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Byzantine Nun Says Her Generosity Was Actually Rooted in Self-Love

Pints with Aquinas · Experiencing the Beautiful Love of God (Mother Natalia) | Ep. 582 · June 8, 2026
Byzantine Nun Says Her Generosity Was Actually Rooted in Self-Love
Pints with Aquinas
Pints with Aquinas
Experiencing the Beautiful Love of God (Mother Natalia) | Ep. 582
"I thought that I was an extremely generous person. I realized that a lot of my generosity was coming actually from a self-love. This person is difficult to live with when they're in a bad mood. So I want to ease their load so that they're not in a bad mood so that it's more pleasant for me to live with them."
Mother Natalia shared a revelation about her character after years in the monastery. She discovered that acts she believed were pure generosity—like making coffee for sisters in bad moods—were actually motivated by self-interest to make her own life more pleasant. This represented a key moment of self-awareness in her spiritual formation.

About this episode

On Pints with Aquinas, host Matt Fradd interviewed Mother Natalia, an Eastern Catholic Byzantine nun, for a wide-ranging discussion on monastic life, spiritual formation, and the nature of authentic holiness. The conversation led with Mother Natalia's striking admission that she seriously considered leaving her monastery just six months before her life profession after 4.5 to 6 years of formation, requiring an emergency retreat with her spiritual father. She revealed she has experienced no doubts since taking final vows five years ago. The nun shared controversial perspectives that challenged common Catholic assumptions, including her admission that she no longer misses Eucharistic adoration, which she had developed an unhealthy dependence on before becoming Byzantine. She argued forcefully against Archbishop Fulton Sheen's characterization of nuns' confessions as trivial, insisting that interior sins like disobedience to the Holy Spirit can be more serious than external grave sins. Mother Natalia disclosed personal struggles including what she called an addiction to dating before religious life and a realization that much of her perceived generosity was actually rooted in self-love. The discussion explored the importance of Eastern Catholic tradition, with Mother Natalia explaining that Byzantines represent a legitimate expression of Catholicism that should resist blending with Western practices. She emphasized that monastic life involves living with broken, sinful people rather than angels, describing community life as a rock tumbler that smooths rough edges through constant friction. The conversation concluded with practical advice for women discerning religious vocations, stressing the absolute necessity of daily prayer and complete honesty rather than trying to present an idealized version of oneself to a community.

Key takeaways

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