Rejoice always, pray without ceasing...
Illustration
"Rejoice always, pray without ceasing, in every thing give thanks." (1 Thessalonians 5:16-18)
Advent reminds us of God's coming to us in the past in the person of Jesus Christ, of God's coming to us in the here and now needs of our neighbor, and of the approaching return of Jesus Christ.
Paul's stress upon prayer "on every occasion" and "in every set of circumstances" enables us to see prayer from a different perspective. Instead of understanding prayer solely as those "holy" moments we set aside for God, we need also have an understanding of prayer which allows God to meet us in the common, every day occurrences of life.
John A. T. Robinson, in his little book, Honest to God, puts it well: "My own experience is that I am really praying for people, agonizing with God for them, precisely as I meet them and give my soul to them. It is then if ever, in incarnational relationship, that deep speaks to deep and the Spirit of God is able to take up our inarticulate groans and turn them into prayer."
Therefore, for Paul, to "pray without ceasing" is in every moment to be aware that God is met, praised, and served in our day by day living. To love another and to open our heart to another is to be aware of the very presence of the Almighty in our midst. In the faces of needy humanity, we encounter the Presence who gives us life.
For Paul and for us, this is a viable understanding of prayer and how we should live during these days as we await the coming of the Lord.
Advent reminds us of God's coming to us in the past in the person of Jesus Christ, of God's coming to us in the here and now needs of our neighbor, and of the approaching return of Jesus Christ.
Paul's stress upon prayer "on every occasion" and "in every set of circumstances" enables us to see prayer from a different perspective. Instead of understanding prayer solely as those "holy" moments we set aside for God, we need also have an understanding of prayer which allows God to meet us in the common, every day occurrences of life.
John A. T. Robinson, in his little book, Honest to God, puts it well: "My own experience is that I am really praying for people, agonizing with God for them, precisely as I meet them and give my soul to them. It is then if ever, in incarnational relationship, that deep speaks to deep and the Spirit of God is able to take up our inarticulate groans and turn them into prayer."
Therefore, for Paul, to "pray without ceasing" is in every moment to be aware that God is met, praised, and served in our day by day living. To love another and to open our heart to another is to be aware of the very presence of the Almighty in our midst. In the faces of needy humanity, we encounter the Presence who gives us life.
For Paul and for us, this is a viable understanding of prayer and how we should live during these days as we await the coming of the Lord.
