Prayer Is
the Language of Hope
by Christoph
Schonborn
Just before
her conversion, Blessed Edith Stein went into
the cathedral in Frankfurt and saw a simple
woman come in from the market, kneel down, and
pray. By Edith Stein's own testimony, the
sight of this woman made a decisive impression
upon her on her journey toward the faith: a
simple woman, kneeling and praying in the
cathedral. Something inexpressible, very
simple, so ordinary, and yet so full of
mystery: this intimate contact with the
invisible God. Not a self-absorbed meditation,
but quiet relaxation in the presence of a
mysterious Other. What Edith Stein
sensed in this humble praying woman would soon
become a certainty for her: God exists, and in
prayer we turn toward him.
Longing to pray
Think of the
impression the silent prayer of Jesus made on
his disciples, prayer that often went on for
hours, all night long, in fact! What was it
about this secret place, this long turning in
silence to him whom our Lord calls "Abba"? "He
was praying in a certain place, and when he
ceased, one of his disciples said to him,
'Lord, teach us to pray, as John taught his
disciples'" (Luke 11: 1).
Teach us
to pray. The disciple yearns to enter
this place of silent intimacy, this vigilant
prostration before the presence of the
Invisible One. He feels such a great reverence
for the mystery of the prayer of Jesus that he
does not dare to interrupt, to "burst in" on
our Lord with his question. He waits till
Jesus himself comes out of his prayer. Only
then does the disciple make bold to ask, to
implore: "Teach us to pray!"
Does it not
move us when we come into church and find
someone silently praying there? Does this
sight awaken in us the longing to pray? Do we
hear at this moment the murmuring of the
spring that summons us to the living water? As
the martyr Ignatius of Antioch writes: “Living
water murmurs within me, saying inwardly:
‘Come to the Father!’” (1)
The longing for prayer is the lure within
us of the Holy Spirit, who draws us to the
Father, Yes, this longing is already prayer,
is already the prayer of the Spirit within
us, “with sighs too deep for words"
(Romans 8:26).
Is the ground of prayer
dried up today?
There is, of
course, a question we have to consider
carefully: Is the ground of prayer
dried up today? Isn't the hidden "murmuring"
of the wellspring of the Holy Spirit drowned
out by the noise of our times? Can prayer
prosper when, as Neil Postman writes in his
disturbing book, Amusing Ourselves to
Death, the average American spends
fifteen years of his life in front of the
television? …There is no doubt that there is
much in today's society that is detrimental to
prayer.
And yet we
are permitted to hope that no
secularization can entirely drown out the call
of God in the hearts of men. …For prayer is
the expression of a longing, which has not
been “produced” by us but has been
placed in the hearts of men by God. It is an
expression of the “fecisti nos ad Te”
of Saint Augustine (Thou madest us for
thyself). …He who prays hopes.
For someone who cannot hope to be heard cannot
ask. After all we only ask other human beings
for something when we have the hope that our
petition has a chance of being granted.
"Prayer," says Saint Thomas, “is the spokesman
of hope”(2)
For what do we pray and
hope?
By our prayer
we can gauge the state of our prayer. For what
do we pray? For what do we hope? The reason
why prayer and hope are so closely related is
that both realize that what we pray and hope
for does not lie within our own powers but can
only be given to us. But what are we
permitted to hope for? And what should we pray
for? In his long quaestio on prayer
(the longest in the whole Summa),
Saint Thomas says:
Since
prayer is a kind of spokesman for our
desires with God, we only ask for something
in prayer rightly if we desire it rightly.
In the Lord’s Prayer not only do we ask for
all that we may rightly desire, we also ask
for them in the order in which we are
supposed to desire them. This prayer, then,
not only teaches us to ask, it also shapes
all our affections (sit informative
totius nostri affectus). (3)
A wonderful
statement: The Our Father shapes our whole
affective life into its right proportions; it
places in us desires and yearnings and
therefore the right priorities in our
praying.
Is it really
reasonable for our primary hope, and therefore
our greatest longing, to be: “Thy
Kingdom come, Thy will be done”? We
have a concern for our “daily bread” (think
how many of our people are worrying about
their jobs or have already lost them!). We
want to get on well with one another (“Forgive
us our trespasses ...”). Above all, we beg for
protection from evil and temptation, from
anguish and despair (“Lead us not into
temptation,” “Deliver us from evil”). All of
these petitions develop out of the problems of
our life. They force their way to the front of
our attention and harass our hearts. They are
usual1y, therefore, our first and most
pressing petitions.
Prayer is the language of
hope
The fact that
we turn to God with these petitions
shows that we expect, that we hope for, help
from him in all these needs. As Cardinal
Ratzinger has said, prayer is “hope in
action,” for “prayer is the language of hope.”(4) “The despairing man no
longer prays, because he no longer hopes. The
man who is sure of himself and his own
strength does not pray, because he relies only
on himself.
The man who
prays hopes for a good and for a strength that
go beyond his own powers.”(5)
If we really pray for what we ask for in the
four petitions of the second part of the Our
Father, then we are already hoping,
and that hope goes beyond the thing we ask
for, it is directed toward the Person
of whom we ask it: “Hallowed be thy
name, thy Kingdom come, thy
will be done....” These petitions become the
articulation of an ever greater trust, which
dares to call God “Our Father”.
Saint Thomas
[Aquinas] says that the Our Father is
"informativa totius nostri affectus": it
shapes all our desires and feelings. And
indeed, time and again, we hear of people
being healed in the very roots of their lives
through the Our Father. I am thinking, for
example, of Alexander Solzhenitsyn's friend
Dimitri Panin,(6) or of
Tatiana Gorischeva, who received the grace of
conversion through reciting the Our Father.
When our affectus
is shaped by the Our Father, our desires and
yearnings are sound and in conformity to the
action of God, and then our prayer will be
more and more efficacious, because it really
will be in harmony with God's plan, really
will be cooperating with God's providence.
Then our praying will be in harmony with the
"sighs" of the Spirit, who "intercedes for the
saints according to the will of God" (Romans
8:27). In the Compendium theologiae,
Saint Thomas says: "The Our Father is the
prayer through which our hope in God is raised
up to the highest degree."(7)
Just as
faith is certain, because it believes
God, so hope does not disappoint (cf.
Romans 5:5), because, full of trust, it
expects from God what he promises. It
is from God alone that hope derives
its triumphant certainty: "In te,
Domine speravi, non confundar in aeternum" (In
thee, O Lord, have I trusted, let me
never be confounded).
[Excerpted
from Loving
the
Church, by Christoph Schonborn,
Archbishop of Vienna, Austria; translated by
John Saward, © 1998, Ignatius
Press, San Francisco. Used with
permission.].
Notes:
(1) Epistula ad Romanus 7,
2.
(2)
STh 2a2ae 17, 4, obj. 3.
(3)
STh 2a2ae 83, 9. 3.
(4)
Auf Christus schauen: Einubung un Glaube,
Hoffnung, Liebe (Freiburg im
Breisgau: Herder, 1989), 68f.
(5)
ibid., 69.
(6)
See The Notebooks of Sologdin
(New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1976).
(7)
Compendium theologiae 2, 3.
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