Let Us Exercise Our
Desire In Prayer
Why
in our fear of not praying as we should, do we turn to so many things, to find
what we should pray for? Why do we not say instead, in the words of the psalm: I
have asked one thing from the Lord, this is what I will seek: to dwell in the
Lord’s house all the days of my life, to see the graciousness of the Lord, and
to visit his temple? There,
the days do not come and go in succession, and the beginning of one day does
not mean the end of another; all days are one, simultaneously and without end,
and the life lived out in these days has itself no end.
So
that we might obtain this life of happiness, he who is true life itself taught
us to pray, not in many words as though speaking longer could gain us a
hearing. After all, we pray to one who, as the Lord himself tells us, knows
what we need before we ask for it.
Why
he should ask us to pray, when he knows what we need before we ask him, may
perplex us if we do not realise that our Lord and God does not want to know
what we want (for he cannot fail to know it), but wants us rather to exercise
our desire through our prayers, so that we may be able to receive what he is
preparing to give us. His gift is very great indeed, but our capacity is too
small and limited to receive it. That is why we are told: Enlarge your desires, do not bear the yoke
with unbelievers.
In
this faith, hope and love we pray always with unwearied desire. However, at set
times and seasons we also pray to God in words, so that by these signs we may
instruct ourselves and mark the progress we have made in our desire, and spur
ourselves on to deepen it. The more fervent the desire, the more worthy will be
its fruit. When the Apostle tells us: Pray without ceasing, he means this: Desire unceasingly that
life of happiness which is nothing if not eternal, and ask it of him who alone
is able to give it.
Source: The Liturgy of the Hours – Office of
Readings
From a Letter to Proba by Saint Augustine of Hippo
Photo
taken from Wikimedia
Commons
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