A Prayer of Gratitude

Prayer is sitting in the silence until it silences us, choosing gratitude until we are grateful, and praising God until we ourselves are an act of praise. Mature prayer always breaks into gratitude. This week’s practice is a body prayer from Beverly Lanzetta. Adapt the movements to your body’s needs so that you’re comfortable. Focus simply on the feeling of gratitude and, as you are able, do the following as you read through the stanzas: bow, kneel, lie down, rise, put your hands over your heart, place your hands together, bow your head, and open your arms wide.

Holy Earth, Holy Cosmos,
I bow before you
With my whole being.

Holy Creatures, Holy Nature,
I kneel upon the earth
In honor and thanksgiving
Of your blessed bounty.

Holy Waters, Holy Mountains,
I lay my body on your temple
In gratefulness for nurturing
My tender soul.

Holy Passion, Holy Longing,
I rise up before you
A devotee of truth,
Following wherever you lead me.

Holy Silence, Holy Solitude,
I place my hands over my heart
Breathing in serenity,
Breathing out your peace.

Holy Sorrow, Holy Suffering,
I close my hands in prayer
May I bear every wound
With compassion and nonharm.

Holy Humility, Holy Emptiness,
I bow my head before you
I have become open,
For your All to shine in my soul.

Holy Freedom, Holy Rejoicing,
I open my heart to the world
Offering myself to this day,
In joyfulness and gratitude.

Amen. [1]

[1] Beverly Lanzetta, “Canticle of Praise,” A Feast of Prayers (Blue Sapphire Books: forthcoming 2019). Used with permission. Dr. Beverly Lanzetta is a theologian, spiritual teacher, and the author of many groundbreaking books on emerging universal spirituality and new monasticism as well as a vowed monk of peace living in the world. For more information on Lanzetta and her work, visit her website beverlylanzetta.net.

A Prayer

Henry Nouwen Society DAILY MEDITATION | MAY 31, 2019

A Prayer
Dear God,
Speak gently in my silence. When the loud outer noises of my surroundings and the loud inner noises of my fears keep pulling me away from you, help me to trust that you are still there even when I am unable to hear you. Give me ears to listen to your small, soft voice saying: “Come to me, you who are overburdened, and I will give you rest . . . for I am gentle and humble of heart.” Let that loving voice be my guide.
Amen.
Henry Nouwen

Prayers to quiet the mind for entrance to Centering Prayer

Let Your God Love You

Be silent.

Be still.

Alone.

Empty.

Before your God.

Say nothing.

Ask nothing.

Be silent.

Be still.

Let your God, look upon you

That is all.

God knows.

God understands.

God loves you.

With enormous love.

And only wants

To look upon you

With that love.

Quiet.

Still.

Be.

Let you God-love you.

Edwina Gately and Jane Hammond-Clarke.

Whispers: Conversations with Edwina Gateley

Source Books, 2000

http://www.cachisdigital.com/wp-content/juf-websites/prayingfromtheheart/?p=158

 

 

Prayer of Abandonment (Br. Charles de Foucauld)

Father,

I abandon myself into your hands;

do with me what you will.

Whatever you may do, I thank you:

I am ready for all, I accept all.

Let only your will be done in me,

and in all your creatures –

I wish no more than this, O Lord.

 Into your hands I commend my soul:

I offer it to you with all the love of my heart,

for I love you, Lord, and so need to give myself,

to surrender myself into your hands without reserve,

and with boundless confidence,

for you are my Father, my Mother my Alfa and my Omega,                                                                      

my refuge and my strength,

my inspiration and my consolation.

An Ancient Byzantine Prayer

Serene light shining in the ground of my being,

Draw me to yourself,

Draw me past the snares of the mind,

Free me from symbols and words

That I may discover the Signified,

The Word unspoken,

in the darkness that veils, the ground of my being.

