July 11, 2008
Interior
Prayer: Founded on Loving Much
Interview With Author Father Jacques Philippe
By Carrie Gress
ROME,
JULY 10, 2008 (Zenit.org).- Interior prayer is not a technique,
but an attitude of love that makes our sacramental life more
fruitful, says author Father Jacques Philippe.
Father Philippe, of the Community of the Beatitudes, is the
author of "Time for God" published by Scepter Publishing, which
is also available in French and Spanish.
In this interview with ZENIT, Father Philippe discusses the
simple precepts of interior prayer, common misconceptions and
the fruit that can be expected when added to the sacramental
life.
Q: You describe mental prayer or interior prayer as something
that does not involve technique. How, then, does it work?
Father Philippe: It would be better to say interior prayer
instead of mental prayer, because in our modern culture, the
word "mental" is associated with thoughts -- as something
cerebral -- whereas this form of prayer is more an affair of the
heart, instead of reflection. St. Teresa of Avila said that it
is not an act of thinking much, but of loving much.
Interior prayer is not a question of technique. It is not a
process that can be controlled because it is a meeting with God,
who infinitely surpasses anything we can achieve through our own
efforts.
What must be essentially understood is that there is no method,
but an interior attitude. For interior prayer, there are three
principles: a true desire for God; the confidence that God will
allow us find that which we are looking for; and finally,
humility: To accept our poverty and to wait for the goodness and
love of God in all things.
Q: What is the fruit of interior prayer? And why is it
important? Isn't adherence to the sacraments enough?
Father Philippe: Interior prayer permits the sacramental life to
be more fruitful, more alive, more intense. It is important
because it is there that we see and endlessly deepen the most
essential dimension of Christian life: the personal relationship
of trust and love that is established between God and each of
his children, the reciprocal exchange where we give ourselves to
God and where God gives himself to us. According to Pope John
Paul II in "Novo Millenio Ineunte," this reciprocity is "the
very substance and soul of the Christian life, and the condition
of all true pastoral life."
Q: How does mental prayer differ from those who would wish to
compare it to yoga or Buddhist practices?
Father Philippe: The fundamental difference is that it is a
question of living and deepening the relationship of one person
to another with God, and it is not solely to acquire the power
to practice an interior or psychic state. The possibility of
this interpersonal relationship is not founded on initiative or
skill, but on God's desire to reveal himself and to communicate
through love. Moreover, God acts within the Holy Trinity
revealed in the New Testament: Through Jesus and thanks to the
action of the Holy Spirit, we can enter into communion with the
Father.
Q: You describe mental prayer as "just spending time" with God,
like two people in love would, but this can often feel like
nothing is happening. Could something be happening interiorly
despite the feeling that there isn't? Or even during times when
one is distracted?
Father Philippe: The life of prayer is much deeper than the
intelligence or the senses can perceive. Even when prayer is
poor and distracted, provided that it is made with sincerity and
faith, God can communicate secretly with the soul. He puts into
it the treasures of light and the power of peace that is often
made manifest at other times in life instead of just during
prayer itself. And if one perseveres despite times of aridity,
there will always be moments when God visits and makes his
presence felt.
Q: In today's world, many people just don't seem to have time to
spend half an hour or an hour in silent prayer. How can it be
fit in? Does it always have to be practiced in a church?
Father Philippe: When one activity is considered vital, we find
time to do it. The fundamental question is "what are our
priorities?" We must be convinced that God will give us a
hundred-fold the time that we devote to him in prayer. If we
give part of our time to God with fidelity and perseverance,
even just a quarter of an hour ever day, our life will be more
peaceful and more fruitful.
We can pray at a church, as there is a lot of grace when praying
in the presence of the Holy Sacrament, but we can also pray in a
corner of our room in front of an icon, out in nature, or even
on the bus or the subway.
Q: Many people only want to pray when they have an interior
prompting to do so. Why is this not helpful both in prayer and
in arriving at true interior freedom?
Father Philippe: All love relationships need, in order to grow,
a choice for fidelity. If a husband loves his wife only when he
feels the spirit to do so, the relationship will remain
superficial, on only an emotional level. Fidelity and
perseverance allow love to move beyond merely the sentimental
and to become something very beautiful and rich, a life shared,
a mutual gift of persons, one to another.
In every love relationship there are times of crisis and
difficulty, but if we persevere with fidelity, the love will
become stronger and truer.
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On the Net:
"Time for God":
www.scepterpublishers.org/product-exec/product_id/174/nm/Time_for_God
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