Yes, we need to pray without ceasing, as St. Paul told us in
his First Letter to the Thessalonians. (5,16) To keep our spiritual
life alive, to make it survive all trials in life, let alone, to make
it work effectively and grow healthily, we need to pray without letup.
We need to pray especially when we find ourselves in some urgent or
persistent needs.
What food is to our biological life, prayer is to our
spiritual life. Prayer is like the breathing and the very beating of
the heart of our life with God and with others. It is the primary and
abiding link we have with God and with everybody else. Without it, we
would simply isolate ourselves.
In short, we can say that while God is objectively with us,
since he is present everywhere, we have to make sure that on our part,
we should also be subjectively with him. Precisely, St. Augustine once
complained about this problem of God being with us while we are not
with him. We need to correspond to this objective reality of our
unbreakable and intimate relation with God.
Our need to pray is like our need to breathe. It should be
non-stop, since it is indispensable in our union with God our Creator,
who keeps us alive and healthy in our spiritual life. Again, let’s
bring back a basic truth—without God we are nothing!
But for our prayer to be most pleasing to God, it has to
come from the fervor of a living faith. Thus, we need to take care of
our faith.
Faith is a tremendous gift from God who starts to share with
us what he has, what he knows about himself and about ourselves. It
gives us the global picture of reality, covering both the temporal and
the eternal, the material and the spiritual, the natural and
supernatural dimensions of our life.
It is what gives permanent value to our passing concerns,
the ultimate, constant and unifying standard to all the variables of
our life. The perishable things of life can attain an imperishable
quality when infused with faith. What is merely earthly and mundane
can have a sanctifying effect when done with faith.
By its very dynamics, it fuels our hope and prepares us for
a life of charity which is how our life ought to be. It is also
nourished and is the effect of charity, indicating to us that faith is
organically united to charity, the very essence of God in whose image
and likeness we are.
It is faith that lets us enter into the spiritual and
supernatural world. It brings us to share in God’s wisdom and power.
Remember those stirring words of Christ: “If you have faith as a grain
of mustard seed, you shall say to this mountain, Remove from there,
and it shall remove, and nothing shall be impossible to you.” ((Mt
17,20)
Without faith, in spite of our keenest intelligence, we will
miss much of the more important aspects of our life as we would only
be restricted to the here and now, the material and the temporal.
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