The May issue of the digizine Kyria <http://www.kyria.com/> focuses on
prayer, and they invited me to contribute an essay on the Jesus Prayer. It's
on my 
website<http://www.frederica.com/writings/kyria-the-jesus-prayer.html#entry7521289>as
well, and pasted in below.

Also on my website you'll find transcripts of my podcast, which are posted
as they filter in from friends and family who help with the typing. The
latest posted is an interview with me on the topic of listening
skills<http://www.frederica.com/writings/listening-skills.html#entry7521275>;
how can you learn to be a good listener?

Hope you are enjoying this beautiful Spring! somehow it seems more spring-y
than in previous years. What a wonderful all-five-senses representation of
Christ's Resurrection.

********

The Jesus Prayer



“Rejoice always, pray constantly, give thanks in all circumstances” (I Thess
5:17)



Have you ever wondered what St. Paul was talking about? How can a person
pray constantly? Yet this wasn’t the only time St. Paul urged his hearers to
constant prayer.



“Rejoice in your hope, be patient in tribulation, be constant in prayer” (
Romans 12:12).



“Pray at all times in the Spirit, with all prayer and supplication. To that
end keep alert with all perseverance” (Eph 6:18).



“Continue steadfastly in prayer, being watchful in it with thanksgiving”  Col
4:2.



If he took the trouble to say this to four different communities, he must
have thought it was important. And he must have thought it was *possible*.
He wouldn’t have kept urging his hearers to do something that was completely
beyond their capability.



In the 2nd through 5th century, men and women began going out into the
deserts of Palestine and Egypt to devote themselves wholly to prayer. They
are known as the Desert Fathers and Mothers. They wanted to find a way to be
in constant communion with God, as St. Paul had urged.



They soon discerned that the reason it’s hard to be in such communion is the
ceaseless inner flow of wandering thoughts: old memories, desires, fears,
criticism of others, any number of aimless thoughts that disrupt the mind
and keep it unsettled. These are not the constructive thoughts used in
problem-solving, but the wandering thoughts of a mind seeking something to
“chew on.” Since the impediment came in the form of thoughts, the cure was a
substitute thought—a single, simple thought of prayer. After experimenting
with various short scriptures and petitions, this is the form that emerged:
“Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me.” It called the Jesus
Prayer.



The prayer is drawn from Gospels, from passages where people called on Jesus
for mercy: the ten lepers  who cried, “Jesus, Master, have mercy on us”
(Luke 17:13), the Canaanite woman who said , “have mercy on me, O Lord, son
of David.” (Mt15:22), and blind Bartimaeus, who said,  “Jesus, Son of David,
have mercy on me!” (Mk 10:47). In Jesus’ parable, the publican “would not
even lift his eyes to heaven but beat his breast, saying, ‘God be merciful
to me a sinner!’” (Luke 18:13). These requests for mercy aren’t like a
criminal begging a judge for lenience, but are stories of people in need
asking for the Lord’s tender mercy.



I’ve been saying the Jesus Prayer for fifteen years now, and have found that
it has greatly increased my ability to sense the presence and voice of the
Lord. Mostly, it gets rid of the clutter. Instead of being blindsided by
thoughts that carry me away into the past or future, I am able to size up
the thought and decide whether or not I want to give it my time. The Jesus
Prayer strengthens the part of your mind that observes your mind, building
an entryway, as it were, where thoughts must prove their validity before
being invited in. At all times, the inner you rests in the presence of our
Lord, the light that drives away all darkness.



As we said, the goal is to pray constantly, but you can’t begin by doing
anything all of the time; you have to begin by doing it *some* of the time,
and gradually build up. The advice about acquiring the habit of this Prayer
hasn’t changed for 1500 years. Set aside a bit of time each day when you
will do nothing but say the Prayer—even just ten minutes a day. Sit quietly,
close your eyes, and begin repeating the prayer inside. The ancient sources
speak of “bringing the mind into the heart,” but you must keep in mind that
“mind” and “heart” don’t mean “reason” and “emotion” in the ancient texts.
(As best I can tell, the notion that we are divided into “head” and “heart”
arose in the West in the Middle Ages. It’s not biblical and, I’ve become
convinced, not true.) In the ancient writings about the Jesus Prayer, the
“mind” is the receptive intelligence, the understanding or comprehension. It
is always hungry for something to take in, and restless. During prayer
practice, discipline that hungry mind to keep returning to gaze at the Lord.
Deny it anything other than the words of the Prayer to think about. As St.
Paul said, “Take every thought captive to obey Christ”  (2 Cor 10:5). You
will find this impossible at first, but very gradually you will make
headway. Those who stick with it report that, over time, there is a nearly
physical sensation of the prayer activity move from buzzing around the top
of your head, to being lodged securely at your physical center, the chest or
heart. (This has nothing to do with emotions; the Prayer is a mental
exercise, but it does, of course, produce better control over negative
emotions.)



I wondered at first how it was possible to be praying all the time when I
had so many other things to think about and accomplish. I found that it
works by utilizing a layer of your awareness, not your entire awareness. It
is like having a friend along as you go through your day. The presence of
your silent friend wouldn’t limit your ability to concentrate and handle the
demands of daily life, but it would give them a different color or flavor.
In this case, the best of Friends provides tranquility, perspective, love
for the unlovely, patience, and good humor.



But the purpose of the Jesus Prayer is not tranquility or inner healing; the
purpose is to bring you into the presence of Christ. He is all our joy. I
think it is wise that the Prayer asks for mercy, to remind us of the
necessity of humility, rather than the narcissism that can accompany the
self-designation “spiritual.” So the Jesus Prayer is not an end in itself,
but a way of training the mind to remain always in his presence, no matter
what else life brings. As the anonymous pilgrim says, in the 19th century
Russian text *The Way of a Pilgrim*, “Sometimes my heart would feel as if it
were bursting with joy, so light was it and full of freedom and consolation.
Sometimes I would feel a burning love towards Jesus Christ and all of God’s
creatures...Sometimes, by invoking the name of Jesus, I was overcome with
happiness, and from then on I knew the meaning of these words, ‘The Kingdom
of God is within you.’”




********
Frederica Mathewes-Green
www.frederica.com
_______________________________________________
Frederica-l mailing list
*** Please address all replies to: frederic...@gmail.com ***
You can check your subscription information here:
http://lists.ctcnet.net/mailman/listinfo/frederica-l

Reply via email to