The spiritual offering of prayer |
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Prayer is the offering in spirit that has done away with the sacrifices of old. What good do I receive from the multiplicity of your sacrifices? asks God. I
have had enough of burnt offerings of rams, and I do not want the fat
of lambs and the blood of bulls and goats. Who has asked for these from
your hands?
What God has asked for we learn from the Gospel. The hour will come, he says, when true worshippers will worship the Father in spirit and in truth. God is a spirit, and so he looks for worshippers who are like himself.
We are true worshippers and true priests. We pray in
spirit, and so offer in spirit the sacrifice of prayer. Prayer is an
offering that belongs to God and is acceptable to him: it is the
offering he has asked for, the offering he planned as his own.
We must dedicate this offering with our whole heart,
we must fatten it on faith, tend it by truth, keep it unblemished
through innocence and clean through chastity, and crown it with love. We
must escort it to the altar of God in a procession of good works to the
sound of psalms and hymns. Then it will gain for us all that we ask of
God.
Since God asks for prayer offered in spirit and in
truth, how can he deny anything to this kind of prayer? How great is the
evidence of its power, as we read and hear and believe.
Of old, prayer was able to rescue from fire and beasts
and hunger, even before it received its perfection from Christ. How
much greater then is the power of Christian prayer. No longer does
prayer bring an angel of comfort to the heart of a fiery furnace, or
close up the mouths of lions, or transport to the hungry food from the
fields. No longer does it remove all sense of pain by the grace it wins
for others. But it gives the armour of patience to those who suffer, who
feel pain, who are distressed. It strengthens the power of grace, so
that faith may know what it is gaining from the Lord, and understand
what it is suffering for the name of God.
In the past prayer was able to bring down punishment,
rout armies, withhold the blessing of rain. Now, however, the prayer of
the just turns aside the whole anger of God, keeps vigil for its
enemies, pleads for persecutors. Is it any wonder that it can call down
water from heaven when it could obtain fire from heaven as well? Prayer
is the one thing that can conquer God. But Christ has willed that it
should work no evil, and has given it all power over good.
Its only art is to call back the souls of the dead
from the very journey into death, to give strength to the weak, to heal
the sick, to exorcise the possessed, to open prison cells, to free the
innocent from their chains. Prayer cleanses from sin, drives away
temptations, stamps out persecutions, comforts the fainthearted, gives
new strength to the courageous, brings travellers safely home, calms the
waves, confounds robbers, feeds the poor, overrules the rich, lifts up
the fallen, supports those who are falling, sustains those who stand
firm.
All the angels pray. Every creature prays. Cattle and
wild beasts pray and bend the knee. As they come from their barns and
caves they look out to heaven and call out, lifting up their spirit in
their own fashion. The birds too rise and lift themselves up to heaven:
they open out their wings, instead of hands, in the form of a cross, and
give voice to what seems to be a prayer.
What more need be said on the duty of prayer? Even the
Lord himself prayed. To him be honour and power for ever and ever.
Amen.
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