Praying as you can
One week in, I hope you’ve been able to enter into Lent in a peaceable way. I almost wrote offering hopes for a “good start” to Lent, which sounds like it’s a race or something we’re trying to accomplish, which it’s not, exactly. But we are going somewhere.
So what is it? This time of year, I often remember Dorothy Day’s desire in her work in creating the Catholic Worker Houses-she said she wanted to create a society in which it was easy to be good. I think Lent is a time when we try to take on practices that make it easier to be close to God; of course we’re not distant from God at other times of year, but in Lent we’re invited to a certain sense of quiet intimacy with our Creator that the dynamism of Easter or the long days of summer Pentecost don’t exactly share. A colleague’s wife, Joy Howard has written about the traditional Lenten practices of giving alms, praying, and fasting. She recasts them as “three C’s” – compassion, connection, and clarity.
Compassion: we give to others because we are moved by the Spirit of God and see Christ in them. Compassion is different from pity-compassion moves us to respond to the needs of others, whereas pity keeps them at arm’s length, separated from us. Pitying “the poor” makes “them” different, not “our kind.” Being compassionate, though, allows God to move through my heart in action, not just words.
Connection: we pray. We pray to be more deeply connected to God, and we pray to be conncted to each other. We had some wonderful conversations in our Lent groups this week (you can still join!) about how we are made in the image of God-and how it can be hard to remember that. In prayer, we remember who we are-beloved children of God. That opens our hearts to each other (see: compassion) and allows us to respond with grace. The 2014 www.prayworshipserve.org challenge invites us to give 20 minutes a day to prayer, one hour a week to going to church, and four hours a month to service. If you can’t pray for 20 minutes, what about ten?
Clarity: we fast. You don’t have to give something up for Lent, but if you were to, what could it be? Think beyond the usual stalwarts of chocolate and alcohol. What about excess noise? What about shopping for stuff you might not need? What about gossip or complaining? Is there anything that would help you simplify or look more clearly at your life? My Lenten discipline for the last three years has been fairly minor, in that I give up the radio in the car. I’m an NPR junkie with a 20-30 minute drive to work, so taking that extra sound out of my life has created 40-60 extra minutes of silence in my day. There’s nothing wrong with knowing what’s going on in the world-it’s really important!-but to spend some extra time witnessing the chaos and noise of my chattering brain is always kind of sobering, an effect that usually lasts for a while even after I happily return to Bob Oakes in the morning.
I’m a big fan of the phrase “Pray as you can, not as you can’t”-don’t spend too much time regretting what you think isn’t possible. But don’t take it as an excuse that your life doesn’t permit you to do one BIG thing to get you off the hook of doing the little things you can.
Here are a few other resources:
The Daily Office online: also a podcast.
Hear Scripture and the ancient prayers of the church. Pray together with others knowing that they hear and say the same words, whether or not you’re in the same room. (it’s in the Book of Common Prayer, too-you can even do it without a screen!) Also check out our local monastery, SSJE, and their Give us a Word series.
How’s your charitable giving? Is your pledge to church really where it could be? Could you add some extra giving to a community charity like the Community Day Center or the Waltham Family School?