With and To Whom Do We Pray in Times of Crisis?
When we experience times of crisis, we usually
turn to and receive support from family closest friends, and confidants. We
also, if needed, seek appropriate professional care and help. But to whom do we
go in prayer?
Timothy Gallagher OMV at the beginning of his
book on Ignatian meditation and contemplation reports the following prayer
experience:
A woman was ready to pray. These were days of
retreat dedicated to prayer with Scripture. This day she felt drawn to pray
with the trial of Jesus. She writes:
The scene came alive in my imagination and my
heart. I saw Jesus standing before Pontius Pilate and his accusers. How could
Jesus stand there while everyone called for his death, I wondered. How could he
be so calm? As I placed myself completely into that scene, feeling Jesus'
calmness, I began to hear Jesus saying quietly to the crowd, "Yes. Take
me. Do what you want with me, for my death will be your salvation." I
could see the Father hugging him tightly. "Give yourself over to
them," God told his Son. "I can never let you go, no matter what
happens. I am with you. You are safe in my arms." After a long period of
prayer, I realized that the Father was within me as he was within Jesus. He was
also holding me: "Do not be afraid. You are safe in my
arms."
Seventeen years earlier, this woman, Kathryn, had
been admitted to a hospital for a simple outpatient surgery. She was young,
healthy, strong, and capable. Soon after the surgery, however, something went
terribly wrong. Four days later, she learned that she had suffered a stroke.
Years of struggle with severe physical and emotional disabilities followed.
Kathryn strove to cope with these disabilities and her efforts were, in some
measure, successful. Yet deeper struggles remained. Now grace was about to
touch that deeper level.
Kathryn continued her prayer:
On another day, I contemplated Jesus right after
Pilate had condemned him to death and washed his hands of the whole affair. I
saw Jesus dragged off by those who wanted him dead. The moment of terror I
felt, as his final walk through Jerusalem began, was excruciating. I prayed
many hours, holding that terror in my heart, desiring to comfort Jesus, to tell
him I was there for him and that I would not leave him alone.
Kathryn shares Jesus' final walk through Jerusalem
in deep communion with him. She desires "to comfort Jesus, to tell him I
was there for him and that I would not leave him alone." Kathryn draws
close to Jesus as she prays.
Her prayer deepens further:
One day in prayer, I stood beneath the cross and sank
to the ground at its foot after he had died. I had told Jesus I would not leave
him alone, and so I stayed there keeping watch. I kept the cross before my eyes
for hours, feeling the sorrow Mary must have felt, as I asked for the courage
to stay near the cross. It was at this point that my retreat director pointed
out to me that perhaps God was bringing together Jesus’ experience and my own.
I began to cry when I returned to prayer. For several hours, in
prayer ... scenes of my hospital stay after my stroke so many years before
alternated with scenes of Jesus' passion and death. It was like watching a
movie. My moments of loneliness and fear alternated with Jesus' loneliness and
fear. I cried inconsolably for hours - seventeen years worth of tears. God was
truly embracing me tightly and saying, "Do not be afraid even of this. I
am holding you tightly and nothing can hurt you."
Kathryn describes the fruit of those blessed
hours:
These cleansing tears began a process of healing, a
miracle of God's love for me as I began to pray over my "passion."
Just as I, in that prayer, had remained beneath the cross after Jesus had died,
I now saw Jesus sitting on the floor at the foot of my hospital bed keeping me company.
As I had stayed with Jesus, he now kept watch with me. The many lonely years of
struggling with the consequences of my stroke ... were "healed" in
this prayer. ... I began to see that though I had kept myself at a sufficient
distance from God to protect myself from anything else God could "do"
to me, God nevertheless had waited until the right moment to "seize me by
the arms" and turn me toward him.
The eye of faith clearly perceives the
authenticity and richness of this prayer. Before it, we simply stand in wonder
and praise. These "cleansing tears" begin
a process of healing that Kathryn, after years of helpless struggle, knows to
be a miracle of God's love. Her prayer with Jesus' passion leads, by God’s
loving gift, to a healing in her own “passion.”
