“Therefore
I tell you, whatever you ask for in prayer, believe that you have received it,
and it will be yours.” Mark 11:24
Christianity
is a way of life and prayer is its fuel. To be a Christian is to pray or be a prayerful
person. Christ prayed at all times and he taught His disciples to pray. We pray
for each other especially in times of illness or suffering. Most often, we
limit prayer only to petition, which is only one way of praying. So what is
prayer? Why do we pray?
St.
Therese gave herself to a life of prayer and self-emptying love in the Carmel
of Lisieux in Normandy. The interesting question centres on how she prayed. She
had learned the importance of prayer as a child from the example of her own
parents and used to spend some time in the quiet of her room reflecting on the
life of Jesus.
In
her Story of a Soul, St. Therese reports that she was faithful to community
prayer as a nun but often experienced certain dryness in prayer. She was
faithful to community prayer such as recitation of the breviary, a daily
Eucharist and vocal prayer. She was spent time in personal or private prayer as
well. Prayer is the identity of the Carmel sisters.
Prayer,
for St. Therese, was a way of walking with God. Whether it was a period of
meditative prayer, communal prayer in the chapel with other nuns in the
community or the aspirative prayer of lifting her heart to God in short prayers
of intercession or praise, she realized that God was with her.
In
order to pray, we have to acknowledge an omnipotent God in the reality of human
beings, in other words, someone higher being than human being. Human beings
become humble before God who is Alpha and Omega. A total dependency is the key
to prayer. But sometimes, our prayer might be routine exercise of consoling
whilst the need for prayer arises, such as the following,
Ø
An
Aspirin Prayer: An aspirin pill is helpful when we are suffering from aches
and pains in the hope to alleviating the pain. Likewise, some of us would pray
when the need arises, such as, suffering, difficulties, loneliness, sickness
etc. There is an element high dependency on prayer only to a particular need.
Ø
A Police
Prayer: Prayer becomes a police who is watching and waiting to punish us
when we err. If we don’t pray, we will be punished. Hence, we pray in order not
to be punished, to remain in good books of God. This indeed limits my freedom
to experience prayer as non-punisher.
Ø
A
shopkeeper Prayer: Some of us relate to prayer as we relate to a
shopkeeper, as you give me this and I pay you this much. Likewise, God you do
this favour for me and I will offer prayers, money, service, worship etc. We
limit prayer in order fulfil some desires through barter.
Ø
A
puppeteer Prayer: We are puppets in the hands of God so we pray. God is
there a master who pulls the strings so that we have the movements. An unmoved
mover. He moves us in this world. Hence, an element of final judgement, final
goal, final end, predestination sets into our lives. Here we limit God to a
merely super power who controls us according to His whims. Therefore, we have
to please this God in order that he will control our movements properly. This
kind of prayer does not allow us to grow in freedom; rather it shrinks our
growth because of the fear of God.
Ø
A Laundry
Prayer: We see prayer as cleanser, which cleanses us from our sins and
wrongdoings as we take our filthy clothes to laundry. We limit prayer to merely
satisfy our immediate need. This form of prayer will not help us in the long
run because of the negativity of life.
Ø
Trying my
luck prayer: We are not sure, we will get it, and anyway we try our luck.
This way of life makes us live a lethargic life because there is not strong
believe in one’s own abilities. Sometimes, our prayer could be, I will pray,
not sure it will happen. This prayer has kept important component of belief
away, hence, our prayer becomes insignificant.
Hence,
the important question we need to ask is, ‘who is God for me?’ Only you can ask
this question and only you can answer this question based on your experience of
God. If we have arrived at an answer to this question, we will also be able to
answer the question ‘why do I need to pray?’
God
is the unconditional Father of the universe who the integral part of human
beings because He has created us in His own image and likeness. We cannot
separate God from us. “My Father, who has given them to me, is greater than
all; no one can snatch them out of my Father’s hand. I
and the Father are one” John 10:28-30. If we try to separate God from
human being, human being lose their identity; lose the divine image in us, but God
does not lose His image because God is omnipotent and omnipresent in the
universe. Therefore, we are the losers if we separate ourselves from God.
Anytime we are clear about this reality, we become the humble creature whose
dependency leads to prayer because prayer builds relationship with God. Hence,
in prayer creature and Creator are in dialogue with each other in an intense
and intimate way. Prayer helps us to keep this relationship cemented to the end
of time. This way prayer becomes ‘A Way
of Life’ for us.
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