Beginner's Grace: Bringing Prayer into Your Life
Kate
Braestrup (Free Press, 2010)
There's something scandalous about prayer. Even for people who go to church,
the thought of having a personal prayer life is challenging. We build
our own stumbling blocks: imagining that our prayers have to be fresh, original and perfect; or knowing them
so well we can't hear their inner life any more. Most seriously, I
think, trying to pray means sitting face to face with the fact that
we aren't as self-sufficient as we like to imagine. We brought nothing into this world, and it is certain we can take nothing from it, but in between, we are going to pretend to have this thing covered.
In her capacity as a chaplain to the Maine Warden Service, Kate Braestrup meets people in need of prayer, even if they have gone years without thinking about it. Or, if they have thought of it, it's been with reluctance, or indeed resistance. "I'm too busy. I'm uncomfortable. All the people I know who pray are real jerks, and I don't want to be one of them. I have bad memories of abusive religious figures. I wouldn't know who I was praying to. I don't know what to say."
In her capacity as a chaplain to the Maine Warden Service, Kate Braestrup meets people in need of prayer, even if they have gone years without thinking about it. Or, if they have thought of it, it's been with reluctance, or indeed resistance. "I'm too busy. I'm uncomfortable. All the people I know who pray are real jerks, and I don't want to be one of them. I have bad memories of abusive religious figures. I wouldn't know who I was praying to. I don't know what to say."
So,
if we imagine prayer in our own lives, we may not feel that we know
when or how to pray, to whom, or to what end. Braestrup's
Beginner's Grace proposes answers to these questions. She
gives examples from assorted traditions, along with some simple,
direct prayers of her own devising. Like Anne Lamott's Help,
Thanks, Wow, which came out two years later, it also points out
the places where our hearts lead the way, and we're praying without
quite knowing it.
Some
of the 'whens' and 'hows' present themselves in the most ordinary
ways. "Offering thanks for a meal is familiar, mannerly, and
sensible, so much so that you might overlook the other helpful
attribute of mealtime. It occurs with considerable regularity, once,
twice, or three times a day, and because even forgetful and
preoccupied people generally remember to eat, saying grace before
supper doesn't require nearly as much self-discipline as carving out
a distinct time for spiritual activity from days that are already
overbooked."
We
part from our loved ones on a regular basis, and we could probably
remember to say, or think, "God go with you till we meet again,"
or words to that effect. Like the physical threshold of our
household, the passing into the night's sleep represents a change of
state worthy to be noticed: "Because we don't know what the
night will bring, because we will not necessarily remember what the
night has held, bedtime is, as it has always been, a time that lends
itself to prayer."
How
to pray? Braestrup has good words, but she sees beyond them. On a
night when you can see a thousand stars, words may be superfluous. If
the officers of the Warden Service are searching for your child in the woods, "Oh God, Oh
God, Oh God" may be all you have, but you'll have it deeply. The
God who 'makes me lie down in green pastures' may bring me to my
knees, or, like a novice nun, to complete prostration; or he may
permit me to hold the hand of a friend in a hospital bed.
To
whom? Braestrup is a Unitarian Universalist, so she is
philosophically as well as temperamentally unlikely to try to
persuade people of The One Right Way. But she'll take her stand here:
"I believe all human souls are called to become as loving as
they possibly can be, given the limitations that time and luck will
inevitably impose. Love is the point, the purpose, and the ultimate
value; it is consciousness and empathy, alpha and omega, beginning
and end. God is love."
And
what's it all for? My favorite part of this book may be Braestrup's
fitness instructor informing her cheerfully "that the logic of
physical fitness is not teleological but tautological. This means
that the goal of exercise is to enable you to exercise more."
While we live, there is no 'last' workout, no final state of fitness.
That's true of prayer, too. "There will be no moment–in this
life, anyway–when I will be able to say, 'That's it! I've prayed,
and the prayers have paid off: I'm a fully conscious, totally
grateful, and unstintingly generous person. I can just start stuffing
myself as soon as the plate hits the table.'" That's such a
gloriously silly way of reminding us that life is made up of habits
and practices, and we are always works in progress.
That being the case, we always have an option for courage. Prayer feels risky,
vulnerable - that's because it is. To pray is to stand, for that
moment, in need: grateful for riches you didn't make, incomplete,
imperfect, mortal. Like all those squats and crunches, we can expect it to feel like work, at least sometimes. "Doubt, frustration, and plain hard work are inevitable and more or less permanent features of a spiritual life. How could it be otherwise? No word, book, story, scent, or pretty statue can mask for long the essential pathos of the human being struggling to extract transcendent meaning from her merely human life."
Nonetheless, we persist. Alleluia! Amen.
Nonetheless, we persist. Alleluia! Amen.
Any
Good Books
April 1,
2018