The Practice of Welcoming Prayer

The Welcoming Prayer is a method of consenting to God’s presence and action in our physical and emotional reactions to events and situations in daily life. The purpose of the Welcoming Prayer is to deepen our relationship with God through consenting in the ordinary activities of our day. The Welcoming Prayer helps to dismantle the emotional programs of the false-self system and to heal the wounds of a lifetime by addressing them where they are stored — in the body. It contributes to the process of transformation in Christ initiated in Centering Prayer.

practiceofthewelcomingprayer

 

Contemplative Outreach Ltd Welcoming Prayer.

Practicing the Welcoming Prayer

Practicing the Welcoming Prayer

The Welcoming Prayer Movement One:

“Feel and sink into” what you are experiencing this moment in your body.

Movement Two:

“Welcome” what you are experiencing this moment in your body as an opportunity to consent to the Divine Indwelling.

Movement Three:

“I let go of my desire for security, affection, control and embrace this moment as it is.”

“The reason that Centering Prayer is not as effective as it could be is that when you emerge from it into the ordinary routines of daily life, your emotional programs start going off again. Upsetting emotions immediately start to drain the reservoir of interior silence that you had established during the prayer.

“On the other hand, if you work at dismantling the energy centers that cause the upsetting emotions, your efforts will extend the good effects of centering into every aspect of daily life.”

— Thomas Keating, Open Mind, Open Heart

The Welcoming Prayer is a practice of letting go in the present moment, in the ordinary routines of daily life. It is prayer because of our intention and consent to God’s presence and action in our lives, helping us to remember that the Indwelling Presence is always with us in our experiences.

The daily reminder to practice the Welcoming Prayer is our body. By learning to notice what’s happening in the body in the moment, we can use this new incarnational awareness as our reminder to practice the prayer. That’s why it is so important to practice the scanning exercise given in this Monday’s lesson. We’re developing a new muscle of consciousness, a new way of becoming aware of our next opportunity to consent to God’s presence and action in the ordinary activity of our lives.

 

The Three Movements of the Welcoming Prayer

The three movements of the prayer are:

Feel and Sink Into

Welcome

Let Go

  1. “Feel and Sink Into” what you are experiencing this moment in your body.

Feel what is happening in the body. Sink into — do not resist — the body sensation. Simply experience the energy.

Using your intuitive eye, move gently through the body, scanning for any discomfort, pain, uneasiness, itching, heat, cold, tension, tingling, or any other sensations. When you become aware of any body sensation, rest (stop) and sink into (experience) it. Be alert to any uneasiness in your body — a sensation of heat or cold, itchiness or tingling, tension, or pain.

All feelings, whether perceived as positive or negative, are welcomed. Feelings may intensify, dissolve, or change as we are present to them in the moment. Simply follow their movement.

The body, from the top of the head all the way down to the tip of the toes, is the warehouse of the unconscious. All of our experiences are carried in every cell of our body and imprinted there — the “issues are in the tissues.” The first movement of the prayer helps us to access the unconscious through the body, in the moment.

  1. “Welcome” what you are experiencing this moment in your body as an opportunity to consent to the Divine Indwelling.

 

“Welcome” is the sacred word, the symbol of our consent to the presence and action of the Indwelling Spirit, the Divine Therapist. “Welcome” is to embrace what we find happening within. Saying the word “welcome” interiorly is the action of embracing the Indwelling Spirit, whom we know by faith is always present, in and through our experience.

 

3. Next, we say the “Letting Go” phrase.

“I let go of my desire for security, affection, control and embrace this moment as it is.”

Attachment is an important concept to explore here. Attachment can be defined as something that fastens one thing to another (clinging) or an attempt to possess and control the perceived source of happiness. Attachments imprison us, like a fly stuck to fly paper. Attachment to the instinctual drives for happiness (security, affection, control) creates compensatory needs, like when we eat or drink when we feel in need of love and affection. We let go in order to open to the will of God in our life. We “let go” and “let God.”

