Occasional (sometimes very occasional!) thoughts about whatever is on my mind at the moment; frequently theological, occasionally feline, sometimes just random...
--AnnBarbie
*It's freeing, isn't it -- not to have to be right about everything? One thing I've learned in my "retirement age" life is that, no matter how close I might get, I am never completely right about anything, and I don't have to be. I am also guaranteed to be imperfect. Come be imperfect with me...
Monday, August 26, 2013
Why do we pray?
A friend asked this recently in a discussion group we both belong to:
A similar question was posed to the four "Abrahamic Program for Young
Adults" coordinators this year at Chautauqua; "How to you deal with the
reality of evil and still believe that God is almighty?" I thought they
(all mid-20's!) had some great insights towards their question, and also
yours.
A couple of them talked about recognizing the
difference between tragedy/disaster and evil. Evil is a human concept,
the intentional betrayal of the transcendental bit of God (our true self
in Hindu terms, the Holy Spirit in Christian terms, etc., etc.) that
exists in every human being, or perhaps in every living thing, or even
in every created thing -- pick your philosophy. Thus, the essential role
of the believer is in to engage in "fixing the world" -- trying to
return, self and others, individually and collectively, to a proper
relationship with their essential nature, the part of G_d that is within
us all. I think then, in this view, prayer could be considered the
ego-self engaging with the true-self (Allah, G_d, Holy Spirit) and
attempting to willingly submit the ego to what this inner spirit is
saying.
But natural disaster is a disaster only in human terms.
For the planet as a whole, earthquakes, hurricanes, volcanoes, etc.,
are not disasters. In fact, they are essential for renewing the Earth.
And cosmologically, even stars that collide, planets that burn out; we
could potentially be wiped out as a planet at any moment. And yet that,
as much human pain as it may bring, is not evil, although we often
assume that it is so. In truth, is there really anything in our
understanding of God and creation that requires that humans are central
in the grand scheme of things?
In neither case, against evil or
in the wake of disaster, are our temporal selves ever "safe" or
protected, and I can't imagine why or how the Almighty we say we believe
in could or would intervene. Evil must have its consequences, if we are
ever to choose to listen to the spirit rather than to our own ego. And,
G_d pronounced the Universe majestic and "good" and reflecting Her
glory, even though it does not in any way appear to revolve around
humans and our needs.
As long as we are primarily concerned
about our temporal selves and physical/emotional wants and needs, we
will never be in control or safe. Psychologists say most of us need to
block out how "iffy" life actually is just to function effectively, and I
think some people do use prayer to this end. As you say, to feel in
control. But, I don't personally believe that this the purpose or intent
for prayer that the great religions put forward.
If there is
(and I believe there is) something before "in the beginning" and after
"the end," something that is light and life, the full reality of love,
that exists beyond our definitions and our understanding of existence --
that is not only transcendent, forever beyond and ultimately
unknowable, but that also is our innermost self and essence and
intimately knowable, then I think prayer is meant to be about trying to
know, to merge with, to become that which in truth we already are. And
which is the only constant in this ever-changing and unpredictable
world.
In Christian scriptures, Jesus says that we must
love God with all our heart, mind, strength and soul, and,
interestingly, that a second command is "like" the first, to love others
as we love ourselves. Not "as important" but "like." As in, you can't
love God if you don't love others, because the two are sides of the same
coin. I think of it as the active/passive aspects of the same concept.
Prayer/worship/meditation/study
are the passive components and service to others/compassion for others
are the active components of loving God, just as God is the only true
reality, both transcendent/beyond and intimate/inside.
So, as I see it, this is not much to hold onto if you are looking for security or comfort. Life is still
scary and unpredictable and full of evil and disasters, and we are in
many ways truly powerless. In another way of looking at things, though, the exercise of trying to know that which we call G_d is everything and exceedingly
more than everything.
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