Saturday, October 20, 2007

Prayer: Session #4

Prayer: Listening

On Sunday I took one of the two torn raincoats that hang in the grand parlor for the use of the monks, and went out into the woods. Although I had not at first determined to do so, I found myself climbing the steepest of the knobs, which also turned out to be the highest -- the pyramid that stands behind the head of the lake, and is second in line when you begin to count from the southwest. Bare woods and driving rain. There was a stong wind. When I reached the top I found there was something terrible about the landscape. But it was marvelous. The completely unfamiliar aspect of the forest beyond our rampart unnerved me. It was as though I were in another country. I saw the steep, savage hills, covered with black woods and half buried in the storm that was coming at me from the southwest. And ridges traveled away from this center in unexpected directions. I said, "Now you are indeed alone. Be prepared to fight the devil." But it was not the time of combat. I started down the hill again feeling that perhaps after all I had climbed it uselessly. Halfway down, and in a place of comparative shelter, just before the pine trees begin, I found a bower God had prepared for me like Jonas's ivy. It had been designed especially for this moment. There was a tree stump, in an even place. It was dry and a small cedar arched over it, like a green tent, forming an alcove. There I sat in silence and loved the wind in the forest and listened for a good while to God.
Thomas Merton, When the Trees Say Nothing.

And my soul is like a woman to you.
She is Naomi's band that ties to Ruth.
By day, my soul stacks sheaves of wheat
like a maidservant doing lowly tasks.
But at night, she takes a thorough bath,
perfumes, and dresses very well;
then goes to you when all's asleep,
and turns back the cover by your feet.
And when you wake and ask her to explain,
she naively says: I'm Ruth, the maid.
Spread your cloak over your servant,
you are heir and next of kin...

And then my soul sleeps until dawn
down by your feet, warmed by this blood of yours,
and is your woman -- just like Ruth.
Rainer M. Rilke, The Book of Hours

Why should the Christian turn to the Psalms and make use of them in his own prayer to God? ...The Psalms are the songs of men who knew who God was. If we are to pray well, we too must discover the Lord to whom we speak, and if we use the Psalms in our prayer we will stand a better chance of sharing in the discovery which lies hidden in their words for all generations. For God has willed to make Himself known to us in the mystery of the Psalms. ...The Psalms are not only the songs of prophets inspired by God, they are the songs of the whole Church, the very expression of her deepest inner life. The words and thoughts of the Psalms spring not only from the unsearchable depths of God, but also from the inmost heart of the Church, and there are no songs which better express her soul, her desires, her longing her sorrows and her joys. ...The Psalms contain in themselves all the Old and New Testaments, the whole Mystery of Christ. In singing the Psalms each day, the Church is therefore singing the wedding hymn of her union with God in Christ. ...If we really come to know and love the Psalms, we will enter into the Church's own experience of divine things. We will begin to know God as we ought.
Thomas Merton, Praying the Psalms

Scripture Study
Psalm 130 & 131
Matthew 6:9-13
Philippians 1:3-11


Somehow, I must sit to listen.
Standing implies the readiness for action,
for the executing of the will.
To hear You I must sit down and calm down.

The magpie mind chatters.
it doesn't know about stopping.
How helpless I fell in its automatic firing,
its busy babbling. It is impossible to hear You
as long as I am full of sound.
I turn this helpless prayer toward You.
Help me to be quiet, to sit here
...slowly unknowing everything,
becoming dark, becoming yielding...
just sitting.

