17th
Sunday OT
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
Our Lady of the Rosary, NOLA
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
Our Lady of the Rosary, NOLA
John
the Baptist teaches his disciples how to pray. The Pharisees and the
Sadducees know how to pray. The Zealots and the scribes can pray.
Even the Roman occupiers—with their home altars and idols—know
how to pray. Why don't the disciples of Christ know how to ask God
for what they need? How could they spend so much time with Christ and
not understand the basic rules and methods of prayer? Well, part of
the reason could be that every time he needs to pray, Jesus runs off
to the hills or the desert, or gets in a boat and flees the crowds.
He needs some space, some time alone to properly pray. It could be
that pretty much all he does with the disciples is teach, preach, and
heal. Or it could be that he is teaching them to pray all along and
they don't recognize the lessons for what they are. Regardless, they
wanted to learn to pray, so they ask a Master for instruction. What
does Jesus teach them? He teaches them that prayer is first about
knowing who and what you are in relationship with God. And that
knowing and understanding this relationship to God brings exactly
what you need.
So,
who are we in relationship with God? “Man is a beggar before God.”
So says St. Augustine. And he's right. But being a beggar before God
and knowing that we're beggars before God are two very different
things. What separates the truth from our ignorance is the sin of
pride, more specifically, the lack of humility before God and His
gifts. We are beggars but we don't know how to beg well b/c we do not
yet fully understand what we truly need to thrive as children of God.
To learn what we truly need, we must embrace a life of discipleship,
the life of a student and learn to beg at the feet of a Master. The
disciples—Jesus' students—realize this, so they ask, “Lord,
teach us to pray.” And he gives them The Lord's Prayer. He gives
them not only the words to pray but shows them the proper attitude of
prayer: humility, not demeaning groveling or sniveling toadyism but
the truly, deeply held understanding of their creaturely nature. Like
all created things, we are wholly dependent on God for our being, for
our very existence. Absent this basic understanding of our nature, we
cannot properly ask God for anything useful, for anything at all
helpful to our flourishing. Humility, then, is the foundation of
prayer.
Recognizing
our total dependence on God for absolutely everything, we can begin
our lessons in how to beg. First, asking God for what we need is not
the be-all and end-all of prayer. St. Thérèse of Lisieux writes in
her autobiography, “For me, prayer is a surge of the heart; it is a
simple look turned toward heaven, it is a cry of recognition and of
love, embracing both trial and joy.” This surge of the heart might
be humility rolling out in force; or it might be delight in love, or
anguish during trial. What does she recognize while praying? Does she
see her end, her purpose? Does she see-again Christ's love for her on
his cross? Maybe she is reminded that she is a creature, a made-being
who has been remade in her freedom from sin? Begging before God is
fundamentally about knowing who and what we are before a thought or a
word can form; before we can even name our need, we must know that
Love draws us to beg; Love seduces us into prayer and teaches us to
ask. That we must ask is itself a gift precisely b/c the need to ask
pulls us into a tighter union with God. This is why Jesus teaches his
students to begin their prayer, “Our Father. . .” Our source. Our
beginning. Our origin. Think about it: You cannot ask for directions
if you do not know where you are going. And you cannot ask for
directions unless you know how to speak to the One Who knows the way.
Abraham
learns to speak to God, and finds his way. In what may look like a
flea market negotiation, Abraham and God haggle over the fate of
Sodom-Gomorrah. Back and forth they propose and counter-propose the
acceptable number of righteous citizens allowable to save the city
from destruction. God finally settles on the not destroying the city
if Abraham can find ten righteous souls. The lesson seems to be: God
is reasonable with our demands if we are properly respectable but
persistent, even if we're trying to save a cesspool like Sodom.
Wrong. This story has little to do with sinful Sodom and more to do
with Abraham learning the true nature of the God he serves. With each
step in the negotiation with God, Abraham learns that the Lord hears,
listens, and concedes not b/c Abraham is persistent or respectable or
desperately needful but b/c God is merciful. How is his mercy made
real in the world? At the request of His faithful servants! God wills
that we ask for what we need so that His mercy and generosity can be
made manifest, so that His mighty works can be seen and bear witness
to His saving love. But in order for that to happen, we must ask for,
receive, and then make known the blessings He pours out for us.
So,
the first lesson about prayer is that we must know and understand who
and what we are in relationship with God: dependent creatures. The
second lesson is that prayer—undertaken with all humility in
recognition of our creatureliness—releases the already given
blessings of God for us to receive. The third lesson is that
receiving God's blessings always and immediately merits copious
thanksgiving. Gratitude is the essential ingredient in humility. Try
making a roux without fat. Gumbo without filé. Try celebrating Madri
Gras without beads. Won't work. Humility without genuine gratitude is
simply a less obnoxious form of pride. When we receive a blessing
from God, our gratitude, our expressed gratitude, deepens and
strengthens our bond to God and purifies our humility. If humility is
the foundation of prayer, then giving thanks for the blessings we
receive reinforces the ground upon which we stand to pray. We come to
know ourselves more fully. We come to see and hear God more clearly.
And the bonds of divine love that we share among ourselves grow
stronger even as our selfishness and pride wither away.
Jesus
makes a significant promise to his disciples regarding prayer. He
says, “And I tell you, ask and you will receive; seek and you will
find. . .For everyone who asks, receives; and the one who seeks,
finds. . .” The keys to understanding this promise are
selflessness, service, humility. He's not promising us that God will
be our celestial Santa Claus, or our divine Sugar Daddy. Ask in
humility and you will receive in love. Seek in service to others and
you will find merit in sacrifice. Before you give voice to prayer,
remember who and what you are in relationship with God. Remember that
what you are given reveals God's nature to you and to the world. And
never forget that God Himself has no need of our thanks or praise.
Giving thanks to Him for His gifts is for our benefit not His. He
calls us to prayer so that we might grow in holiness, grow closer to
His love, and become beacons of that love for a darkening world.
Without His prompting, without the good work of His Holy Spirit, we
cannot pray. So know that every urge to pray, the very need to pray
is the Holy Spirit working His loving work within you. We can nothing
good without Him. With Him, every door falls open.
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