Kathryn tells us that, as she prayed with Jesus'
passion, "the scene came alive in my imagination and my heart." She
hears Jesus speak. She experiences the Father's loving presence to Jesus and
his loving presence to her. She shares with Jesus his final walk through
Jerusalem. She stands beneath the cross and accompanies Jesus in his final
hours. Her own passion alternates with Jesus' passion, is enlightened by Jesus'
passion, and is healed by Jesus' passion. She sees Jesus keeping watch with her
in her hospital room ... and cleansing tears begin to fall.
- from Timothy Gallagher OMV, Meditation and Contemplation: An
Ignatian Guide to Praying with Scripture, pp. 19-22.
When I was a small boy, one of the crises in my
life, I recall, was when I fell sick with a severe case of tonsillitis.
Whenever any of the children fell sick in our family, we were given our own
bedroom. I remember in this room there was a picture of Our Lady, and when we
were sick Mum would place a holy card, from her prayer book, of St Thérèse of Lisieux
on the mantle-piece, underneath the picture of Our Lady. No words were spoken.
They were simply there.
On this particular occasion, I thought I was
going to die! I remember turning to the picture of Our Lady and promising her
that if I recovered I would be more mindful of her in the future and endeavour
to be good. Well, I recovered, but the jury is still out on fulfilling my side
of the bargain! One thing, however, has remained constant. Whenever, I have
found myself to be in crisis of a more serious kind, it has been Mary to whom I
have returned in prayer; and then, since my 30 day retreat on tertianship in
1990, with Mary before Jesus at the foot of the Cross.
Who do we turn to mostly, who is at the centre or
recipient of our prayer in times of crisis?
By ‘crisis’ I mean the times when we are unhinged
by something, when our world is shattered in a bewildering, confusing way, and
when we find ourselves lost. It may be the experience of sickness, as with
Kathyrn above, or the death or protracted illness of a dear friend or loved
one. It may be when all that we hoped in, and for, is decimated, when faith is
shrouded by fear, or cynicism, bitterness, resentment and even despair, when
love is cold comfort and indeed no comfort at all.
Sometimes the crisis is so overwhelming that we
are left numb and in shock, and during this time, good friends and loved ones -
including God - seem distant, their well-meaning words and actions finding no
resonance or only serving to jar and jangle the senses – something like the
experience of Job, when his friends try to advise and console him in his crisis
with God. Sometimes defensively [or is it healthy self-preservation?], we can
cocoon ourselves through withdrawal – perhaps like Thomas, who was not with the
other disciples when Jesus first appeared to them. Sometimes, like Eve, we can
look for a scapegoat to apportion blame to rationalize, deflect and so
alleviate somewhat our insecurities around our crisis. And sometimes, like
Jonah, or the disciples on the road to Emmaus, we can take to flight.
If we look at Jesus, when he was in crisis, it
was to his Father that he always turned. Unable to rely on human companionship
in Gethsemane, during his most serious crisis, he is only able to move beyond
the fear and terror he experiences there through a profound trust in his
Father’s love. At Calvary, again, his abandonment prayer is directed to his
Father.
The question, then, is pertinent: To whom do we
turn mostly, who is at the centre or recipient of our prayer in times of crisis?
Is it our Father, Jesus, the Holy Spirit, all Three, Mary, our favourite saint,
... ? Whoever it is, one thing is certain – eventually, it needs be to someone,
if we are to move, or be moved, beyond our crisis.
Crisis can bring a sense of breakdown and
failure, but it can be a moment too of breakthrough - the moment when God’s
mysterious and compassionate presence in our lives touches our vulnerability as
all our securities and defenses are stripped. And then, to our astonishment,
out of the depths of our brokenness, out of the shards of false hopes, dreams
and ideals, and even out of the grip of a living hell, we can begin to
experience recovery, a new dawning.
The key to living through crisis, then, lies in
to whom we ultimately turn. Time and patience, meanwhile, can be helpful
allies.
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