Here, without will, let me become willing.
Here, without concepts, help me to know.
Here, without doing, turn me toward usefulness.
Let my heart find its ears in You.
Let the countless cells of my body
open in order to listen,
Let my being come into Your presence
and experience the sound of Your light.
Gunilla Norris, Being Home

Sunday, September 30, 2007

Prayer: Session #3

Prayer: Successful

We must make sure that we do not decide that we shall succeed. If we decide to succeed then we may succeed without succeeding in God's way. But if we go on from day to day seeking to do his will, then we shall be prepared to receive success from him if he wills it; and if he does not, then humbly say --It is God's decision that David shall not build the temple, but he will raise up Solomon. W.A. Visser't Hooft as quoted in That They May Have Life by Daniel T. Niles

Too often prayer has no such importance in our lives that everything else fades away to give it room. Prayer is additional to a great many things; we wish God to be present, not because there is no life without him, not because he is the supreme value, but because it would be so nice, in addition to all the great benefits of God, to have also his presence. He is additional to our needs, and when we seek him in that spirit we do not meet him. Yet notwithstanding all that has just been said, prayer, dangerous as it appears, is the best way to go ahead towards the fulfillment of our calling, to become fully human, which means in full communion with God and, ultimately, what Peter calls partakers of the divine nature. From The Approach to Preaching by W.E. Sangster

Scripture Study
Jonah 2:1-10
Habakkuk 3:17-19
Matthew 26:36-39, 42, 44
Acts 4: 24-30

These troubles and distresses that you go through in these Waters are no sign that God hath forsaken you, but are sent to try you, whether you will call to mind that whi9ch heretofore you have received of his goodness, and live upon him in your distresses. Then I saw in my Dream that Christian was as in a muse a while. To whom also Hopeful added this word, Be of good cheer, Jesus Christ maketh thee whole; and with that Christian brake out with a loud voice, Oh, I see him again, and he tells me, When thou passest through the Waters, I will be with thee; and through the Rivers, they shall not overflow thee. Then they both took courage, and the Enemy was after that as still as a stone, until they were gone over. Christian, therefore, presently found ground to stand upon, and so it followed that the rest of the River was but shall0w. Thus they got over. From The Pilgrim's Progress by John Bunyan

"Write thy blessed name, O Lord, upon my heart, there to remain so indelibly engraven, that no prosperity, no adversity shall ever move me from thy love. Be thou to me a strong tower of defence, a comforter in tribulation, a deliverer in distress, a very present help in trouble, and a guide to heaven through the many temptations and dangers of this life. Amen" Thomas a Kempis

Saturday, September 08, 2007

Prayer: Session #2

Prayer: Our Native Tongue? Our First Language?


"Beginners at prayer --children, new converts -- find it easy. The capacity and impulse to pray both are embedded deep within us. We are made, after all, by God, for God. why wouldn't we pray? It is our native tongue, our first language. We find ourselves in terrible trouble and cry out for help to God. We discover ourselves immensely blessed and cry out our thanks to God. But prayer doesn't stay simple. We spend years slogging through a wilderness of testing and begin to question the childlike simplicities with which we started out. We find ourselves immersed in a cynical generation that corrodes our early innocence with scorn and doubt. Along the way we pick up notions of prayer magic and begin working on slight of hand rituals and verbal incantations that will make life easier. It isn't long before those early simplicities are all tangled up in knots of questions, doubt and superstitions. It happens to all of us. Everyone who prays ends up in some difficulty or other. We need help." Eugene Peterson in Forward of The Soul of Prayer

"The worst sin is prayerlessness." P T Forsyth, The Soul of Prayer


"Prayer is irksome. An excuse to omit it is never unwelcome. When it is over, this casts a feeling of relief and holiday over the rest of the day. We are reluctant to begin. We are delighted to finish. While we are at prayer, but not while we are reading a novel or solving a cross-word puzzle, any trifle is enough to distract us. And we know we are not alone in this. Now the disquieting thing is not simply that we skimp and begrudge the duty of prayer. The really disquieting thing is it should have to be numbered among duties at all. For we believe that we were created "to glorify God and enjoy Him forever." And if the few, the very few, minutes we now spend in conversation with God are a burden to us rather than a delight, what then?" C S Lewis, Letters to Malcolm

Scripture Study
Isaiah 30:19; 55:6; 58:9; 65:24
Matthew 6:6,7; 7:7; 18:19; 21:22
Ephesians 3:14-21
Colossians 1:9-14

