Prayer
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Fr. Alfonso Galvez, in a simple and comprehensive manner portrays the doctrine of such consecrated masters in the art of adoration as St. Augustine, St. John of the Cross, and St. Teresa of Avila while including the ideas of modern authors like Garrigou Lagrange. The text speaks directly to the heart, conveying traditional doctrine in contempora
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Prayer - Alfonso Gálvez
PRAYER
ALFONSO GÁLVEZ
Translated by
MICHAEL ADAMS
Shoreless Lake PressPrayer by Alfonso Gálvez.
Copyright © 2022 by Shoreless Lake Press.
American edition published with permission. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without written permission of the Society of Jesus Christ the Priest, P.O. Box 157, Stewartsville, New Jersey 08886.
CATALOGING DATA
Author: Gálvez, Alfonso, 1932–2022
Title: Prayer
First Printing: New Jersey, 1998
Second Printing: New Jersey, 2022
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 2020917553
ISBN: 978-1-7322886-7-6 (hardcover)
ISBN: 978-1-7322886-8-3 (e-book)
Published by
Shoreless Lake Press
P.O. Box 157
Stewartsville, New Jersey 08886
www.alfonsogalvez.com
CONTENTS
Introduction
The Bases of Prayer
Divine-Human Dialogue and Human Communication
Rejection of Prayer and the Crisis of Faith
The Practice of Prayer
Silence
Enemies of Silence: Distractions
The Search for Silence: Struggling against Distractions
The Imitation of Christ
Mortification and Prayer
Meditation and Contemplation Distinguished
Prayer and Purification
Distractions as an Element of Purification
Temptations as an Element of Purification
Prayer and the Cross
Basic Ideas about Contemplation
On the Paths of Contemplation
Epilogue
Notes
No longer do I call you servants… but friends…
(Jn 15:15)
Only one thing is necessary…
(Lk 10:42)
INTRODUCTION
This little book is not a treatise on prayer. It has been assembled with the help of outlines or notes containing ideas which everyone is familiar with —notes which the author used for giving talks to ordinary but generous people already quite advanced in the spiritual life.
Much of what is said here can also be applied to vocal prayer, though the author is almost always referring to mental prayer; this is something one will easily notice and there is no need to repeat it.
It should be borne in mind that the true Teacher of prayer is the Holy Spirit, to whom anyone needs to have recourse if he desires to make progress in prayer. We also need to have recourse to the Blessed Virgin, an outstanding teacher of prayer, given that she was the best and most faithful hearer of the Word and, at the same time, the one whose response to it was most generous and loving —Let it be done to me according to thy word—; she, better than anyone, pondered on it in her heart —Mary kept all these things in her heart—, and she was the one who was closest to her Son and to the Spirit of her Son.
Everyone knows that prayer is a vast subject, both in importance and in range. And anything we manage to say about it will always fall too short and convey almost nothing. But let us put ourselves in God’s hands, humbly and trustingly, so that He guides us along the ways that lead to that only thing necessary.
This little book is only a short vade–mecum which can be useful for reminding people of ideas they already know. To explore the subject in greater depth we have the great treatises written by the masters of the spiritual life.
THE BASES OF PRAYER
Prayer grows out of the need God has chosen to feel to speak to us —and the need we feel to speak to Him. Speaking is a form of communication, but in this context it involves a form of communication which is, above all, an outpouring of love towards the loved one. Obviously we are not saying very much when we say that prayer is a conversation between God and man. Prayer is in fact a special form of becoming aware of, and intensifying, the life of intimacy that exists between God and man. It means man becoming intimately conscious of divine–human love. Clearly, if there is no communication between lovers, no love can happen —and this also applies when the lovers are God and man.
In the Trinity, the Father utters to Himself what He is with just one Word, which He loves with a Love which is identical with the response He receives, that is, the Holy Spirit. Well, prayer is the prolongation ad extra, in man, of the dialogue that takes place in the Trinity. In prayer there is actualized, in a very special way, the fact that man has been given entry to, given a share in, the eternal and ineffable dialogue of love that takes place in the bosom of the Trinity. The mystery of prayer derives from the mystery of the goodness of God, Who chose to give man a share in His own divine life. To understand the mystery of prayer one would need to know why God chose to make man His son, friend and interlocutor by giving him His own only–begotten Son and the Spirit of His Son. The mystery of prayer is the mystery of the love God has for man.
Christian prayer is located equidistantly between two errors which seem to be opposed to one another: atheism and pantheism. Both these errors rule out the possibility of prayer because they rule out the possibility of dialogue between God and man. Atheism rules out God, in favor of man; and pantheism rules out man, in favor of God. But clearly, any type of love, even divine love, calls for there being more than one person so that there can be communication and self–giving between them. Therefore, the complete revelation of God as Perfect Love is the revelation of God as Trinity. For God is that, no more, no less: perfect Love; or, if you wish, simply Love (1 Jn 4:8).
God desires to converse with us because He loves us. Prayer is the response we give to His invitation to converse with Him; or, better to say, it is that conversation, that dialogue, actually taking place: In many and various ways God spoke of old to our fathers by the prophets; but in these last days he has spoken to us by a Son. ¹ Because He loves us and therefore desires to communicate with us, He has spoken to us and has given us His own Word, making us His true interlocutors because He wants His love for us to be true. That is why He has brought us into His Son and has given us a share in His life by participation —and has also given us the Spirit to pray on our behalf, since we would not know how to go about it: The Spirit Himself intercedes for us with sighs too deep for words. ²
The Son is the Father’s Word, and is loved by Him in a Love which is, in turn, Love and the Son’s response. That Love, which is the Spirit, is given to us so that, through Him, we might possess the Son and go in the Son to the Father, thereby sharing in the mysterious dialogue of the Trinity. The Spirit makes it possible for us to pray, which is the same as saying that He makes it possible for us to speak with God and be His friends.
This is merely a starting–off point, because prayer is much more than a dialogue between God and man. For, just as in the bosom of the Trinity the dialogue between the Father and the Son is fully achieved, perfected, and expressed in the Love that is the Spirit; just as that dialogue expresses itself in the mutual self–surrender and self–giving of the Father and the