Five Pieces of Writing that Inspired Me: #3 Prayer

Ask and it will be given to you; search, and you will find; knock and the door will be opened for you.” – Jesus

Prayer is so personal that I got to the middle of my life either reciting a memorized prayer or confusing it with the jumble of thoughts, aches and needs in my head. But when I read this description from Frederick Buechner about a conference he once went to led by a faith healer, I all at once saw the possibility of miracle and longing in prayer.

I saw Agnes Sandford first in the dingy front hall of the building where the talks were to take place, and after no more than a few minutes’ conversation with her, I felt as sure as you can ever be in such matters that if there was such a thing as the Real Article in her line of work [faith healing], then that was what she was. She was rather short and on the plump side with a breezy matter-of-factness about her which was the last thing I would have expected. She had far more the air of a college dean or a successful businesswoman than of a Mary Baker Eddy or Madame Blavatsky. She seemed completely without pretensions, yet just as completely confident that she knew what she was talking about. She had an earthy sense of humor.

The most vivid image she presented was of Jesus standing in church services all over Christendom with his hands tied behind his back and unable to do any mighty works there because the ministers who led the services either didn’t expect him to do them or didn’t dare ask him to do them for fear that he wouldn’t or couldn’t and that their own faith or the faith of their congregations would be threatened as the result. I recognized immediately my kinship with those ministers. A great deal of public prayer seemed to me a matter of giving God something that he neither needed nor, as far as I could imagine, much wanted. In private I prayed a good deal but for the most part it was a very blurred, haphazard kind of business – much of it blubbering, as Dr. Muilenburg had said his was, but never expecting much back by way of an answer, never believing very strongly that anyone was listening to me or even, at time, that there was anyone to listen at all.

That was the whole point, Agnes Sanford said. You had to expect. You had to believe. As in Jesus’ parables of the Importunate Friend and the Unjust Judge, you had to keep at it. It took work. It took practice, was in that sense not unlike the Buddhist Eightfold Path. More than anything else, it took faith. It was faith that unbound the hands of Jesus so that through your prayers his power could flow and miracles could happen, healing could happen, because where faith was, healing was too, she said, and there was no power on earth that could prevent it. Inside us all, she said, there was a voice of doubt and disbelief which sought to drown out our prayers even as we were praying them, but we were to pray down that voice for all we were worth because it was simply the product in us of old hurts, griefs, failures, of all that the world had done to try to destroy our faith. More even than our bodies, she said, it was these hurtful memories that needed healing. For God, all time is one, and we were to invite Jesus into our past as into a house that has been locked up for years – to open windows and doors for us so that light and life could enter as last, to sweep out the debris of decades and drive back the shadows. The healing of memories was like the forgiveness of sins, she said. Prayer was like a game, a little ridiculous the way she described it, but we were to play it anyway – praying for the healing both of ourselves and others – because Jesus told us to and because most of the other games we played were more ridiculous still and not half so useful.

We were to believe in spite of not believing. That was what faith was all about, she told us. “Lord, I believe; help thou mine unbelief,” said the father of the sick son (Mark 9:24), and though it wasn’t much, Jesus considered it enough. The boy was healed. Fairy-tale prayers, she called them. Why not? Jesus prayers. The language of the prayer didn’t matter, and her own language couldn’t have been plainer or her prayers more unliterary and down-to-earth. Only the faith mattered. All of this she spoke with nothing wild-eyed or dramatic about her, but clearly, wittily, less like a mystic than like the president of a rather impressive club. And you could also get too much praying, too much religion, she said and when that happened, the thing to do was just to put it aside for a while as she did and do something else. She herself read murder mysteries, she said. Or just collapsed.

Listening to Your Life by Frederick Buechner

The Magic of Sleep

We are like someone in a very dark night over whom lightning flashes again and again.” – Maimonides

I overslept! Instead of waking two hours before my kids get up as I do almost every other day of the year, I woke up 30 minutes after. I had been awake in the middle of the night worrying about how to keep my kids entertained and cool in the heat wave that is enveloping the Pacific NW and then I went to back to sleep for hours.

There’s a Buddha quote – “sleep is the best meditation.” In this phase of life with young children, I understand that more than ever. I go to bed feeling all the grime of the day and awaken feeling all the possibility. I go to bed with worries and doubts and awaken with faith that I can tackle them. I go to bed struggling to understand what I’ve learned and awaken with one more page of my story written.

When I finally woke up this morning, no one was crying or upset and instead we were all rested. Maybe the best proof that there is God helping us through this life is experienced when my eyes are closed and my brain is quiet. I lose the certainty of it every day, only to discover it again each night.

The Serenity Prayer for Parents

The other day I was chatting online with a bunch of parents about how to get kids to eat well. One woman said seeing pictures people post of the interesting and nutritious foods they were serving their kids made her feel depressed. Another said she fixes three different dinners every night – one for the grown-ups and a different selection for each of her two kids. I admitted that I get so tired of wasting food that I often forget to try. There were a lot of good suggestions and strategies in our chat but also a lot of frustration and self-flagellation from parents who are trying their best. It reminded me that parents need a serenity prayer to remind us not to beat ourselves up.

God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change. The courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference.

The serenity prayer is of course most known as a cornerstone of Alcoholics Anonymous (AA). I asked a friend who goes to AA, how that meshes with a wide variance of belief systems that go along with such a group. He told me, “when a newby is having a problem with the term higher power, or a ‘God of your understanding’….the old timer would say, ‘for now, just believe there is a God, and it isn’t you, go sit down and listen.’ “

So for whatever Higher Power means to you, it is a relief to acknowledge that there are forces beyond our parenting that influence our little people. We want them to eat well for many great reasons that including our own needs because this is a work in progress and we are itching for solid proof that they’ll be fine and because it is our job and we want evidence that we are doing it well. They will grow up – with our help and in spite of our help. I have a friend with older kids who had a son who would only eat bagels when he went off to college. Truly, that is not an exaggeration. He was a great kid – athletic, smart and kind and she was a fantastic parent. He turned out fine.

These years when my kids are young are the ones where I get to practice that finding that wisdom between accepting what I cannot change and having courage to show up for my kids on the things that I can. It starts with the battles over peas and broccoli but these are just stand-ins for our ability to know when to push, improve our ability to listen and not judge ourselves too harshly when we get it wrong. God grant me the serenity…help me find that place to listen…please make cauliflower too pricey as a sign I don’t need to serve it anymore…let me know that my kids will be fine. Amen.