Dallas Willard
once said that “prayer is both the enjoying and in-joining
of what God is doing in the world right now.”
Notice the two words: enjoying and in-joining, which means that prayer
doesn’t need to be serious and somber and stoic; prayer can be playful. Laughter is prayer. Prayer can be quiet. Holding hands with a family member or friend
is a prayer posture. Where you
find joy, you find God. This can be
counterintuitive and even counter-cultural.
Prayer has more shapes, sizes, and shades than our human imaginations
can dream.
Wait, you may
think, God wants me to enjoy prayer? At its heart, prayer is an encounter
with the Eternal. It is us awakening and
aligning ourselves with God. One way we
experience God is through goodness. God
isn’t some Grumpy Gus with a permanent scowl.
God delights. God dances. God dreams of new ways to let loose the holy
to hum and hover in your life ~ remember Lazarus on Sunday being unbound? We know people who practice the art of
pessimism ~ wrapped in negativity.
Sometimes this is because life has hurt and harmed the person so much
that the scars are a shield. I have had
a time in my life when I was always worried that the other shoe would drop, and
I was suspicious of joy because I thought it wasn’t dependable. Joy seemed flighty or fragile. So, instead, I committed myself to the fine
art of always looking for the negative as a way to protect myself from being
too vulnerable. Make no mistake about
it, cynicism is easy ~ there is plenty of external evidence for why the world
is crashing and crumbling. And, joy
still insists and inserts herself in our lives.
What would it
look like for you and God to enjoy each other?
The second word,
“in-joining,” is important here too.
Prayer has legs and hands and words.
Prayer has a body, that is yours.
God’s prayer finds expression in you.
Too often, I can rush and run in a direction I am convinced God called
me to go, only to find myself lost. To
join with God means I first listen for/to God.
(Note that the words “listen” and “silent” share the same letters.) God may not show up with a neon sign. In Scripture, God shows up in dreams, a still
small voice, in the wilderness (which can be loneliness), at meals, at prayer
circles, in burning bushes, whales that swallow prophets, and countless other
ways. One question to ask is, where has
God shown up so far this week? Where
have you felt energized and enlivened?
St. Irenaeus said that, “The glory of God is a (being) fully
alive.” Alive as in your spirit leaping,
heart soaring, smile crossing, and body tingling. Alive as in goodness or God-ness that is
woven into this world. Hold those twin
words: enjoy and in-join, as invitations as we approach our holiest
week of the year. Amen.


.jpg)



