Why should we “pray constantly”?FR. LEONARD M. PUECH, O.F.M.Why should we "pray constantly"(I Thes. 5,17)? Because prayer is the great means of salvation according to the words
of St. Alphonsus, one of the great doctors of the Church. He even wrote: "He who
prays is certainly saved; he who does not pray is certainly damned. All the saints
in heaven, except infants, were saved because they prayed; and all the damned
in hell were damned because they did not pray, and this is their greatest torment
to see how easily they could have been saved, had they prayed, and that now the
time for prayer is over." Elsewhere Saint Alphonsus tells us the reason for
this: without prayer all our good resolutions will vanish into smoke, because
we won't receive the grace we need to keep them. We know well enough what we should
do; we even want to do it; but unless God helps us, when the occasion arises,
we don't do it. Saint Paul himself was conscious of this contradiction: "The
good that I would I do not; but the evil which I would not, that I do." (Rom.
7,19). Only through God's grace are we enabled to overcome the power of sin, and
grace is given to prayer. Prayer can rightly be compared to breathing. Breathing
is made up of a twofold movement: expiration and inspiration, breathing out and
drawing in. The same with prayer: from the heart goes out praise and thanksgiving
to God, and in return man draws in forgiveness and grace. Breathing is the
condition of life; as long as there is a breath, there is life, but the moment
breathing stops, death is certain, unless somebody is able to restore respiration.
It is the same with prayer: as long as one prays, even if he is the greatest sinner,
there is still some life in his soul and there is hope that he may recover. But
when one has given up prayer, the only hope left for him is that through the prayers
of others he may be brought back to prayer. And as risky as it is to count on
artificial respiration to bring somebody back to life, it is equally risky to
count on the prayers of others to be saved. From this we understand why Jesus
insisted "about the need to pray continually and never lose heart" (Lk. 18, 1);
why he warned the Apostles in the garden to stay awake and to pray so as not to
give in to temptation, because "the spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak"
(Mk. 14,38). The Apostles did not forget the lesson. The first thing they did
after the Ascension was to gather in the upper room, where they were staying,
and all together they "joined in continuous prayer" (Acts 1, 14). We see in the
Acts how they remained faithful to prayer either in common or as individuals,
before an election or an ordination, in time of persecution, before working a
miracle, in prison, etc. In their writings they exhort their disciples to do the
same. Saint Paul, who so often assures his correspondents of his prayers for them
and asks for theirs, reminds them also that they must be persevering in prayer
(Col. 4,2), pray for all they need (Phil. 4,6), and "pray all the time" (Eph.
6,18). Peter (I Pet. 4,7) and John (I Jo. 5,14-16), James (1, 5-6; 5,13; 16-18),
Jude (20), and the author of the letter to the Hebrews (Heb. 13,18) do the same.
Yet, great as :may be our need to pray, it is not the first reason why we must
pray. The fundamental reason is that we owe it to God a duty to thank and
to praise him. This is why Jesus taught us to ask for God's glory before asking
ourselves, and even then to ask what we need to fulfill this duty. Ours is a passing
need and therefore we ask only for "this day" the present life while
praising and thanking God remain our duty forever and will be our eternal occupation
in heaven. Even if prayer is a duty, it does not mean one should pray just
because one has to. To be true, praise and thanksgiving must come from the heart;
on the lips alone they would be lies and it impossible to lie to God. Gratefulness
and admiration spring from love and there is no love unless it is free. Yet we
have a duty to love God; it is the first commandment and that love must be free.
How would it be possible not to be obliged to be grateful to God and at the
same time not to love him for his goodness to us? All that we are, all that we
have, he has given us, and in addition, he wants to give us all that he has. Not
only does he take constant care of us, but he has adopted us for his children
when to be accepted as servants in his heavenly palace would have been undreamed
of honour. How heartless would we be, were we never to thank him. Don't we consider
it a most elementary duty to say "thank you," even for an insignificant gift or
a passing kindness? Is it not a duty to recognize and honour excellence, and do
we not admire it when we meet with it? And when this excellence is an excelling
goodness, how could we not live it? Excelling all excellent goodness is the infinite
goodness of God, who gives to all most abundantly, not because he must or for
the sake of gain, but out of pure generosity, because he is good so infinitely
good that he gives even to those who offend him. Even when he asks us to love
him in return, it is for our own good, so that loving as he loves, we may be happy
as he is, since he is infinite happiness because he is infinite love. Moreover,
he rewards us when we give him the love we owe him. Did ever a man reward anybody
for paying his debts? He might perhaps grant a discount, but surely not repay
a thousandfold over what he received. If prayer is a duty as loving God is
a duty, then how foolish it is to say, "I pray or I go to Mass when I feel like
it." Would you dare say: "I'll love God, when I feel like it?" Would you dare
tell your boss: "I'll work when I feel like it?" Better not try it, not even once!
A duty binds, whether we like it or not. But if such were your disposition then
all the greater would be the need for you to pray and to ask God to open your
eyes on your spiritual misery. Because we all fall so short in giving God the
praise and thanksgiving he deserves, and because we cannot even hope ever to praise
and thank him enough, we all need to ask with the Apostles: Lord, teach us how
to pray. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT Fr. Leonard M.
Puech, O.F.M. "What it means to be saved." In Spiritual Guidance (Vancouver,
B.C.: Vancouver Foundation of Art, Justice and Liberty, 1983), 22-27. Republished
with permission of the Vancouver Foundation of Art, Justice and Liberty. THE
AUTHOR The late Fr. Leonard M. Puech wrote a popular column for
the B.C. Catholic from 1976 to 1982. Those columns were compiled and
published by the Vancouver Foundation of Art, Justice, and Liberty as the book
Spiritual Guidance in 1983. The Vancouver Foundation of Art, Justice
and Liberty is interested in reprinting Spiritual Guidance. Anyone interested
in donating to this worthy cause please write: Dr. Margherita Oberti, 1170 Eyremount
Drive, West Vancouver, B.C. V7S 2C5. Copyright © 1983 Vancouver Foundation
of Art, Justice, & Liberty
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