Centering
Prayer
Source
Progression
& Orientation
Centering Prayer is a contemporary name for the practice that
Jesus describes as “prayer in secret” in the Sermon on the Mount. When you
pray, he teaches, “Enter your inner room, close the door, pray to your Father
in secret and your Father who sees in secret will reward you” (Matthew 6:6).
In the course of time this prayer has been given other names such as “pure
prayer”, “prayer of faith”, “prayer of simplicity”, “prayer of the
heart”, etc.
Jesus’ teaching has roots in the Old Testament. For
example, Elijah’s experience of God on Mount Horeb as “sheer silence”; the
pillar of cloud by which Yahweh led his people for forty years through the
desert; the cloud in the Temple built by Solomon at the time of its
consecration; and the exhortation of Psalm 46:10, which reads, “Be still and
know that I am God”.
In the New Testament we hear of the overshadowing of Mary at
the moment of the Incarnation; the cloud that overshadowed the disciples on the
Mount of Transfiguration; the silent attentiveness of Mary of Bethany at the
feet of
Jesus in the home of Mary, Martha and Lazarus; and the darkness that covered the
earth at the crucifixion of Jesus.
Christian tradition, especially the Desert Fathers and Mothers
of the fourth century interpreted this wisdom saying of Jesus as referring to
the movement away from ordinary psychological awareness to the interior silence
of the spiritual level of our being and beyond that, to the secrecy of union
with the Divine Indwelling within us.
This tradition was continued by Hesychasts of the Eastern
Orthodox tradition, and in particular by the sixth century Syrian monk known as
Pseudo-Dionysius; Meister Eckhardt, Ruuysbroek and the Rhineland mystics; the
anonymous author of The Cloud of Unknowing in the fourteenth century; the
Carmelite tradition exemplified by Teresa of Avila, John of the Cross, Therese
of Lisieux; and more recently by Thomas Merton.
This tradition became known as Apophatic contemplation. It is
not in opposition to so-called Kataphatic contemplation, which draws on the
exercise of our rational faculties to reach divine union. In actual fact,
Kataphatic contemplation is normally necessary as a preparation for the
Apophatic experience which passes beyond the exercise of the human faculties to
rest in God. The Sabbath of the Old Testament is a figure of this rest. Jesus
invited his disciples to the same rest when he said, “Learn of me for I am
meek and humble of heart and you will find rest for your souls.” Resting in
God is the term used by Gregory the Great in the sixth century to describe
contemplative prayer as understood in his time.
Christian tradition has excellent instructions and guidance
for the beginnings of the spiritual journey, enshrined especially in the ancient
practice of Lectio Divina, which became the central practice of Benedictine
monks and nuns down through the ages. The prayerful reading of the texts of the
Old and New Testaments led to reflection on the mysteries of Christ; responding
with acts of faith, hope, and love; and finally, to resting in God as the fruit
of discursive mediation and its gradual simplification. The three Theological
Virtues just mentioned came to be regarded as the principal transforming
inspirations of the Holy Spirit leading to divine union.
Centering Prayer puts into effect the first two
recommendations of Jesus’ formula in Matthew 6:6 by leaving behind all
external concerns and by discontinuing, at least in intention, the interior
dialogue that usually accompanies ordinary psychological awareness. The latter
consists of commentaries and emotional reactions to events, people, and sense
perceptions entering or leaving our day to day lives.
Jesus’ third recommendation - to pray in secret - seems to
be the practice that later became known in the Christian tradition as
contemplative prayer. Though there remain several legitimate interpretations of
the word, “contemplation”, the state of prayer that John of the Cross
describes by the term “infused contemplation” has come to be generally
accepted in subsequent spiritual theology as the definite meaning.
There is in fact, in the writings of the Christian mystics,
excellent descriptions of the full development of the spiritual journey. But the
process of moving from the beginning to its full development in the transforming
union is not so clear. There are many forms of Christian spirituality, some of
which are organized into stages. But the very variety of these recommendations
makes it difficult for the ordinary seeker to find a clear map or guide to
negotiate them. These stages come to be called respectively the purgative, the
illuminative, and the unitive ways. The purgative and unitive ways are well
differentiated, but the path from one to the other does not seem to adequately
address the physical, psychological, and spiritual obstacles that hinder the
process, especially unconscious motivation and habits of negative behavior.
Centering Prayer was conceived as one way to move from the
beginning to the ultimate goal of inner transformation. It suggests a practical
method of entering what Jesus called “the inner room” by deliberately
letting go of external concerns symbolized by sitting comfortably, closing our
eyes and consenting to the presence and action of God within. As this
disposition of alert receptivity stabilizes through regular practice twice
daily, we are gradually prepared by the grace of the Holy Spirit, to pray, or
more exactly, to relate to the Father in secret. This was interpreted by
the Desert Fathers and Mothers (as well as the later Apophatic tradition) to
mean letting go of all personal agendas, expectations for divine consolation,
psychological breakthroughs, and self-reflections of any kind. In Centering
Prayer a sacred symbol such as a word from scripture, an inward glance toward
God, or noticing our breath, helps to maintain the intent and consent of our
will toward God’s presence and action within us.
Centering Prayer consists of the first two stages leading to
“prayer in secret”. The latter presupposes relating to God beyond thoughts,
feelings, and particular acts. The only initiative we take during the period of
Centering Prayer is to maintain our original intention of consenting to the
presence and
action of God within. Centering Prayer thus leads directly into the apophatic
experience or “infused contemplation” which is purely God’s gift.
There are other ways of moving or disposing oneself for
Apophatic prayer or prayer in secret. Centering Prayer serves the increasing
need for a place and time of silence in daily life due to incessant noise,
intrusions of the mass media, lack of time, and the accelerating pace of
everyday life.
The theological basis of Centering Prayer is touched upon in
chapter three of Intimacy with God. The process of Lectio Divina is
described in chapter five and the theological basis of Centering Prayer is
discussed more fully in the final chapter entitled, “Toward Intimacy with God.”
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