A Traditional Blend ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Following is a list of practices and their sources in the tradition that have influenced Centering Prayer: 1 -Practice: Choice of a place of outer solitude. Source: Jesus’ exhortation to enter our inner room, close the door, and pray in secret (Matt.6:6). I will quote the commentary on that text by Abba Isaac in Chapter Nine of John Cassian’s Conferences, a Fourth Century treatise about the spiritual practices of the Desert Fathers and Mothers of Egypt. "We need to be especially careful to follow the Gospel precept which instructs us to go into our inner room and shut the door so that we may pray to our Father. And this is how we can do it." "We pray in our room whenever we withdraw our hearts completely from the tumult and noise of our thoughts and our worries and when secretly and intimately, we offer our prayers to the Lord." "We pray with the door shut when, without opening our mouths, and in perfect silence, we offer our petitions to the one who pays not attention to words but looks hard at our hearts." "We pray in secret when in our hearts alone and in our recollected spirits, we address God and reveal our wishes only to him in such a way that the hostile powers themselves have no inkling of their nature. Hence, we must pray in utter silence to insure that the thrust of our pleading be hidden from our enemies who are especially lying in wait to attack us during our prayer. In this way, we shall fulfill the command of the prophet Micah, 'Keep your mouth shut from the one who sleeps on your breast.'" 2 -Practice: Gentleness toward unwanted thoughts, feelings and impressions during prayer. Source: St. Francis DeSales, Introduction to the Devout Life, Part 3, "Act with great patience and gentleness with ourselves." We must not be annoyed by distractions or our failures but start over without any further ado." 3- Practice: Returning to the sacred symbol of our consent to God’s presence and action within. Source: St. John of the Cross, Living Flame, stanza 3:26-56. 4- Practice: Confidence in God’s action both in prayer and daily life. Source: St. Therese of Lisieux, her Autobiography and Letters. 5- Practice: Self-surrender and abandonment to God’s will. Source: DeCaussade, Abandonment to Divine Providence. 6- Practice: Purification of the unconscious. Source: The dark nights of St. John of the Cross, especially his teaching on the secret ladder of contemplation. Centering Prayer owes much to the Living Flame, stanza 1, in which St. John of the Cross writes that as long as we have not reached our inmost center, there is always progress to be made. 7- Practice: Laying aside of thoughts. Source: Evagrius and the Hesychasts of the Eastern Orthodox tradition. 8- Practice: Disregarding thoughts during the Prayer of Quiet as "the ravings of a madman." Source: St. Teresa of Avila, The Way of Perfection where she writes of the Prayer of Quiet. 9- Practice: Accepting the divine action of ascending levels of union with God in prayer. Source: St. Teresa of Avila, The Interior Castle 10- Practice: Humanness and humor. Source: The Desert Tradition and St. Teresa of Avila. 11- Practice: Continuous growth in divine union and unity. Source: St. Gregory of Nyssa, Life of Moses and the Rhineland Mystics, e.g., Ruysbroek and the Beguines. 12- Practice: Faith in the Divine Trinity as the source of Centering Prayer. Source: William of St. Thierry, Matthius Scheeben. 13- Practice: The movement of faith and love toward God as the inmost center of our being. Source: St. John of the Cross, Living Flame, stanza 8-14. 14- Practice: Its Christological focus. Source: St. Bernard of Clairvaux and virtually all the Christian mystics. 15- Practice: The ecclesial dimension, bonding with everyone in the Mystical Body of Christ. Source: St. Augustine and Pauline theology. |
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