Let Us Turn Our Mind
to the Task of Prayer at Appointed Hours
Let us always
desire the happy life from the Lord God and always pray for it. But for this
very reason we turn our mind to the task of prayer at appointed hours, since
that desire grows lukewarm, so to speak, from our involvement in other concerns
and occupations. We remind ourselves through the words of prayer to focus our
attention on the object of our desire; otherwise, the desire that began to grow
lukewarm may grow chill altogether and may be totally extinguished unless it is
repeatedly stirred into flame.
Therefore,
when the Apostle says: Let your petitions become known before God, this should not be taken in the sense
that they are in fact becoming known to God who certainly knew them even before
they were made, but that they are becoming known to us before God through
submission and not before men through boasting.
The monks in
Egypt are said to offer frequent prayers, but these are very short and hurled
like swift javelins. Otherwise their watchful attention, a very necessary
quality for anyone at prayer, could be dulled and could disappear through
protracted delays. They also clearly demonstrate through this practice that a
person must not quickly divert such attention if it lasts, just as one must not
allow it to be blunted if it cannot last.
Excessive
talking should be kept out of prayer but that does not mean that one should not
spend much time in prayer so long as a fervent attitude continues to accompany
his prayer. To talk at length in prayer is to perform a necessary action with
an excess of words. To spend much time in prayer is to knock with a persistent
and holy fervour at the door of the one whom we beseech. This task is generally
accomplished more through sighs than words, more through weeping than speech.
He places our tears in his sight, and our sighs are not hidden from him, for he has established all
things through his Word and does not seek human words.
Source: The Liturgy of the Hours – Office of
Readings
From a Letter to Proba by Saint Augustine of Hippo
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