A year of silence, surrender, and hidden holiness-one quiet day at a time.365 Days with Charbel Makhlouf: Silence, Surrender, and the Fire of Hidden Holiness is a contemplative devotional journey shaped by the life and spirit of one of the most hidden and radical saints of modern Christianity. Far from dramatic visions or emotional spirituality, this book invites the reader into a slow, faithful, interior path where prayer is stripped of excess and trust deepens in silence.Saint Charbel lived almost entirely unseen: in obedience, austerity, and prayer carried out far from the world's attention. Yet from that hidden life flowed a spiritual power that continues to draw seekers across traditions. This book does not attempt to explain Charbel or imitate his externals. Instead, it accompanies the reader day by day into the same interior posture: remaining, surrendering, trusting, and staying faithful without reward.Written in a sober, meditative tone, each daily entry offers space rather than instruction-guidance without pressure, depth without emotional manipulation. It is a book for those who are tired of noise, performance, and spiritual urgency, and who sense that God works most deeply where life is quiet, repetitive, and unseen.In this book you will find: A full year of daily reflections inspired by the hidden life and spirituality of Saint Charbel MakhloufA path of prayer grounded in silence, endurance, obedience, and interior freedomDaily meditations that resist clichés and avoid sentimental or motivational spiritualityA steady companion for readers seeking depth, sobriety, and faithfulness in ordinary daysThis is not a book to rush through. It is meant to be lived slowly-one day at a time-allowing the reader to remain where they are, without comparison, urgency, or spiritual performance.About the Author365 Days Press in collaboration with Elias Maroun HaddadElias Maroun Haddad is a Lebanese-born contemplative writer and spiritual editor whose work explores silence, hidden holiness, and the interior life within the Eastern Christian tradition. Drawing deeply from the Maronite spiritual heritage and the witness of Saint Charbel Makhlouf, he writes with a restrained, meditative voice shaped by monastic sources, desert spirituality, and lived prayer. His work seeks to accompany readers not through instruction or exhortation, but through steady presence, simplicity, and fidelity to the unseen work of God in ordinary days.