The Right Disposition for Prayer
Last Sunday’s readings taught us about the necessity for persistence in prayer. Luke recorded our Lord’s parable of the widow who would not back down in the face of a dishonest judge until she was rendered a just verdict. The first reading from Exodus demonstrated for us the power of persistent prayer; as long as Moses kept his arms raised over the battle between the Israelites and Amalek, Israel has the better of the fight, but when Moses stopped, Israel began to falter in the battle. This Sunday’s Gospel reading continues with the theme of prayer, focusing on the right disposition or attitude for prayer. To demonstrate this, the Lord Jesus gives us the parable of the Pharisee and the tax collector who go to pray in the Temple.
The disposition, or attitude, of the two men in the parable could not be more different. The Pharisee’s “prayer” is really a monologue of why he is so good and why God should be impressed with him. Instead of offering any real praise to God, the Pharisee extols his own virtues and why he is better than those around him, including the tax collector in proximity to him. His prayer is one sided; in making his prayer about himself, there is no real chance for dialogue with God or an openness to receive anything from God.
The tax collector’s disposition is quite different. Our Lord describes him as standing off at a distance without raising his eyes towards heaven. He simply beat his breast while praying for God’s mercy. We don’t know what motivated the tax collector’s contrition: is it a particular sin or a feeling of guilt over his occupation? The motivation is not clear but what is clear is that he has humbled himself before the Lord and it is that humility that renders him justified before the Lord, not the Pharisee, because his humility opens him up to receive God’s grace and mercy.
Let us seek the grace of humility in our prayer. Humility moves us to honesty before God, helping us to own our sinfulness, to admit that we don’t have all the answers, and to acknowledge that we are not our own masters. Humility then opens us up to the good things of God; it quiets our hearts so that we may hear the Lord speaking to us, it allows us to perceive his strengthening of us, and enables us feel his love permeating to the depths of our being.
Blessings to you and yours for the week ahead!
Father Chris House