“Letting go” means passing through the energy and not around it, not running away or pushing it back into the unconscious through denial or distraction. One does not identify with the feeling, emotion, body sensation, thought, or commentary, and act it out, but allows it to be transformed by the simple act of sticking with it and experiencing it.

Saying the “letting go” sentence helps to dismantle the emotional programs for happiness that can’t work, uprooting the dis-ease in the unconscious. As we “let go,” it is not necessary to identify which energy center was triggered, or focus on one or the other of them.

It is important to say the “letting go” sentence, even if one has experienced a release of the energy after the first two movements of “feel and sink into” and “welcoming.” There is no need to try to determine which of the three energy centers is the source of what we are experiencing – they are all inextricably connected.

Energy is a force for expression. It desires to express itself somehow. Releasing energy by “letting go” is a healthy and useful way to handle a feeling. Each release undoes a bit of the repressed energy. As time goes by, we become freer and have greater clarity of mind. Purpose and direction become more positive and constructive, resulting in more conscious choices, decisions, and actions.

“It is the most difficult thing for us to let go.

We have a mind that tells us that we’re always right;

everybody else is wrong, but we are right.

Then we have emotions and feelings

that sort of validate those thoughts.

And what we need to do is to let go of

whatever is happening on an interior level

and surrender so that we can see reality

and what is actually happening

instead of perceiving through our thoughts and feelings.”

  • Mary Mrozowski, creator of the Welcoming Prayer

From Contemplative Outreach Ltd

 

practiceofthewelcomingprayer

A Meditation on Kenosis

I found this meditation at the end of the book title Humility Matters by Mary Margaret Funk (2005).In this meditation, I discover the words I was searching for so long in my Christian tradition.

kenosis-meditation_hm kenosis-meditation-1 kenosis-meditation-2 kenosis-meditation-3

Trinity Prayer

God for us, we call you “Father.”
God alongside us, we call you “Jesus.”
God within us, we call you “Holy Spirit.”
Together, you are the Eternal Mystery
That enables, enfolds, and enlivens all things,
Even us and even me. 

Every name falls short of your goodness and greatness.
We can only see who you are in what is.
We ask for such perfect seeing—
As it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be.

Amen.

Trinity: Week 1

The Importance of Good Theology
Sunday, September 11, 2016

Fr. Richard Rohr, OFM

Running A Race With Your Eyes On the Goal.

Fr. William Meninger Homily_August 13, 2016 and  a guided meditation from Cardinal John Newman (Prayer used by Mother Theresa)

Homily

 The readings this morning are complicated and diverse so I would like to focus on just one important line from the epistle to the Hebrews. It is very relevant to the interest right now on the Olympic games. The imagery is that of running a race with your eyes on the goal. The author says, “Run the race that lies before you by keeping your eyes fixed on Jesus”. This, of course, is at the very heart of what it means to be a Christian. to be a follower of Christ. We must keep our eyes fixed on him with the purpose and intensity of an athlete striving for victory. What we sometimes don’t realize however is that we already have the victory, Christ has won it for us, we have simply to reach out and claim it as our own.

 Somebody has said that “the error of the past is the wisdom of the future”. This means that our failures, the times when we have allowed our eyes to drift from the goal, from following Jesus, should be an impetus and actually an encouragement supporting us in returning to that goal which is Jesus.

 We do realize, all of us, that the most basic and fundamental teaching of Jesus is one of love. Not just love of God, but like unto it love of neighbor. This is why Jesus would say that whatever we do unto one of the least of his brethren we do  unto him. And why St. John tells us that we cannot love God whom we do not see unless we love our brother and sister whom we do see. Richard Rohr reminds us that love is our very structural and essential identity. To live in conscious connection with the loving inner presence of God is to find our true self. Plato says, “We can easily forgive a child who is afraid of the dark. The real tragedy is when a man or woman is afraid of the light.”

 I would like to do something now that is a little bit unusual for a homily. I would like to bring us into an experienced connection, another type of communion if you will, with the love of Jesus, of God and of one another. I would like to take you through a brief, guided meditation. This meditation is a prayer written by the English theologian , Cardinal, John Newman. It is a prayer that Mother Theresa tells us she recited every day of her life.

