A Definition of Prayer

I like to begin classes on Prayer by asking participants:  “What is prayer?”  I don’t do this to trick them into saying the wrong thing or because I’m fishing for a particular answer.  I do it because I want to hear – and I want them to hear – the variety and the depth of one another's answers.  I have never heard a wrong answer to this question, but I have heard some quite beautiful ones.  They are all based on the genuine experience and the spiritual personalities of the "pray-ers" giving the answers.

One of my favorite “definitions” of prayer was written by Servant of God Catherine Doherty in her typical down-to-earth and straight-to-the-heart style.  It captures both the stillness and the movement of prayer, the way prayer can be both vibrant conversation and quiet being.  As Catherine knew very well, sometimes prayer is just being in a meaningful moment with the One you love.  It is a meeting of two loves.

How can you define prayer, except by saying that it is love? It is love expressed in speech, and love expressed in silence. To put it another way, prayer is the meeting of two loves: the love of God and our love. That’s all there is to prayer.
— Catherine Doherty, "Soul of my Soul: Reflections from a Life of Prayer"
This is apparently a photo of Catherine in her nursing uniform.  Catherine served as an army nurse on the front lines during the first World War.

This is a photo of Catherine in her nursing uniform.  Catherine served as an army nurse on the front lines during the first World War.

To Change the World

“An authentic faith – which is never comfortable or completely personal – always involves a deep desire to change the world.”

 -- Pope Francis, Evangelii Gaudium 183

Paschal Mysteries

“There have been times when, after long on my knees in a cold chancel, a stone has rolled from my mind, and I have looked in and seen the old questions lie folded and in a place by themselves, like the piled grave clothes of love’s risen body.”

 -- R.S. Thomas

Good Old-Fashioned Zinger

“If you believe what you like in the gospels, and reject what you don’t like, it is not the gospel you believe, but yourself.”

-- St. Augustine

Saint Augustine in His Study, Sandro Bottticelli, completed 1490-1494.  There he is, writing brilliant zingers!

Saint Augustine in His Study, Sandro Bottticelli, completed 1490-1494.  There he is, writing brilliant zingers!