Prayer is the light of the soul |
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The
highest good is prayer and conversation with God, because it means that
we are in God’s company and in union with him. When light enters our
bodily eyes our eyesight is sharpened; when a soul is intent on God,
God’s inextinguishable light shines into it and makes it bright and
clear. I am talking, of course, of prayer that comes from the heart and
not from routine: not the prayer that is assigned to particular days or
particular moments in time, but the prayer that happens continuously by
day and by night.
Indeed the soul should not only turn to God at times
of explicit prayer. Whatever we are engaged in, whether it is care for
the poor, or some other duty, or some act of generosity, we should
remember God and long for God. The love of God will be as salt is to
food, making our actions into a perfect dish to set before the Lord of
all things. Then it is right that we should receive the fruits of our labors, overflowing onto us through all eternity, if we have been
offering them to him throughout our lives.
Prayer is the light of the soul, true knowledge of
God, a mediator between God and men. Prayer lifts the soul into the
heavens where it hugs God in an indescribable embrace. The soul seeks
the milk of God like a baby crying for the breast. It fulfils its own
vows and receives in exchange gifts better than anything that can be
seen or imagined.
Prayer is a go-between linking us to God. It gives joy
to the soul and calms its emotions. I warn you, though: do not imagine
that prayer is simply words. Prayer is the desire for God, an
indescribable devotion, not given by man but brought about by God’s
grace. As St Paul says: For when we cannot choose words in order to
pray properly, the Spirit himself intercedes on our behalf in a way that
could never be put into words.
If God gives to someone the gift of such prayer, it is
a gift of imperishable riches, a heavenly food that satisfies the
spirit. Whoever tastes that food catches fire and his soul burns for
ever with desire for the Lord.
To begin on this path, start by adorning your house
with modesty and humility. Make it shine brightly with the light of
justice. Decorate it with the gold leaf of good works, with the jewels
of faithfulness and greatness of heart. Finally, to make the house
perfect, raise a gable above it all, a gable of prayer. Thus you will
have prepared a pure and sparkling house for the Lord. Receive the Lord
into this royal and splendid dwelling — in other words: receive, by his
grace, his image into the temple of your soul.
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