I have a few questions about personal prayer: Is God
listening? Why should God care about me? If God already
knows everything, what's the value in my prayer? Why do answers to
prayers seem so inconsistent, even capricious? Does a person with many
friends praying for him stand a better chance of physical healing than one who
also has cancer but with only a few people praying for him? Why does God
sometimes seem so close and sometimes so far away? Does personal prayer
change God, or change me?
Most people pray at moments of crisis ---- when a child is
ill, or when death approaches. But those who pray only at such moments
usually experience great difficulty figuring out what they are supposed to say,
or whom they are addressing. Sometimes dying men and women try to bargain
with God. They say, "I'll live my life in a righteous way God, if
you will have mercy." They struggle with their preconceived notions of
God. Sometimes they are afraid to lay themselves out to God. While
prayer is no insurance policy against adversity, some of us do pray for
forgiveness, for strength, for contact with the Father, for assurance that we
are not alone.
Talking about God, which is what theologians do, is
not the same as learning to talk to God. There are many ways of talking
to God. Prayers learned in childhood or read from a book, are often used
to break the conversational "ice" with God. However, perhaps
here is the best advice: that the most important aspect of personal prayer
is to "shut up and listen."
It seems to me that what matters most is not the frequency
of personal prayer, but whether those who pray experience inner peace, a
feeling of being led by God, or finding other forms of "divine
intimacy." I also wonder if those who do, are more likely to be
forgiving of others, and satisfied with their lives?
Many Americans are raised without any habits of personal
prayer, and cannot conceive of a God who would listen if they did address Him
in prayer. Not really understanding personal prayer, perhaps they will
intellectualize the idea of prayer to such an extent that they "bleach-out"
any emotional experience.
Rabbi Harold Kushner, the author of the best-selling "When
Bad Things Happen to Good People," says he is tired of prayers that
sound like a list of grievances. "We've confused God with Santa
Claus." Kushner charges. "Every time you have to do something
hard and you are not sure you are up to it, that's cause for prayer."
Nevertheless, petitioning God for favors may be one of the oldest ----
and most human ---- forms of prayer.
In the Gospel of John, Jesus himself is said to promise his disciples
that "Whatsoever you ask of the Father in my name will be given to
you." Most Americans who pray believe that at least some of their
prayers have been answered, though not always in the ways in which petitioners
have sought.
Clearly, there is a difference between turning to God for
help and expecting Him to meet our every want. Jesus' own prayer to the
Father was "thy will be done," meaning that God wants us to have
whatever promotes our participation in His life ---- our union both now and in
eternity. Yet, it is precisely this distinction that is lost when
television evangelists regularly claim miraculous healing through the power of on-air
prayer. Indeed, there is every reason to believe that prayer sent their
way, checks enclosed, are posted to the wrong address.
I have also been told, and my experience confirms it, that
personal prayer requires making time for God. Someone once
said, "If you're not as close to God as you used to be, its because you
moved, not God."
Since no one has seen God, people who pray inevitably draw
on their own imagination and experiences. However, it would seem that
their internal representation of God changes throughout one's life cycle in
response to other significant people and events. For example, finding a
loving spouse, or holding a newborn baby, may alter an earlier, more distant
representation of God.
So, what's the bottom line for those who want to draw closer
to God through personal prayer? Beware! The religious purpose of
prayer ---- communing with God ---- can be lost when people use it only for
therapeutic side effects. For example, if my conversation with God were
merely a Santa Claus list of wants. The challenge seems to be moving from
trying to control God, to letting God direct us.
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These thoughts are brought to you by CPC's Adult
Spiritual Development Team, hoping to encourage you to pursue some personal
spiritual growth this spring at CPC.
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