Wednesday, October 28, 2015

The Jesus Prayer - Act - Out of the Stillness

Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy upon me, a sinner.

Dear all, in the previous session we understood that prayer though secret, can never be solitary. We tried to understand how we can intercede for others by invoking the Holy Name of Jesus. By the grace of God, let us now move forward...
There is a misunderstanding that needs to be dispelled. If we pray alone, with our eyes closed, saying repeatedly "... Have mercy on me", are we not being egotistic and self centered? Are we not evading our social responsibility and turning our back on the suffering of a broken world? Indeed, this is an objection that may be made not only against the Jesus Prayer, but against all forms of contemplative prayer.

An answer may be found in two aphorisms. The first is from St Seraphim of Sarov: " Acquire inner peace, and thousands around you will find salvation." The second is from the one time Secretary-General of the United Nations, Dag Hammarskjold, in his spiritual diary 'Markings': "Understand - through the stillness; act - out of the stillness; conquer in the stillness."

"Acquire inner peace": that is exactly the aim of the Jesus Prayer. Yet this is not selfish, for itmakes us an instrument of peace to others. Because we have prayed the Jesus Prayer alone and in secret - it may be for no more than 10-15 minutes every day - then, during all the other mines and hours of the day, we shall be available to others, open to their concerns, loving and Christ-like, in a way that would otherwise be impossible.

Again, it is precisely the purpose of the Jesus Prayer to help us to " understand - through the stillness", so that we can then "act - out of the stillness". If our words and actions do not come out of the stillness of prayer, they turn out to be superficial and impotent. But if they have their source in stones, they can price words and actions of fire and healing. We cannot truly change the world unless we have ourselves been changed by prayer.

The Jesus Prayer is in this way not only a contemplative prayer, but a prayer that combines contemplation and action. It is a prayer that makes our contemplation active, and our action contemplative.

Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy upon me a sinner.

Reference: The Jesus Prayer - Bishop Kallistos Ware

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