 So I would ask you to sit as comfortably as you can, perhaps close your eyes and just for a brief moment try to be aware of God’s presence within you and about you, as Jesus said, where two or three are gathered together in my name there am I in the midst of them and the kingdom of God is within you. (Brief pause). And now with great sincerity, listen with your hearts and offer this prayer keeping your eyes fixed on Jesus.

 

Dear Jesus, help me to spread Your fragrance everywhere I go.

Flood my soul with Your spirit and life.

Penetrate and possess my whole being so utterly,

That my life may only be a radiance of Yours.

 

Shine through me, and be so in me

That every soul I come in contact with

May feel Your presence in my soul.

Let them look up and see no longer me, but only Jesus!

 

Stay with me and then I shall begin to shine as You shine,

So to shine as to be a light to others;

The light, O Jesus will be all from You; none of it will be mine;

It will be you, shining on others through me.

 

Let me thus praise You the way You love best, by shining on those around me.

Let me preach You without preaching, not by words but by my example,

By the catching force of the sympathetic influence of what I do,

The evident fullness of the love my heart bears to You.

 

Amen.

 

May you be happy,

May you be free,

May you be loving,

May you be loved.

 

Father William Meninger

Litany of the Holy Spirit

Litany of the Holy Spirit

Pure Gift of God

Indwelling Presence

Promise of the Father

Life of Jesus

Pledge and Guarantee

Defense Attorney

Inner Anointing

Homing Device

Stable Witness

Peacemaker

Always Already Awareness

Compassionate Observer

God Compass

Inner Breath

Mutual Yearning

Hidden Love of God

Implanted Hope

Seething Desire

Fire of Life and Love

Truth Speaker

Flowing Stream

Wind of Change

Descending Dove

Cloud of Unknowing

Uncreated Grace

Filled Emptiness

Deepest Level of Our Longing

Sacred Wounding

Holy Healing

Will of God

Great Compassion

Inherent Victory

 

You who pray in us, through us, with us, for us, and in spite of us.

Amen, Alleluia!

________________________________

When we come to the end of our rope and hit rock bottom, we are not dashed but fall into God’s hands. It is here at our lowest that we discover our true source of power, the indwelling Holy Spirit. Many years ago, during a hermitage in Arizona, I had a particularly strong sense of the Holy Spirit, the One who is fully available to all of us “if we but knew the gift of God” (John 4:10). I slowly composed this prayer–imagining many names and movements of the Spirit–to awaken and strengthen this Presence within you. Recite it whenever you are losing faith in God or in yourself.

Reference:Adapted from Richard Rohr, The Naked Now: Learning to See as the Mystics See (The Crossroad Publishing Company: 2009), 168-169.

The Yaweh Prayer

A rabbi taught this prayer to me many years ago. I write about it in the second chapter of my book The Naked Now. The Jews did not speak God’s name, but breathed it with an open mouth and throat: inhale–Yah; exhale–weh. By our very breathing we are speaking the name of God and participating in God’s breath. This is our first and our last word as we enter and leave the world.

Breathe the syllables with open mouth and lips, relaxed tongue:

Inhale–Yah

Exhale–weh

 During a period of meditation, perhaps twenty minutes, use this breath as a touchstone. Begin by connecting with your intention, your desire to be present to God. Breathe naturally, slowly, and deeply, inhaling and exhaling Yah-weh. Let your focus on the syllables soften and fall away into silence. If a thought, emotion, or sensation arises, observe but don’t latch on to it. Simply return to breathing Yah-weh.

You may be distracted numerous times. And perhaps your entire practice will be full of sensations clamoring for attention. Contemplation is truly an exercise in humility! But each interruption is yet another opportunity to return to Presence, to conscious participation in God’s life.

From:  Richard Rohr’s Daily Meditation April 9,2016