Category Archives: Prayer as Dialogue

The Mystery of Prayer

Sunday’s sermon was on prayer and I find that my experiences bring me to a slightly different, but possibly important slant on it. My friend, Montez, pointed out that we have a two way relationship with God that is the basis of everything else. A relationship with God is the heart of the matter. And that relationship is expressed, fleshed out in our relationships with others. Prayer is an important aspect of caring about others.

We can’t really understand God, so our relationship with God is always going to be something of a puzzle. (If we understood God, we would be equal to God and the story of Adam and Eve points out the very human, but treacherous path that takes us on. ) Let’s face it, whether we live in a small cave in a world hard to explore on foot or in a world of trips to the moon and other planets, we are still teeny tiny vulnerable limited beings in a immense and scary universe. Our very understandable human desire for power, whether it comes from the illusion of power through knowledge, riches, weapons of destruction, or even our sense of a relationship with the creator of it all, it is to some extent an illusion. Our relationship with God is a dialogue that’s about growing in our ability to love unconditionally. It’s NOT about power.

My experience has been that a simple openness to something far greater than anything we are or know can be life changing. Unfortunately we are naturally limited in our understanding, so once we become aware of the size and power of whatever it is, the temptation is to use it for our own agendas. So it can be a temptation to turn prayer into an illusion of power.

Over and over Jesus turned to prayer for refueling, for understanding, for empowerment to both teach and heal and feed others. Prayer was his WAY of keeping his relationship with God open for understanding, strength, and the gifts of the Spirit, but MOSTLY it kept him aware of his dependence on God. In the end, he was powerless, totally dependent on his faith in the Love of God.

My experiences of both the power and the lessons of prayer have varied in extremes.

Once at a Catholic Charismatic Conference I witnessed the shorter leg of a young woman friend respond immediately to prayer with instant growth. She had to take her built up shoe off and go barefoot that weekend! Ten years later she was still able to wear flip flops and tennis shoes.

Yet, I watched my mother die by inches with Alzheimer’s for fourteen years.

A forty-year-old woman friend, who had not been raised in any religion, was in intensive care on a respirator in the hospital. She had a diagnosis of incurable idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis and was told she would never again be able to breathe off a respirator. She wanted to be unplugged, but a woman stopped to talk to her in the ICU one night and told her to simply give herself to the God of Jesus and trust his Love.. She did this. Three days later she was permanently off the respirator. She became a beautiful witness to the Love of God that was fleshed out in Jesus for all. But she continued to have all sorts of other health crises, even losing a leg. After about ten years she was polishing the candle holders and praying in her Episcopal church and was finally freed to forgive her father, who had been so awful that she had actually been happy that he died in a fire. Shortly after this she had a heart attack and was freed from her earthly struggles.

God is simply beyond anyone’s understanding. So, prayer is also.

I have had many prayers answered so quickly that it was beyond doubting a connection. But also, plenty that seem to fall on deaf ears. This isn’t heaven. And though when we are suffering it seems like eternity,  it isn’t even a blip in eternity. My youngest son was seriously ill from a heart defect his first four years, running temperatures that were beyond the thermometer. Every time he had to have a shot; it took three adults to hold him down. I’m sure that few minutes seemed like an eternity to him, because it did to me. At four years of age, he finally was healed without any medical repair. Through the whole four years I had many Christians of many denominations praying with me for him. (Note: Obviously as a child he was not being punished for anything).

My guess is that healings are so we will know that when God or medicine does NOT heal us, that it’s a part of our journey to a new level of faith and capacity for loving God and all others unconditionally.

Many Europeans seem to have given up on God. Most of the small churches have been turned into cafes or theaters. The crowds in Cathedrals are tourists. We in America have not had widespread bombing blitzes, fire-bombs, or nuclear destruction of our homes and cities. When in Holland my brother asked the tour leader if people in Holland thought we were now facing the end times. She said, “We thought it was the end times when we were eating our tulip bulbs to survive.”

Here in the USA, we don’t really realize how spoiled we are. We think it’s the end of the world when groceries cost too much, Hurricanes increase, and Covid makes us reclusive.

If it’s the end of our world, it’s because we killed it, not because Jesus is coming. Though I am seeing what seems to be some seeds of a renewal of faith in our country, as a History major, I’m pretty sure this isn’t the rapture.

Contrary to what Americans still seem to expect, this life is not heaven. As I’ve said before it seems to me to be a school for growing from need to the capacity for unconditional love……like the life journey of Jesus. And obviously we haven’t gotten there yet.

But I could be wrong, since I’m only 87 and God isn’t finished with me yet.

The Holy Spirit

Richard Rohr on The Holy Spirit.

“God’s Spirit and our spirit bear common witness that we are indeed children of God.” (Romans 8:16) The goal is a shared knowing and a common power-totally initiated and given from God’s side, as we see dramatized on Pentecost (Acts 2:1-13).  As when Mary conceives Jesus by the Holy Spirit, it is “done unto us” and all we can do is allow, enjoy, and draw life from this powerful gift. We would be foolish to think it is our own creation.  To span the infinite gap between Divine and human, God’s agenda is to plant a little bit of God – the Holy Spirit-right inside us (Jeremiah 31:31-34; John14:16-26). This is the meaning of the “new” covenant, which replaces our “heart of stone with a heart of flesh” promised in Ezekiel (36:25-27). Isn’t that wonderful?

The Divined Indwelling is central to authentic Christian spirituality. Yet we could consider the Holy Spirit to be the “lost” or undiscovered person of the Blessed Trinity. No wonder we seek power in all the wrong places-since we have not made contact with our true power, the Indwelling Spirit (Romans 8:9,11; 1Corinthians 3:16).

(Richard suggests that the Holy Spirit is the ultimate answer to our prayers.)

We pray not to change God but to change ourselves. We pray to form a living relationship, not to get things done. Prayer is a symbiotic relationship with life and with God, a synergy which creates a result larger than the exchange itself. God knows that we need to pray to keep the symbiotic relationship moving and growing.  Prayer is not a way to try to control God, or even get what we want. As Jesus says in Luke’s Gospel (11:13), the answer to every prayer is one, the same, and the best: The Holy Spirit! God gives us power more than answers.

A truly spiritual woman, a truly whole man, is a very powerful person. The fully revealed God of the Bible is not interested in keeping us as children (1Corinthians 13:11) or “orphans”(John 14:18). God wants adult partners who can handle power and critique themselves. (Hebrews 5:11-6:1)

Eileen: I find this a bit scary. Power seems to me to be the greatest temptation. But when I’m really screwing up, the Holy Spirit has shown up in amazing ways often beyond my understanding, to get me back on the Path/Way of Jesus. No human is infallible, but God can even use our mistakes once we really experience sorrow for them.  When making decisions, it’s important to not only pray for wisdom, but watch for it coming in a lot of different ways.  Sometimes we miss answers because they can even come through people we don’t consider wise or Godly.  I often have Spiritual Alzheimer’s and have to relearn until it sticks.    Keeping ears and eyes open and on the alert in even small events and sometimes encounters with strangers is amazingly fruitful, but easy to ignore.  I am sharing this today to help myself increase my own awareness.  Most of what I write is what I need to hear or remember. Prayer is meant to be dialogue, but isn’t always just words, particularly God’s answers.  Awareness of the Holy Spirit within us, in others, and in nature and everything else is the dialogue called prayer.

In Jesus’ name we pray: Come Holy Spirit, open our minds, hearts, and bodies to your presence and guidance in each step of our journey.

(Note: Symbiosis is the art of living together.)

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