Finding comfort in our unanswered prayers

July 29, 2009 at 9:06 pm | In art, community, conversation, creation, culture, emergent spirituality, imagination, painting, spirituality | 2 Comments
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Finding_comfort_in_unanswered_prayer2

I volunteered to facilitate a session with our little emerging community this weekend, exploring further, our journey of prayer.

In my own personal journey, I’m learning a new response: to be comfortable in the discomfort of unanswered prayer and difficult spaces. So in keeping with our personal journeys being exposed and displayed in our community journeys, I wanted to follow this theme.

I had an ‘end in mind’, in the words of the famous Steven Covey, I wanted the group to paint or draw an image that gave them comfort in their space of unanswered prayer, but we never quite got there. We painted, but not from the space I had intended.

So I had to make a new response in this space of leadership and facilitation, be comfortable in the discomfort of the process not being what I had planned and expected!

W Tozer threw the first spanner. In his book, Man: the dwelling place of God, he says that if our prayers aren’t being answered, we have to check whether:

1. They are in the will of God – that our prayers fall within the broad will of God for all people

2. We are living lives pleasing to God – he hears and only answers the prayers of those who walk in his ways

This set the cat among the proverbial pigeons – we all thought He heard all our prayers, those that were and weren’t within His will and irrespective of our lives and purity before Him.

I was trying to nudge the group past this, I didn’t want to get stuck in the theology, debate and discussion around this. I wanted to move us on to the euphoria of being okay and at peace with our unanswered prayers, it’s much more comfortable!

I asked everyone to think of an area of unanswered prayer: – what is God inviting you to in this space? What is He asking you to consider? What is He exposing in you?

Phillip Yancey’s book on Prayer quoted John Baillie’s thoughts on prayer:

- Let me use disappointment as material for patience

- Let me use trouble as material for perseverance

- Let me use trouble as material for courage

- Let me use reproach as material for long suffering

- Let me use praise as material for humility

- Let me use pleasures as material for temperance

- Let me use pain as material for endurance

This resonnated with our group, and I guess as facilitator, was glad to get to this point as I had wanted us to journey to the place of being comfortable in discomfort. We live in a world where are our slogans are ‘fast’, ‘produce’, ‘destination’, ‘results’ and any hint at contemplation, journey, being is possibly our, or should I say my greatest challenges.

John Baillie’s suggestion of us using success and failure as material for growth are in keeping with Ecl- a time to live and a time to die etc.

I think it’s a journey we’ve just begun – none of us wanted to be comfortable in our discomfort, and I think it takes time, nurturing and discomfort to realise that we can consider just being. So I hope our little community will pursue this ‘discomfort’ further.

A 2nd shot at Malton Place

January 30, 2008 at 10:15 am | In community, conversation, emergent spirituality, emerging church, movement | 9 Comments
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Spontaneous prayer installation, 20081027, Cape TownThis week (27th Jan) brings a new odyssey of spiritual adventure for our little group of crusaders. We tested some ancient paths with our liturgical Taize singing and then we founded some new ones using a piece of material and stones to represent our prayers rather than verbalising them. The experience was at times sacred, at times inspiring and at times also quite challenging and difficult. It’s a strange realisation how the experience of what is  spiritually meaningful is unique for each individual. 

Here is a summay of the mornings journeyings:

Taize singing. We divided into our various voice groups and learnt two songs that are sung at the ecumenical community of Taize in France. Each song has four parts – so the melodies take a while to learn but the words are very easy. The song is repeated over and over. We found that once we had learnt our parts, it was easy to get lost in the beauty of the sounds and nuances of the meaning of the words as we repeated them. It was our first time so we decided that this kind of singing was something we needed to carry through in order to fully enter into it.

“Jesus remember me when you come into your kingdom” was the one song. Continue reading A 2nd shot at Malton Place…

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