语言

Franciscan at Home

Forming those who form others

Reaching Out to Jesus in Prayer

What Is Prayer?

When we hear the word prayer, often we think of vocal prayer, using words either handed down to us burnished by the voices of generations or the words that spring up spontaneously from the heart. Prayer takes many forms, however, and all of them are means to seek God and respond to his love, for, “whether we realize it or not, prayer is the encounter of God’s thirst with ours. God thirsts that we may thirst for him.”[1] This encounter may well happen beyond words, with gestures or in silence.

The Power of Faith

The response to God’s thirst that touches Jesus, which he praises[2] and which establishes a contact that seems to move him or even allow him to act,[3] is faith. To those who turn to him in faith, he grants what they ask.”[4] In contrast, we find that little faith earns a reproach,[5] and lack of it, mysteriously, seems at times to hinder Jesus’ action.[6] Faith is the attitude Jesus awaits: it is what opens the door of our lives to his action and draws it down: “Prayer to Jesus is answered by him already during his ministry, through signs that anticipate the power of his death and Resurrection: Jesus hears the prayer of faith, expressed in words (the leper, Jairus, the Canaanite woman, the good thief) or in silence (the bearers of the paralytic, the woman with a hemorrhage who touches his clothes, the tears and ointment of the sinful woman).”[7] Faith moves Jesus to act.

 

Notes


[1] CCC, 2560.

[2] Matt 8:10; 15:28; Luke 7:9.

[3] Matt 9:2; 9:22; 9:29; Mark 2:5; 10:52; Luke 5:20; 7:50; 8:48; 17:19; 18:42.

[4] CCC, 548.

[5] Matt 6:30; 8:26; 14:31; 16:8; 17:20; Mark 4:40; Luke 8:25; 12:28.

[6] Matt 13:58; Mark 6:5.

[7] CCC, 2616.

The rest of this online article is available for current Guild members.

Join the Guild today!

Teresa Hawes is Director of the Religion Program and a French teacher at Saint Francis Xavier School in Winooski, Vermont. She also facilitates prayer groups and organizes retreats to foster silent prayer in the Carmelite tradition. She may be reached at [email protected].

This article is from The Catechetical Review (Online Edition ISSN 2379-6324) and may be copied for catechetical purposes only. It may not be reprinted in another published work without the permission of The Catechetical Review by contacting [email protected]

Categorized Under
Issue: 

Current Issue: Volume 10.4

Designed & Developed by On Fire Media, Inc.