MANY of the
so-called millennials think so. They say that
prayer simply serves as a tool to calm them down, relieve
them of some
worries, but it hardly has any real effect. By that
claim, they seem
to mean that even with what they consider as their
fervent prayer,
life continues to go on. That is, with many of their
petitions, dreams
and desires unanswered and unfulfilled.
This is, of
course, regarding prayer from a wrong
perspective. But in spite of that, I would readily
reassure them that
any placebo effect of prayer should not be belittled. For
prayer to
have a placebo effect is already a good and tremendous
benefit, and
should not be a reason or excuse to reject it.
In fact, if
only for its placebo effect, prayer should be
resorted to always. Even doctors do that when the case
they are
handling cannot be cured so far by any drug that they
know of. We
should never ignore the importance of a placebo unless we
use it to
deceive ourselves and to justify the lack of due
responsibility.
But prayer,
irrespective of whether it only gives us a
placebo effect, is a necessity for us. It is the basic
way of relating
ourselves to God who is always with us, who always loves
and cares for
us. It is the first thing we do to correspond to God’s
love and
goodness for us.
The important
thing to remember is that we be always
sincere in our prayer. It should come as consequence of
our faith in
God, of our love for him. It is our way of worshipping
him who is
actually everything to us, of thanking him for the many
blessings we
have received from him, many of them we may not even be
able to
account for.
It is also our
way of asking forgiveness for our sins as
well as a way of making reparation for them. And, of
course, prayer is
our way of asking for some favors from God—and favors and
requests we
will never run out of.
Prayer serves a
lot of purposes. The only thing we have to
remember is that we do it with utmost sincerity and
humility. We
should avoid just going through the motions of prayer. We
should mean
what we say in our prayer. We should, with our faith,
feel a certain
intimacy with God who is a father to us and who loves us
always.
To consider
prayer as a waste time or that it simply
serves as a placebo is to misunderstand prayer. Such
misunderstanding
can come about as a result of a certain mentality, so
common nowadays
among the young ones. It is the mentality of entitlement.
It is to
think that they do not have to do or work so much to be
entitled to
some benefits or advantage.
This is now a
big challenge. While it is true that today’s
generation enjoy more things compared to what the
previous generations
enjoyed, or that they know more things, etc., it does not
mean that
they are exempted from work and from prayer, especially
those types
that involve a lot of effort and sacrifice.
In fact, given
what they have and enjoy now, today’s
generation should have a keener sense of responsibility
of growing
more in the different virtues—hard work, justice,
prudence,
temperance, fortitude and many others. They should be
aware of the
dangers of complacency and self-indulgence. They have to
understand
that these things can only spoil them if they do not do
anything about
them.
They have to
know how to make good use of their time and
of the many conveniences the modern things are giving
them. They have
to have a keener sense of the spiritual and the
supernatural, and
avoid wallowing in the mud of the material and the
transitory things.
Thus, they really have to pray properly.
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