Individual Spiritual Practices: Understanding Prayer
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Transcript Individual Spiritual Practices: Understanding Prayer
James A. Van Slyke
Prayer mainly associated with the Christian
tradition (also Hindu and Buddhism)
Petitioning God
▪ Meet basic needs (food or clothing)
▪ Meet Spiritual needs (forgiveness, purity)
Ascent of the mind or soul towards God
▪ Plotinus
▪ Inward turn towards God
Conversation with God
Expressive prayer
Sharing our emotions or desires with God
Usually involves speech (spoken or inner)
Praise (Kataphatic tradition)
Contemplative prayer
Letting Go
Creating space for God to speak
Silence (Apophatic tradition)
Christian mystic and nun
The Interior Castle (1577)
Prayer should be a
transformative experience
Changes our perspective on the world
Moves us away from illusion
Liminal state – stuck between two states
Guilt and forgiveness
Provides space for transition
Moves us to a state of trust
and dependence on God
More attuned to the needs
of others
Connects us more deeply to
others
Continual activity (“pray
without ceasing”)
Provides a connection to God
throughout the day
Sensing the relational
presence of God
Prayer was an essential element of spiritual
practices in the early church
Early Christians were a minority
Developed unique practices based on several
sources
▪ Jewish Religious Tradition
▪ Circulation of early New Testament writings
Helped form the basic spiritual practices that
define the Christian experience
When Christianity became a
state religion practitioners
moved outside of society
Felt that state religion weakened
the spiritual practices of the
church
Desert Fathers (3rd century)
Monastic movements
▪ Evagrius of Pontus
▪ Maximus the Confessor
Three Stages to developing a mature prayer
life
First Stage – Praktike – lifestyle changes, letting
go of sinful attachments; gain virtues
Second Stage – Natural Contemplation – Seeing
the work of God in the world rather than
exploiting it; rejecting selfish desires (sin)
Third Stage – Theoria – Spiritual contemplation –
Seeing God; ineffable experiences; participation in
the divine reality
Training and Exercises that cultivate
spirituality
Connection between physical, mental, and
spiritual aspects of life
Embodied Spirituality
Increased concern on the role of the body and
emotion in spiritual practices
Religion not a “disembodied” experience
Practices
Simplicity of Diet
Fasting
Prayer retreats
Manual labor
Simplify life in order to allow more room for God
Controlling and moderating desire (Not
eliminating it)
Increases Freedom
Purifying Desire
Prayer was the most important
spiritual practice
“the lifting of the heart or mind to
God” (Luther 1519)
Helped in the discernment of the
scriptures
Reason alone was insufficient for
knowledge of God
Required spiritual experience
through prayer
Meditatio – prayerful reading of
the scriptures
Oratio – Encountering the Holy
Spirit
Promises of the Bible strengthen
our faith
Recognize our need for God
Through prayer our hearts seek
after God
Tenatio or Anfechtung (Distress or
testing)
A feeling of need (poverty of the
spirit)
Increases our hope and faith in God
Genuine prayer should lead to
right attitudes and actions
The primary subject of prayer
should be God or others
Friedrich Heiler (1932)
Focused mainly on expressive forms of prayer
Prayer is mainly a conversation with God that
involves an awareness of dependence and trust
▪ Emotional; an outpouring of the heart
▪ Formulaic or impersonal prayer dissolves this awareness
Two primary categories
Mystical (Subjective; individual)
Prophetic (Active; calling upon God)
Ann Ulanov
Jungian psychologist
Primary Speech (1982)
Prayer is a response to God of our
inner emotions and desires
Begins in infancy
It is the primary expression of our
true selves
Ann Ulanov
Dishonesty with ourselves detracts
from honesty in prayer
Fear or doubt of God’s acceptance
can limit our ability for spiritual
growth in prayer
Must be willing to express our true
selves
▪ Anger, aggression, sexuality
Willing to confront distorted images
of God or the self
Among US population (Poloma & Pendleton
1989, 1991)
Meditative – individual listening; attunement
Ritualistic – reciting prayers; liturgy
Petitionary – Asking for things from God
Colloquial – Conversations with God