Create in me a clean heart, O God, and put a new and right spirit within me. Do not cast me away from your presence and do not take your holy spirit from me. Restore to me the joy of your salvation and sustain in me a willing spirit. Psalm 51:10-12


Thursday, September 06, 2007

Some Thoughts of Mine

Richard Foster is indicating that we should be "at home" with an intimate relationship with our Lord. I think St. Augustine was referring to intimacy when he said "weep for more joy." How frequently do we allow God to give us "the gift of kindness?" Can not the realization that God has been acting throughout church history and is continually acting even in today's generation, increase our faith and obedience in prayer?

Did you notice the likeness in the prayer of David in 1 Chronicles 29:10-19 and in Jesus' prayer of John 17? I noticed these: 1) God's greatness was acknowledged at the beginning of the prayers; 2) then intercession for others, including future generations; 3) intimate relationship with the Father God was evident; 4) purpose in life or a "calling" being brought to completion. Do you see others?

John 17:23,24 grabs me every time I read this prayer. "I in them and You in Me, in order that they may become one and perfectly united, that the world may know and (definitely) recognize that You sent Me and that You have loved them (even) as You have loved Me. Father, I desire that they also whom You have entrusted to Me (as Your gift to Me) may be with Me where I am, so that they may see My glory, which You have given Me (Your love gift to Me); for You loved Me before the foundation of the world." AMP May we follow Jesus and be part of this oneness!

Comment from Myrtle

If Jesus can so fervently pray for us, we should also do so for our brothers and sisters in Christ. Our Sunday school lesson was about Hagar; she gave God a name -- El-roi, the God who sees. My name for Him right now is God who enables. What are your names for Him at this particular time in your life?

Friday, August 31, 2007

Prayer: Session #1

Prayer
Conversation in an Intimate Relationship with our Creator & Redeemer

"The Lord is inviting you and me to come home, to come home to where we belong, to come home to that for which we were created. His arms are stretched out wide to receive us. His heart is enlarged to take us in. For too long we have been in the far country; a country of noise and hurry and crowds, a country of climb and push and shove; a country of frustration and fear and intimidation And he welcomes us home; home to serenity and peace and joy, home to friendship and fellowship and openness, home to intimacy and acceptance and affirmation." Richard Foster, Prayer: Finding Your Heart's True Home


Friendship
Oh the comfort - the inexpressible comfort - of feeling safe with a person
Having neither to weigh thoughts,
Nor measure words - but pouring them all right out - just as they are
Chaff and grain together
Certain that a faithful hand will take and sift them
Keep what is worth keeping
And with the breath of kindness
Blow the rest away.
... Dinah Maria Mulock Craik

"Prayer is conversation with God, not magic. Prayer is not some magical formula through which we hope to entice an apathetic God to act in a way which pleases us. Our prayer is the worshipful recognition that God is continually acting in the world and the signifying of our desire to be a part of that activity." William Willimon
y
Scripture Study
1 Chronicles 29: 10-20 - Prayer of David
John 17 - Priestly Prayer of Jesus


Oh Lord, help us to turn and seek you; for you have not forsaken your creatures as we have forsaken you, our Creator. Let us turn and seek you, for we know you are here in our hearts, when we confess to you, when we cast ourselves upon you, and weep in your bosom, after all our rugged ways; and you gently wipe away all our tears, and we weep the more for joy; because you, Lord, who made us, do remake and comfort us. Prayer of St. Augustine, 4th-5th Centuries

Sunday, August 19, 2007

Bible Study

I will post Session 1 of the Bible study on Saturday, September 1. It will be a 12-week study on prayer. I am excited how the lesson format is falling into place!

Please respond to the comment section to make sure this blog is in working order.

Monday, August 13, 2007

Web Site Bible Study

Several friends have requested a Web Site Bible Study since we are separated by states and cannot meet together. The goal is to have the first one posted around Labor Day.