Pocket Prayers for Commuters. Christopher Herbert

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Pocket Prayers for Commuters - Christopher Herbert


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only for a brief moment, you could turn to the prayer or passage of Scripture inviting you to offer praise. God is always very close to us, waiting for our response of love, and this is a moment to call to mind not only being in God’s presence but also the pleasure of being with him.

      READING AND REFLECTION

      Each day in the pages that follow you will find a biblical passage for you to think about. There are a number of suggestions to help you to read the passage thoughtfully, but you may want to ignore those suggestions and approach the text in your own way. That’s fine, but please let both your imagination and your intelligence play their part in what you are doing. And again, don’t rush. Reading the Scriptures as a part of prayer needs to be done with an open mind and with gentle, rigorous patience.

      PRAYER

      Now begin to turn towards all those people or situations that are on your own heart. Think of the people you are going to meet later today: a colleague, a friend, a stranger – perhaps the people who are sitting around you on the bus or train. Imagine that they are with you now and accompany them into the presence of God. Ask God to bless them and to look upon them with love.

      And finally, pray for anyone you have had to leave at home today; with them and for them, in silence, say: ‘Our Father . . .’

      CONCLUSION

      At the end of the ‘Our Father’ there is a closing prayer to send you out into the day that lies ahead. You might want to try to memorise and hold on to a phrase from this – or from any part of the session – to repeat to yourself throughout the day.

      THE JOURNEY HOME: EVENING PRAYER

      On the journey homewards, hopefully there comes a moment where the cares of the workaday world begin to be shed and in their stead new, home-directed thoughts and issues take over. Some of those home-concerns may be of enormous and worrying importance, others much more mundane, but sometimes, deeper still, there are more profound moments of introspection about life and its meaning.

      There will also come a point, perhaps on the journey itself or, perhaps, later in the evening, when time can be found to reflect on the day that has passed. It’s a sort of tidying-up-and-putting-to-one-side kind of process, a time for turning down the lights and for placing all that has happened before God.

      The structure for Evening Prayer is similar to that for Morning Prayer, but with some variations appropriate to the time of day and the different mood of journeying home.

      PRESENCE AND PEACE

      As with Morning Prayer, this is a moment to focus on God, and to try to achieve a sense of stillness and peace in his presence amongst the commotion of the journey. It will be easier if you have managed to get a seat – but by no means impossible if you haven’t!

      READING

      As with Morning Prayer, the Bible readings have been selected because they represent some of the most powerful and important elements of our faith. In fact, the readings in the evening sessions echo the readings from the Morning Prayer time.

      The readings are followed by Reflections designed to help you to think about one or more of the themes of the reading. At night especially, it is important not to struggle intellectually with each reading, that’s for the daytime. In the evening, the mode and the mood are different. They should be marked by a kind of willing and restful patience.

      CONFESSION

      The reflections will almost inevitably prompt more serious thought about what has happened during the day, and any things that have left you uneasy or with a troubled conscience. You can, if you wish, examine your soul by asking some questions about your own attitudes, thoughts and behaviour.

      The fact is, as human beings we are extraordinarily adept at deceiving ourselves, and therefore, from time to time, in an act of confession before God, we need to be absolutely honest with ourselves and with God. We need to acknowledge what we are truly like and ask God to help us to amend our ways and to become the people he would have us be. Do not wallow in your time of confession; that’s a form of self-indulgence. Once you have confessed to God, move on. Think not of yourself but of others.

      PRAYER

      Offer prayers of thanksgiving for the day that has passed. If there are things that concern you, place those also in God’s hands. Chew over them for a while if you like, but try not to worry over them like a dog worrying a bone. God knows you and your concerns and looks on you with love. And then, finally, as an act of trust say: ‘Our Father’.

      CONCLUSION

      Then, simply hand yourself over to God. Leave your thoughts, your worries and the day that has passed with him, knowing that his redeeming and healing love are always at work, reconciling all things to himself.

      THE LORD’S PRAYER

      Our Father in heaven,

      hallowed be your name,

      your kingdom come,

      your will be done,

      on earth as in heaven.

      Give us today our daily bread.

      Forgive us our sins

      as we forgive those who sin against us.

      Lead us not into temptation

      but deliver us from evil.

      For the kingdom, the power,

      and the glory are yours

      now and for ever.

      Amen.

      PRESENCE AND PEACE Psalm 27.17

      Wait for the Lord;

      be strong and he shall comfort your heart;

      wait patiently for the Lord.

      Still my heart, O Lord, still my heart that I may come into your presence in peace.

      PRAISE

      Glory to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Spirit, as it was in the beginning, is now and shall be for ever. Amen.

      READING 1 Kings 19.11-12

      [The word of the Lord came to Elijah:] ‘Go and stand on the mount before the Lord.’ The Lord was passing by: a great and strong wind came, rending mountains and shattering rocks before him, but the Lord was not in the wind; and after the wind there was an earthquake, but the Lord was not in the earthquake; and after the earthquake fire, but the Lord was not in the fire; and after the fire a faint murmuring sound . . .

      REFLECTION

       This story represents one of the great turning points in the history of human thinking. God was not to be found in power but revealed himself very humbly, in a ‘faint murmuring sound’. Or, in the Authorized Version of the Bible, ‘a still, small voice . . .’ While there can be no doubt of God’s immense power, nevertheless it has been the Christian experience that God reveals himself in quietness and humility.

       Do your ideas about God include his courteous humility as well as his power?

      PRAYER

       Think of the people you are going to be meeting later today: a colleague, a stranger or a friend. Bring them with you into the presence


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