One of the spiritually significant changes in my inner life since our daughter Aileen died, is the effect of grief on my capacity and desire to pray. At first I had neither the ability nor the motivation to pray, or even want to. The reverberations of grief, shock, and sadness so far beyond consolation, drain away so much of what is normal emotional engagement with life and its routines. That's because the routines are disrupted beyond repair; nothing will be the same in the aftermath of the greatest loss of our lives so far.
It takes time to take it in. It takes time to want to even think too much about it. And whatever else prayer is, it makes you think as you search for words. In a time of intense sorrow prayer is a process of taking in, of internalising a reality that cries out for denial and contradiction. Prayer requires engagement at the depths of our being with the God whose personal and interpersonal depths are replete with eternal love, infinite wisdom and redemptive creative purpose. That makes each attempt at prayer an exercise in vulnerability, trust and self-giving. And for the grieving heart, that's sometimes too much to ask. Grief renders us all but defenceless in the face of death, and to survive, much that is inside us shuts down to conserve resources already running out and nearing exhaustion.
It is at such times that the communion of saints stops being a theological idea and becomes a reality to which we are glad to belong. "You are in our prayers" then becomes much more vital and vitalising than the safe cliche of those unsure what else to say. To be conscious that our own silence and felt distance from God is a weight willingly carried by others is part of the comfort that sustains faith in such times. It isn't only that we are prayed for, as objects of prayer. It is also that people pray for us, that is, their faithful prayers are said on our behalf, their words give voice to what has rendered us silent, and their intercession draws us into the circle of a conversation which at the moment is beyond us.
When those who love and care for us say, "You are in our prayers" or make similar promises to mention our names in the presence of God, they are being companions, intentionally taking into themselves the pain and the plight of the prayed for. That's an interesting, syntactically awkward phrase "the prayed for". These past months I have learned at a level more profound than I could have imagined, the meaning of Gethsemane, and how hard it is to be shattered by the brute fact of death and loss. Jesus' grief was exacerbated because no one said, or showed, "You are in our prayers." Quite the opposite; instead of praying with or for him, they were asleep. Jesus' sorrow at the soporific disciples isn't peeved self-concern, it is the cry of a heart needing support, the reflex of a mind tortured by doubt and inner agony.
So there are times when prayer is beyond us, at least for a time. The prayers of others, and the written and stated promises that they will pray for us, are gifts of love that hold us, indeed entangle us, within the communion of saints. The experience of grief, and the inner adjustments it has imposed, has meant a new understanding of what prayer is, and what it is not. In our sorrow, bewilderment and inner derailment, there have been times when prayer felt impossible; other times when prayer didn't even enter a mind too busy processing a new life-changing reality.
Oh I know. Prayer is supposed to be natural for a Christian; an obvious first resort; an open invitation from God; a habit learned over years of practice. That's just the point. The disorientation of mind and heart, of reason and emotion, have made prayer more difficult, not less. I know that isn't everyone's experience, but it has been mine. And the communion of saints, the struggling for words friends who said, "You are in our prayers" and "We are praying for you" have rewritten the Gethsemane experience. They have watched with us, and they have watched over us.
Praying is different for now. Tempered by a continuing sorrow it is often "the burden of a sigh"; arising out of loss and the need to reconfigure our world, the mood of every prayer is interrogative; as someone most at home with words, silent longing may become the new eloquence. And in the grasp of a loss that will be for life, somehow the love and hope and memories of Aileen will be a constant longing which may occasionally find words, but that longing will always be there as love sensing the incompleteness her absence creates.
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