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hrmjustin

(71,265 posts)
Sat Sep 6, 2014, 01:54 PM Sep 2014

Do you get something out of prayer? Do you feel better after you pray?

Interfaith post.

Do you have a hard time praying? What do you pray for?

I do at times. I feel unworthy at times and I feel like God is so big and my concerns are so trivial that God has other things to do.



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Do you get something out of prayer? Do you feel better after you pray? (Original Post) hrmjustin Sep 2014 OP
In my view, there is nowhere that God is not. Htom Sirveaux Sep 2014 #1
That's a good summation of the Native American view. okasha Sep 2014 #2
It's also a perfectly orthodox Christian view Fortinbras Armstrong Sep 2014 #3
I've been hoping to hear more about your beliefs and practices, Htom Sirveaux Sep 2014 #8
That is a greatway of looking st things. hrmjustin Sep 2014 #4
I have a difficult time with prayer. rug Sep 2014 #5
get off your butt and move it. hrmjustin Sep 2014 #6
I bet that's not from Leviticus. rug Sep 2014 #7
No, it's from the book of Nezemiah, 3:17 Fortinbras Armstrong Sep 2014 #9

Htom Sirveaux

(1,242 posts)
1. In my view, there is nowhere that God is not.
Sat Sep 6, 2014, 08:37 PM
Sep 2014

God made all things out of Godself, and that's how anything is sustained. Even the trivial things.

okasha

(11,573 posts)
2. That's a good summation of the Native American view.
Sun Sep 7, 2014, 01:10 AM
Sep 2014

Because Creator is present in all living things and has a part in all spirits, we can address him/her through more concrete manifestations. I'm Panther Clan, so I sometimes I pray to Panther-with-a-capital-P. If I'm frustrated with someone or something, I'll have a word with Coyote. It's something like praying to patron saints, except there's less distance. They're family.

I pray to give thanks, to ask for healing or strength, to work through problems. Sometimes it's pure meditation, making myself open to whatever I need to know.

And then there's the Chinese kiln goddess. Both my studio's gas kilns have small images of her perched on top. Just before we start a firing, we pay our respects to her and offer her rice and flowers. (Potters all over the world do this, regardless of religion or lack thereof. It 's one of the traditions of the art.)

Fortinbras Armstrong

(4,473 posts)
3. It's also a perfectly orthodox Christian view
Sun Sep 7, 2014, 07:39 AM
Sep 2014

Thomas Aquinas wrote, "God is what sustains all things in being by his love, and ... is the reason why there is something instead of nothing, the condition of possibility of any entity whatsoever". (Summa Theologica, I, q 6, art 4.)

 

rug

(82,333 posts)
5. I have a difficult time with prayer.
Sun Sep 7, 2014, 06:31 PM
Sep 2014

I used to pray for God to give me strength to get through things, you know, grit your teeth. "Thy will be done" and all that. Then a priest pointed out, why hunker down to accept God's will? If he is all-good and loves us infinitely, his will is nothing to accept like a dog getting beaten with a stick. It's something to embrace with a glad heart. So, nowadays, my prayer consists of remembering that, feeling his presence, and waiting for the good. I can't even pray for something anymore, even strength. That's for the best. God's not a vending machine.

Fortinbras Armstrong

(4,473 posts)
9. No, it's from the book of Nezemiah, 3:17
Mon Sep 8, 2014, 04:26 AM
Sep 2014

I cried out, "O Lord, why dost thou ignore my prayer?" And the Lord answered me, "Why criest thou? Thee shouldst get off thy fundament and do thy portion. Why dost thou expect me to do all the heavy lifting?"

More seriously, Augustine says in one of his letters, "I should pray as if everything depended on God, and I should work as if everything depended on me."

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