Let’s take note of how Christ himself always gave priority
to prayer, despite the hectic schedule he had to follow during his
preaching trips. He found not only time for it, but also the
appropriate place for it. In spite of being God himself who became
man, Christ always felt the need to pray and did his best to meet the
relevant requirements for prayer.
He is actually showing us how to carry out a very important
duty that is incumbent on all of us if we want to keep our humanity
intact, let alone, our Christianity. It is the duty to pray always
because that is our fundamental way of being in touch with God, our
Creator and Father. We need to be always with God. We will only have
trouble when we lose touch with him.
God, being our Creator, is not only the giver of our
existence but also the keeper or maintainer of it. As such, he is
always with us, trying to shape us the way he wants us to be, that is,
to be his image and likeness, children of his, sharers of his divine
life.
But he does this, respecting always our freedom, precisely
because being like him, we have to freely correspond to God’s will for
us. This is a fundamental truth about ourselves that we should never
forget. In fact, we should try our best to faithfully, consistently
and generously act on it.
And that correspondence to God’s will for us is basically
done through prayer. We have to understand that prayer is our first
way to connect ourselves with God. It is so basic that we have to
learn to turn everything in our life, from our thoughts and intentions
to our words and deeds, into some form of prayer. That’s how important
prayer is!
When we pray, we start to share what God has with us—his
knowledge, his wisdom, his power, etc. We get to see and understand
things the way God sees and understands them. When we pray, we get to
see his will and ways, and learn how to follow them. When we pray, we
can manage to handle any kind of situations and predicaments,
challenges, trials, difficulties, etc., properly.
When we pray, we would be more able to love everyone,
including our so-called enemies, just as God himself, as shown in
Christ, loves everyone. We would learn how to be patient and merciful,
how to be “all things to all men,” how to be both strong and tough, on
the one hand, and also gentle and tender, on the other hand.
And if God would grant us the honor and the privilege, we
can be empowered to do some extraordinary things like performing some
miracles and receiving some special charisms that would redound to the
good of everyone. Prayer makes our faith active, our hope alive and
our charity burning.
Of course, we also have to understand that prayer can lend
itself to many different ways. There’s vocal prayer, mental prayer,
contemplative prayer, liturgical prayer, etc. It can adapt itself to
different situations and conditions.
The absolutely important thing that makes prayer real prayer
is when we manage to give all our mind and heart to God in whatever
thing we do or in whatever situation we may find ourselves in. It need
not be expressed in words or deeds. It should start and end with our
desire to be with God!
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