilities in
succeeding years took him from the hallways of
academia to the byways of the poor: theology
instructor and campus minister at the University
of Steubenville; liturgy instructor and
spiritual director at St. Francis Seminary;
graduate student in creative writing at Columbia
University, and in Scripture and liturgy at
Catholic University of America; living and
working among the poor in Europe and the U.S.
A
two-year leave of absence from the Franciscans
took Brennan to Spain in the late sixties. He
joined the Little Brothers of Jesus of Charles
de Foucauld, an Order committed to an
uncloistered, contemplative life among the poor
-- a lifestyle of days spent in manual labor and
nights wrapped in silence and prayer. Among his
many and varied assignments, Brennan became an
aguador (water carrier), transporting water to
rural villages via donkey and buckboard; a
mason's assistant, shoveling mud and straw in
the blazing Spanish heat; a dishwasher in
France; a voluntary prisoner in a Swiss jail,
his identity as a priest known only to the
warden; a solitary contemplative secluded in a
remote cave for six months in the Zaragoza
desert.
During
his retreat in the isolated cave, Brennan was
once again powerfully convicted by the
revelation of God's love in the crucified
Christ. On a midwinter's night, he received this
word from the Lord: "For love of you I left my
Father's side. I came to you who ran from me,
who fled me, who did not want to hear my name.
For love of you I was covered with spit, punched
and beaten, and fixed to the wood of the cross."
Brennan would later reflect, "Those words are
burned into my life. That night, I learned what
a wise old Franciscan told me the day I joined
the Order -- 'Once you come to know the love of
Jesus Christ, nothing else in the world will
seem as beautiful or desirable.' "
The
early seventies found Brennan back in the U.S.
as he and four other priests established an
experimental community in the bustling seaport
city of Bayou La Batre, Alabama. Seeking to
model the primitive life of the Franciscans, the
fathers settled in a house on Mississippi Bay
and quietly went to work on shrimp boats,
ministering to the shrimpers and their families
who had drifted out of reach from the church.
Next to the community house was a chapel that
had been destroyed by Hurricane Camille. The
fathers restored it and offered a Friday night
liturgy and social event, which soon became a
popular gathering and precipitated many
families' return to engagement in the local
church.
From
Alabama, Brennan moved to Ft. Lauderdale,
Florida in the mid-seventies and resumed campus
ministry at Broward Community College. His
successful ministry was harshly interrupted,
however, when he suffered a precipitate collapse
into alcoholism. Six months of treatment,
culminating at the Hazelden treatment center in
Minnesota, restored his health and placed him on
the road to recovery.
It was
at this point in his life that Brennan began
writing in earnest. One book soon followed upon
another as invitations for him to speak and to
lead spiritual retreats multiplied
exponentially. Today, Brennan travels widely as
he continues to write and preach, encouraging
men and women everywhere to accept and embrace
the good news of God's unconditional love in
Jesus Christ.
His
publications include:
- Above All
- Abba's Child
- A Glimpse of
Jesus: Stranger to Self Hatred
- Journey of
the Prodigal
- The Wisdom
of Tenderness
- Ruthless
Trust: The Way of the Ragamuffin
- The Boy Who
Cried Abba: A Parable of Trust and
Acceptance
- Lion and
Lamb: The Relentless Tenderness of Jesus
- Signature of
Jesus
- The
Ragamuffin Gospel
- Reflections
for Ragamuffins: A Daily Devotional
- Posers,
Fakers and Wannabes
- The Rabbi's
Heartbeat
- The
Importance of Being Foolish
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For
Your Listening Enjoyment
On April 5, 2008 Brennan appeared on The Drew
Marshall Show, a live radio talk show which is
the most listened-to program in Canada.
Click here to listen now (24m:38s).
Right click here to download and save to
your computer (5.64mb).
Visit The Drew Marshall Show
website.

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