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Prayer

Prayer ideas from the United Reformed Church to help inspire you to explore prayer in innovative and fresh ways.

'Pray as you can, not as you can’t'

Over the last two thousand years, Christians have found many ways to pray. Some people find it helps to focus on one way of praying for a long time so that it becomes deeply embedded in their life, while others thrive on a variety of different styles to keep their conversations with God alive and active. Some people find a deep sense of freedom and connection with others in using a standard pattern of prayer, like a prayer book or order, where others prefer something more 'in the moment'.

Prayers during the pandemic: please use these devotions in your private prayers, prayer groups or sermons

 

By Mark Argent

Particular ExamenOne of the less familiar corners of the Ignatian Spiritual Exercises is the obscurely-named Particular Examen. It lurks in the first part of the Exercises, where the general focus is on sin and the forgiveness of God. The word ‘particular’ is included because the person engaging with the Exercises is invited to keep track of the times when they fall into a particular sin, perhaps making some small gesture (such as discretely striking their breast) each time they catch themselves, periodically taking stock of their performance. Confidently, Ignatius suggests a somewhat unconventional diagram with the purpose of helping people keep track of how they are improving.

Read more: Particular Examen

By Mark Argent

IllnessA protracted brush with pneumonia a few years ago had some interesting repercussions. At a practical level, it meant that a siesta took the place of my daily jog and my car seemed to know its own way to the local hospital, but what about the spiritual dimension of the experience? A bout of pneumonia is far from being the most serious illness faced by people of my age and fitness level in a hospital, but it is inevitable that such an ordeal has an effect on the prayer life.

Read more: Praying in times of illness

By Mark Argent

DreamsThe Bible is peppered with references to people having profound experiences of God through their dreams. The readings from around Christmas include two classic examples, namely, Joseph being assured that it was right to take Mary as his wife, and the Magi being encouraged not to go back to Herod on their return trip from Bethlehem. Down the centuries, many mystics have laid great store by the content of dreams and visions.

Yet today, people are sometimes wary of letting the language of dreams spirituality sit too closely together. Perhaps that’s because dreams have become a major part of the psychoanalyst’s toolkit, and so there can be a lingering fear that talking about dreams reveals more than one realises.

Read more: Dreams and visions

By Mark Argent

MeditationSlightly confusingly, the terms ‘meditation’ and ‘contemplation’ get used in a variety of ways. Some treat them as interchangeable. Some make a careful distinction, though it can still end up with one person’s meditation being another’s contemplation.

So, with apologies to those who use the words differently, this article picks up practical ways of meditating — coming to a place of inner stillness and clarity by turning off the inner chatter of the mind.

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By Mark Argent

General ExamenOne of the fruits of the increased interest in Ignatian spirituality in recent decades has been greater use of what Ignatius calls the General Examen. In essence, this is to look back over part of the day, and ask “Where was God in the experience?”Ignatius’ actual formula doesn’t translate so well across the centuries, but a contemporary approach can be quite useful.

Read more: General Examen
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