| GROWING
EDGES Written
prayer, while never scorned, did not have a large place in the tradition in which
I grew into faith. Reading a prayer felt a little like meeting an old friend on
the street and quickly thumbing through a textbook to find an appropriate greeting.
Intimacy was prized above precision. Finding
Merit There is much of value in the Quaker concern about "book
prayer", but over the years I have also come to appreciate the good in written
prayers. For one thing, they help us articulate the yearnings of the heart that
cry for expression. Sometimes it is hard for us to find the words to say what
we feel. At other times we do not feel up to praying, and the words of a written
prayer "prime the pump," as we say. Then, too, written prayers help us enter into
"the communion of saints." We can offer up to the throne of grace the very words
that have been prayed by followers of the Way for many generations. Also
the written prayers of others help us resist the temptation of private religion.
It is so very human of us to allow our petty concerns to be the whole burden of
our prayer. Now, it is not wrong to pray over our own pressing needs, but that
must never be the end of our prayer experience. By praying as our own the prayers
of others, we are brought back to the life of the community of faith; we are instructed
in sound doctrine; we are made to hear the whimper of the poor; we are forced
to see the tumult of the nations. Praying
the Prayers of Others Since we are focusing our attention in
this issue upon written prayer, perhaps a word is in order about how we pray the
prayers of others. The most obvious feature of written prayer is the words, and
so I would encourage you to begin by looking at the words, reading the words (both
silently and audibly), getting some sense of the texture and shape of the words.
Some of the prayers are poetic in form, others are decidedly prosaic; some are
stately, others simple; some draw us near in deepest intimacy, others cause us
to fall back in godly fear. Attention to the words, then, is the beginning point
of the prayer experience. Written
prayer, however, intends far more than linguistic significance; it seeks to usher
us into the loving heart of God. As you pray the words, you are going beyond the
words and into the reality which the words signify. Therefore, as you begin entering
into whatever experience God in his infinite wisdom knows is best for you, I suggest
you leave the words of the written prayer behind. They have served their purpose.
Your task now is to be attentive, always attentive, to the heavenly Monitor. Listening.
Resting. Interacting. Receiving. Ever in a posture of holy expectancy and holy
obedience. As you do this, you will discover that Jesus Christ, your everliving
Savior, Teacher, Lord, and Friend will guide you into what you need. Happy praying! Peace
and joy, Richard J. Foster
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