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Dear Theophilus,
It is a one thing to discuss spiritual matters and topics which touch on
spirituality but it is quite another matter to practise spirituality. I
think that the time has come, Theophilus, to look at this question in
some depth. We have laid what we may call the theoretical basis for the
practical work that is necessary.
At the heart of the spiritual life is prayer but even this seeming
simple concept has different interpretations. Is charitable work done on
behalf of the needy, prayer? Some would say yes while others would say
that this represents good works and only complements prayer. I will be
very simple in our discussions: prayer is the turning of our attention
to God to the exclusion of everything else at that moment. Notice, that
I say turning our attention and this attention has two principal forms:
we either use words to address God or we use silence to permit God to
address us. But more about this a little later.
What is fundamental to prayer is that we believe that there is a God
with whom we can commune. We have to be convinced that God exists and
that God has personal characteristics which call on us to interact with
Him. This is why we have gone through all those questions that we dealt
with previously - as a preparation for our direct confrontation with
God. For some this preparation is not necessary but, for others, like me
and I think many others, it is indispensible.
Prayer is very much like the Bible. The Bible is up there with the
best-sellers but when it comes to reading it, the matter is quite
different. There are many, many books on prayer, some better than
others, and someone approaching this topic in a bookstore will be
overwhelmed by all of the titles available. But, in spite of this great
proliferation of books, when one speaks to people we quickly get to see
that the practise of prayer is not directly proportional to the amount
of material printed on prayer.
Why do we pray? There are many answers given to this question. We have
what are called petitionary prayers where we present our needs before
God. There are prayers of gratitude, of mourning, of praise, and many
other things. And, just as with many other things, prayer is a gradual
growth in us so that we will soon realize certain aspects of a prayer
life are for us and others are not, until we become a little better
grounded in our faith. A very common characteristic of the prayer life
of most of us is its inconstancy. We start out with zeal and great
resolve and this peters out and we drift away from prayer. We get tugged
this way and that way by the siren calls of the events of our lives and
we put prayers aside. One of the reasons for this is that prayers do not
give an immediate gratification and in our fallen nature, we find it
difficult to persist in something that is not immediately satisfying our
present perceived needs. Because of this, we will find that prayer is
hard work which requires discipline and resolve to persist in.
Certain approaches have been devised which assist us in combatting the
temptation to be sporadic in our prayer life. However, it should be kept
constantly in mind that prayer is a relationship between two - you and
God and because of this, cut and dry rules are impossible in order to
pray. The rules are there to assist you in coming to prayer; but prayer
is, in a sense, a secret between you and God. This is one of the reasons
for a reticence on the part of spiritual directors to talk about their
own private prayer life.
What is crucial for prayer is to develop a sense of the continual
presence of God. One of the biggest enemies that we have to struggle
with is forgetfulness both of God and of our true needs. If we were to
believe, and truly believe, that God is right there before us, we would
behave in a very different manner and we would find that our prayers
would take on a different character. However, we must work with what we
have and that is a lukewarm sense of God, a sense that is further
weakened by the demands of our daily lives. You will be amazed how
things come up that we have to pay attention to and at the same time
weaken our resolve to pray.
But prayer offers something that cannot be obtained in any other manner.
One of the foundation layers of science in Europe was Roger Bacon who
stated that there are three ways in which man can get knowledge:
authority, reason, and finally experience and it is experience which is
the most convincing and the longest lasting source of knowledge. It is
prayer that offers us the opportunity for experience and therein lies
one of the problems for a sustained life of prayer. Many of us do not
experience much during prayers and we simply give up. However,
experience is not undervalued by Christianity. The early definition of
Christians was those who were witnesses to the Resurrection. It is only
those who have beheld the Resurrection with their own eyes, it is only
they who are capable of worshipping Christ. You see, if we are not
witnesses to the Resurrection of Christ, how could we possibly pray to
Him?
Our earliest introduction to the Resurrection is in the sacrament of
entry into the Church - the sacrament of baptism. It is through this
that we die and are resurrected in Christ.
I must confess to you, Theophilus, that for the longest of time, for me,
God was an abstract concept. God was some idea, some perfection,
something unattainable. I was struck, and this was a real revelation to
me, how different this is to what the Christian Church teaches. God is
palpable; He is here; He may be beyond all definitions but He is
experienceable. This is the essence of spirituality - not some exalted
idea but the closeness and experience of God.
Remember that we are called on to have faith and what this means is that
our knowledge about God may be imperfect but this does not affect our
ability to experience God and live in a close union with Him. In a
sense, the term God has been used by humanity to describe, to give a
name to a powerful and life-changing encounter. Remember that in the Old
Testament, God is not just a noun but a verb. He is dynamic, I am who
am, He is life and yet, we often lock Him away in dusty definitions and
dry words. Don't misunderstand me; words and definition are important
but they have to be wedded to experience. Maybe this is one of the
reasons that many have fallen away from a living faith. We do not have
this living, vibrant experience of God.
Mind you, this does not happen in an hour, or in a week or in even a
year. It takes time and diligence and discipline and above all, desire.
We have been sent a love letter, the Bible, with an accompanying
proposal of marriage and we have to a large extent, simply ignored this.
So, where do we begin? There is almost universal agreement on this
within all of the main branches of Christendom. We begin with
repentance. By repentance, we mean not just that we have done something
wrong, but, more seriously, there is something wrong with us. We have an
illness, a wound and until this is addressed, we cannot make much
progress. Our journey begins with the acknowledgement that we are in
need. If we do not feel this, or do not acknowledge this, then prayer
and spirituality is not for us.
There is something in the concept of repentance that the modern mind
rebels against and this feeling comes from a sense of pride. How dare
anybody tell us that we are wrong or that we are in need? It is this
powerful sin of pride which blocks our way to further growth. So, what
does repentance mean in practice for us? How do we go about repenting?
Repentance means a realization that something has gone awry and that it
needs correction and that there is a means for carrying this out. This
is the beginning. What this calls for is a daily revision of our day, of
what we have done, a realization of actions of ours which may caused
pain to others or actions which violated our relationship with God. One
way to gauge our position before God are the commandments. This is
completed by remembering the seven (the usual number, but it sometimes
varies) main sins to which we are all prone. Having carried out this
review, and expressed it before God as part of our prayers, we now
express sorrow for our actions (or sometimes inactions, because sins can
be those of commission and those of omission) and make a resolve not to
repeat these sins. And here we come to the crucial crux of the matter,
one that discourages us and stands in our way like a large looming
impediment, to further progress. We know, as we are making this promise
that we will fall, that we will not be able to keep our promise and this
is what makes everything so discouraging and what causes us to declare:
what's the use, nothing really changes. This is a very subtle
temptation, and it seems to recall humility, but it is a false humility
and at the back of it all is the adversary or as he was known in the
Middle East throughout the long years of history, Satan. But, more about
this in the next letter.
Yours, as always,
Bar-Abbas |