Friday, December 03, 2004

A critique on my own teaching on prayer

A couple weeks ago instead of a centralized "sermon" at New Life we separated into a couple different "breakout" sessions. I taught on the subject of prayer.

This is a topic I have hit before within the context of my community. I certainly did not say anything new. But in the few days since my words have echoed in my head and I am already rethinking some of my statements.

(This is a curse of my own personality. I am an over-analytical perfectionist. This leads me to a deep pursuit of accuracy and completeness--and that manifests itself in me being easily distracted by a myriad of disclaimers--like this one.)

Anyway, I was describing how prayer and the inner spiritual life were fundamentally solitary pursuits--a frontier shared by each individual soul and the guidance and presence of the Holy Spirit. I cannot step into someone else's heart, mind, or soul and "hold his or her hand" along the path of quieting one's self in prayer. I can teach, encourage and share my own (and others') experiences. But in those quiet moments it is you and God--no more, no less.

However upon reflection I am not so sure. I think my statements are true in the limited sense of prayer that is individual in nature. But prayer is also communal. Jesus himself taught us to pray "Our Father..." Perhaps I am off base from the outset by defining prayer as a solitary pursuit. Clearly those "prayer closet" moments are a component of prayer, but there is an equally important communal aspect. So first my definitions of prayer must include this corporate perspective.

Once I acknowledge that I wonder if we allow space within our community, within the time and identity of New Life, to foster this communal notion of prayer? Sure, when Tom or I or anyone else pray during a service we are leading others in prayer and hopefully, in essence, praying for those who simply do not know how to pray in that moment. There must be value and merit to people simply "agreeing" with us in prayer.

(The debater in me says "yes, but that very concession of heart, soul and mind is a solitary pursuit and I cannot join the individual there either." See, we cannot escape that solitary component.)

However, I am not sure that it is fair to judge the "success" or development of our prayer life simply by the efficacy of our "prayer closet" moments. Couldn't we equally see development during a gathering of "Our Father..." type of prayers?

And so I wonder if simply "leading" prayer (prayers of invocation, benediction, etc) is sufficient. Is there merit in communally reciting the Lord's Prayer? Is there a need for responsive reading structures? While my non-creedal background recoils at it, could we be formed by praying through some of our legacy Creeds ("I Believe in God the Father." I believe Lord, help my unbelief)? And now I am at the heart of evangelical worship structure and how it is lived out in our own little community. Does our structure and heritage limit us?

I do not know.

But me simply saying "I cannot hold your hand in prayer" seems like a copout. In many ways perhaps I can. Perhaps that is the very nature of spiritual leadership and discipleship.

Thoughts? Anyone?

3 Comments:

At 6:00 PM , Blogger bloggirl said...

You know, I have had extremely powerful experiences praying in my prayer closet, no one around but me and God. I have to say though that I have had equally powerful experiences when praying communally. And it's more than an emotional connection, it's the feeling of the Holy Spirit being present. I just can't help but think of the scripture, 'where two or more are gathered in my name, there I am also,' (my paraphrase). I think there is a real value in communal prayer, in coming together with the same purpose before God. Look at Acts 2. The believers were gathered together, and the Holy Spirit ascended in a very powerful way. It doesn't say what they were doing, but I'm doubting it was conducting a Scrabble tournament.

Pray communally. It rocks.

 
At 11:57 AM , Blogger Brian said...

Sure. Pray communally.

But the crux of my dilemma is: "how does one teach others to pray communally?"

When we circle up and "pray together" is there more going on that a bunch of people praying individually in close proximity to one another? If that's what it is, then when we discuss teaching about prayer then I'm right back where I start--this is how you pray in your own little prayer closet of your soul.

But if there is something else, some "corporate prayer dynamic" that can be taught, experienced, fostered, engendered, cultivated or otherwise encouraged....well, what does that look like? How do we "teach" (encourage, etc) that?

I do not yet know.

Which is OK. I don't have to know everything :-)

When I'm asked at church "hey, brian, why don't you teach a group of fellow believers about prayer", the outline is pretty basic. We can talk about attitudes of prayer, types of prayer (thanksgiving, confession, supplication, etc), history of prayer in scripture, forms of prayer (structured formula versus the outpouring of the psalms).

But when the early church gathered together in prayer...what does that mean? How do we beome a church that prays well collectively, instead of a group of people that pray in one anothers presence?

Is there a difference? Perhaps I'm going in circles.

Wouldn't be the first time. Won't be the last.

 
At 12:16 PM , Blogger bloggirl said...

While I'm not dissing guiding or teaching others about prayer, I think it's one of those things you can't fully understand intellectually. I think experiential learning is a must. How can you fully understand anything like - what college is like, marriage, having a career, being a responsible adult - until you've experienced it?

Maybe you can teach effectively about prayer by sharing personal stories about what you've experienced?? I think it's valuable to learn about others' experiences with prayer, because it can challenge you to take your own prayer life a step further, or to better understand the power that can be involved.

But I guess I'm talking more about guiding people to pray on their own. Hmm. I didn't help solve anything.

 

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