CHRIST IN WINTER:
Reflections on Faith and Life for the Years of Winter…
Holy Spirit, if this is right for me, let if become
more firmly rooted and established in my life. If this is wrong for me, let it
become less important to me, and let it become increasingly removed from my
life.
Flora Slosson Wuellner
calls this “the radical prayer.” [1]
When I first read it, I
thought, “Well, that’s not radical.” In fact, it’s rather prosaic. It certainly
does not have the beauty of Reinhold Niebuhr’s “Serenity Prayer” or St. Francis
of Assisi’s “Instrument of Peace” prayer.
Wuellner means it mostly
for addicts, and it seems incredibly insipid for an addict. I mean, if you are
praying about an addiction, to say “If this is right for me…” Well, you already
know it’s not right for you. Why give God the option of getting it more firmly
rooted in your life when it is already too firmly rooted?
Because the first and last
job of life—the same job for the first and last stages of human development--is
trust. If we don’t learn to trust at first, in the womb and in infancy, we’ll
have a hard problem trusting all the way through life. But then at the end,
whether because we have “aged out” or been given a terminal diagnosis, trust
becomes a factor again. Can we trust God for what will come?
That doesn’t mean
“believing” certain things, like what “heaven” is like, or who we’ll see there,
etc. Trust and belief are very different.
Wuellner’s “radical”
prayer really is, because trust is the most radical thing we can ever do.
“Radical” comes from the Latin word for “root.” Trust is the root; it goes all
the way down into the soul. Wuellner’s prayer is saying to God: I trust in You.
So…
Holy Spirit, if this is right for me, let if become
more firmly rooted and established in my life. If this is wrong for me, let it
become less important to me, and let it become increasingly removed from my
life.
JRMcF
1] P. 78, PRAYER,
STRESS, AND OUR INNER WOUNDS [1985, The Upper Room]
“All we ask [in old age]
is to be allowed to remain the authors of our own story.” Atul Gawande, Being Mortal, p. 140.
“Evil is a soul hiding
from itself.” Wm. Sloane Coffin
Katie Kennedy is the
rising star in YA lit. [She is also our daughter.] She is published by
Bloomsbury, which also publishes lesser authors, like JK Rowling. Her latest
book is, What Goes Up. It’s published
in hardback, paperback, audio, and electronic, from B&N, Amazon, etc.
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