Category: Pilgrimage

  • Now more than ever relevant!

    Now more than ever relevant!

    Screenings

    Now more than ever, we all long for an order in which fairness, justice, and compassion for all people is demonstrated by our respective governments. Saint Hildegard had her own “unruly-ness” toward the powers of the Church — allowing an excommunicated nobleman to be buried in the cemetery at the convent, defying the direct orders of the Bishop of Mainz. Whose teaching was she following in taking that unruly action? That teaching is still relevant today.

    Hildegard didn’t resist quietly. When the Church threatened to place her convent under interdict — forbidding all religious services, music, and sacraments — she wrote back with fierce theological clarity, arguing that silencing sacred music was an offense against God. She won. The interdict was lifted. This was a 12th-century abbess standing her ground against the full institutional weight of the medieval Church — and prevailing.

    That combination of spiritual depth and civic courage is exactly what makes her so resonant now. She didn’t separate her inner life from her public one. Her mysticism was not a retreat from the world — it was the source of her willingness to engage it, challenge it, and demand better from it.

    Isn’t it time you became unruly? In unruliness, find your own mystic heart.

    Now More Than Ever Relevant

    Audiences everywhere are fired up by Saint Hildegard’s 12th-century activism, creativity, and ability to speak her mind across 800 years of distance. At screenings from university campuses to church halls, the conversations that follow are rarely about the past. They are about now — about power, about conscience, about what it means to trust your own perception when the world is telling you to stay quiet.

    Students in particular respond to her story with a recognition that surprises them. Here is a woman who was told, in every possible way, that her voice didn’t count — and who wrote, composed, traveled, debated, and prophesied anyway. That is not a medieval story. That is a human one.

    Students at Oxford Emory University discussing The Unruly Mystic: Saint Hildegard
    Students at Oxford Emory University — a screening of The Unruly Mystic: Saint Hildegard

    If you are interested in hosting a screening — at a university, a spiritual community, a festival, or a private gathering — get in touch. The film travels well. The conversation it starts travels even further.

  • Nature view of Ecological Prophets John Muir and Saint Hildegard of Bingen

    Nature view of Ecological Prophets John Muir and Saint Hildegard of Bingen

    To honor the U.S. National Parks 100th Anniversary in 2016, I am proud to release the following clip from my new work in progress documentary, The Unruly Mystic: John Muir. In this clip, we hear from Stephen Hatch, author of The Contemplative John Muir, who shares some insight of the nature view of the Ecological Prophets John Muir and Saint Hildegard of Bingen around the trans-formative power of waterfalls.

  • The Unruly Mystic and Unruly Me:  Nicole Barchilon Frank

    The Unruly Mystic and Unruly Me: Nicole Barchilon Frank

    The following is taken from a review of The Unruly Mystic, by my longtime friend, Nicole Barchilon Frank, who was about to embark on her own 10 month spiritual sabbatical in Ireland when I saw her in Boulder, Colorado.

    Nicole Barchilon Frank

    A few days ago I watched my friend Michael Conti’s film, The Unruly Mystic. The film is about his spiritual journey and his exploration of the life of Saint Hildegard of Bingen. I first learned about Hildegard from my botanist friend Jolie Egert Elan of Go Wild Consulting. Jolie is definitely an unruly herbal mystic. I guess I am one also, unruly in all kinds of directions.

    It turns out Michael, Jolie and I, we’re in good company.

    Excerpt

    In today’s era, heeding the call of the Divine, is still thought of as crazy or radical. It’s never really a safe thing to pay attention to the other side, to the call of the wild, the earth, the angels, the Holy (however you conceive of that or connect to it). Once you listen, really listen, there are oceans full of energy, voices, and information. It can actually make you a little “nuts.”  Not paying attention though, is truly dangerous. With our world full of mess, suffering, climate change and violence, the only way through into what Sakyong Mipham Rinpoche calls Enlightened Society, is to wake up and listen and start making a connection with the basic essential goodness of who we are. Once we do that we can move towards repair and mending and healing of the world around us. We can embody Tikkun Olam.

    So, being called unruly, makes sense, once you are able to hear the call of the Wild and Powerful Divine within, then you have to figure out how to translate that. If your message is true, it will survive naysayers, wars, eons, folks who cannot relate and it will come into the greater world. Hildegard of Bingen was hearing voices, healing, and channeling what she experienced in the Middle Ages.

    Read the rest of the amazing gems offered by Nicole Barchilon Frank here.