We Do Not Know How To
Pray As We Ought
Perhaps you may still ask why St Paul
said when we cannot choose words in order to pray properly, since it
is impossible that he or those to whom he wrote should not have known the
Lord’s Prayer.
Yet
Paul himself was not exempt from such ignorance. When, to prevent him from
becoming swollen-headed over the greatness of the revelations that had been
given to him, he was given in addition a thorn in the flesh, a messenger of
Satan to buffet him, he asked the Lord three times to take it away from him.
Surely that was not knowing to pray as he ought? For in the end he heard the
Lord’s reply, telling him why even such a great saint’s prayer had to be
refused: My grace is enough for you: my power is at its best in weakness.
So
when we are suffering afflictions that might be doing us either good or harm,
we do not to know how to pray as we ought. But because they are hard to endure
and painful, because they are contrary to our nature (which is weak) we, like
all mankind, pray to have our afflictions taken from us. At least, though, we
owe this much respect to the Lord our God, that if he does not take our
afflictions away we should not consider ourselves ignored and neglected, but
should hope to gain some greater good through the patient acceptance of
suffering. For my power is at its best in weakness.
Scripture
says this so that we should not be proud of ourselves if our prayer is heard,
when we ask for something it would be better for us not to get; and so that we
should not become utterly dejected if we are not given what we ask for,
despairing of God’s mercy towards us: it might be that what we have been asking
for could have brought us some still greater affliction, or it could have
brought us the kind of good fortune that brings corruption and ruin. In such
cases, it is clear that we cannot know how to pray as we ought.
Hence
if anything happens contrary to our prayer, we ought to bear the disappointment
patiently, give thanks to God, and be sure that it was better for God’s will to
be done than our own. The Mediator himself has given us an example of this.
When he had prayed, My Father, if it is possible, let this cup pass me
by, he transformed the human will that was in him because he had assumed
human nature and added Nevertheless, let it be as you, not I, would have
it. Thus, truly, By the obedience of one man many have been made
righteous.
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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