Thursday, October 09, 2008

Prayer: St. Paul and the Lord's Prayer

"How St. Paul prayed the Our Father", presentation by Fr. Peter Cameron, O.P.
  • The Our Father configures us to the image of Christ
    • Reveals us to ourselves, as Christ reveals humanity to itself (cf. Acts 9)
    • Conversion of Saul (Paul)
      • Struck blind
      • Goes to Straight Street
      • Has a mini-retreat
    • Ananias
      • Jesus tells him he'll know which one Saul is
        • He's the one praying
  • Paul's journey was radically different from everyone else's
    • Paul's response must have been free
    • Paul was unequipped to be a Christian
    • Paul is like the infant of the family: he has no past knowledge (of the Christian family)
    • Some one taught him, shared with him, handed over the faith
      • A companion (com- = with, panis = bread; "with bread", Eucharistic life)
    • The basis of the Christian faith is an encounter with an event and a Person, Jesus Christ (cf. Deus Caritas Est, n. 1)
  • "Our Father, Who art in heaven..."
    • God's name (YHWH) was not uttered by a faithful Jew
    • Calling God "Father" was also exceptionally rare
      • Christ opened that door for us, telling us to call God Abba
      • It is inconceivable that a Jew would call God Abba
      • Cf. "The Prayers of Jesus" by Lutheran theologian Joachim Jeremias
  • Working backwards through the prayer
  • "Deliver us from evil"
    • That is what happened to Paul: he was saved from his heinous evil
      • He was attacking the Church with murderous rage, way beyond zeal
        • "I persecuted the Church of God beyond measure" (Gal 1:13)
        • "Of [sinners] I am the foremost" (1 Tim 1:15)
      • Jesus called Saul by name (twice!) and told Saul he was persecuting him
        • Saul responds, asking who he is
        • Jesus identifies himself as Jesus whom Saul is persecuting
      • God rescued us from the power of darkness (cf. Col 1:13f)
        • The evil we are delivered from is not just any evil
        • It is The Evil One, the diabolos
        • This darkness is just as personal as the light (Christ) is
    • Paul was a Pharisee
      • He prayed the Psalms and probably had them memorized
      • Perhaps he was so violent against the Church because he wanted something in his heart that he had never yet encountered
        • A mélange of Psalms comes together to describe Saul's longing and his situation
          • "For you I thirst" ... "flash forth lightning"
        • Violent... yet honest
      • Jesus was the answer to Saul's prayer
      • We are blackmailed by evil; when we sin, we look for a way out of blame
      • Why did Jesus wait so long to answer Saul's prayer (and interfere with his attack on the Church)?
        • Paul was intent on exterminating all Christians
        • There was a plan for the evil Paul was committing
          • That evil had a role to play in his conversion
          • It created an awareness of the void in his life
  • "Lead us not into temptation"
    • Example of a looking for happiness in a cheesecake
      • You eat a slice of cheesecake and feel happy
      • Then you want more cheesecake
      • That is disordered: it is not the cheesecake you want, but the happiness you derive from the cheesecake
    • Concupiscence - the tendency to sin - wanting things in a disordered way
      • Three types: lust, concupiscence for things, and concupiscence for power
    • Aquinas said that Christ did away with the power of the grave and death, but not so for concupiscence
    • Without concupiscence, we would be proud; the state of concupiscence demands dependence on God rather than ourselves
    • We need things that show us our limits and lead us to God
    • Satan shows us our weaknesses and how much we depend on God
      • Say to the Devil "thank you" for that, and then tell him "go to Hell"
    • God saves us from that final temptation that turns our "yes" to God into an eternal "no"
    • Paul said the Lord gave him "a thorn in his side" (cf. 2 Cor 12:7)
      • Better to have the thorn in his side if it leads him to appreciate God in his life
    • 1 Cor 10:13 - God will not test us beyond our strength
  • "Forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us"
    • Not the Jewish conception of justice - "eye for eye, tooth for tooth"
    • Humility was seen as a mark of cowardice until Jesus Christ showed it to us
    • Paul did not encounter retribution from the people he had once persecuted; rather, he met with mercy and forgiveness
      • This confirms that what happened on the road to Damascus was true
    • Paul could forgive his former cohorts
      • During the storm at sea in Acts, Paul calmed his captors and treated them with love
      • Something was changed in Paul by his encounter with Christ
    • Forgiveness is a type of judgment
      • Either you harbor ill will against a person (and things get worse)...
      • Or use your freedom to forgive them
        • Inject mercy where it doesn't belong
        • Forgiveness is "bringing being to where there was non-being" (Aquinas)
    • Paul describes "heartfelt compassion" as something to "put on", forgiveness is like a garment (cf. Col 3:12-14)
  • "Give us this day our daily bread"
    • This was the hinge of the whole prayer for Paul
    • At this point, he would have said: "Jesus is everything I could ever want and will ever need, he is my sustinence. I fasted for three days before I was baptized. I would fast every day of my life if after that fast I could receive Jesus. Any bread that isn't Jesus isn't bread enough."
    • And that is the Eucharist: Jesus under the appearance of bread
      • He took bread, blessed it, broke it, and gave it to them, saying "this is my body"
    • We should beg to receive that which we truly hunger for
    • Prayer for daily bread which has become Jesus Christ
  • "Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done"
    • Easy for Paul from here on
    • The Kingdom is Christ, and in him we shall reign
      • Jesus is the Kingdom of God in Person; where Jesus is, there is the kingdom
    • Doing God's will is not about being a robot, it is the expression of joy from one friend to another
      • Hearing a voice in danger and paying attention to it
        • Let us follow that voice forever!
    • Asking for obedience isn't about being robotic or brainwashed
      • It is to do the bidding of my friend who knows my needs better than I do!
      • It is about following the signs God gives us to bring us to happiness
        • Immorality is like being given signs to our destiny and then saying NO to them
    • Christ reveals himself to be Paul's shepherd
      • Paul could not disobey the vision (cf. Acts 26:19)
  • At this point, Paul says "teach me to pray what Jesus prayed!"
    • In Gethsemane, Jesus prayed to his Father, and called him Abba
    • What Paul had feared the most is what Paul needed the most
    • He writes in Romans and Galatians about calling God Abba

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