Teresian Prayer
Teresian Prayer
Teresian Prayer
- ROMAE
THEOLOGICAL AND SPIRITUAL REFLECTION PROJECT
FOR THE DISCALCED CARMELITE NUNS
TERESIAN PRAYER
We have only to look to our Holy mother to discover the elements that make up our
Carmelite vocation and to find out how to live them in an adequate way. With much
more reason this applies in the area of prayer, the centre and characteristic mark of
the Teresian life and charism and, because of this, the principal component of our
place in the Church.
Without a doubt, St Teresa speaks prayer to us. Her person and her message
cannot be explained without it. Carmel today cannot be explained. While the study
of Teresian prayer gives us access to the whole of her life and teaching, at the
same time it opens out for us a more radical understanding of our vocation.
It is this word also -- or rather the experience, the lived out word -- that the person
of today has the right to expect from us. This is because, through St Teresa and in
her, we have become known in the Church as an Order specially linked with prayer,
a praying community.
All the elements that go to make a qualified teacher of prayer are to be found in St
Teresa: a wealth of experience; profound understanding of the grace received
from God; ability to communicate, that is the capacity to put her experience into
words. With great precision she writes: For it is one grace to receive the Lord's
favor; another, to understand which favor and grace it is; and one more, to know
how to describe and explain it (L 17:5; cf. L 12:6; 23:11; 30:4). These three
mystical graces make Teresa a qualified teacher of prayer, while at the same time
map out for us the subjects for studying Teresian prayer: experience, doctrine
and pedagogy.
1. - TERESA'S EXPERIENCE OF PRAYER
We all know that knowledge of our Holy Mother's experience is necessary if we are
to understand her word, her message. This is because experience is the source of
her knowledge, because in her experience she saw the fundamental elements of
Christian life. She thought about this and reflected on it to unearth these ways
along which the history of salvation advances, in the loving relationship of each one
of us with God.
A few words suffice to outline this experience in a schematic way to help us get
inside her word and message. Three periods are apparent in the development of St
Teresa's prayer.
-- First period: easy and spontaneous prayer. Teresa took to prayer. (cf. L 1)
-- Second period: of difficult and testing prayer which lasted from her adolescent
crisis -- brought on by the death of her mother -- up to the definitive conversion
which occurred in 1554 (L 9). The difficulty she experienced had a two-fold source:
on the one hand her inability for discursive reflection along with thoughts that ran
wild (L 4:8,9; 9:4); and on the other hand her resistance to embarking on the way
friendship is totally demanding and absorbing. To pray is to opt for God as a friend.
She pinpoints the explanation for her crisis and the key to a solution when she
writes: For if I would have paid back something of the love You began to show
me, I should not have been able to employ it in anyone but You; and with that all
would have been remedied (L 4:4). To pray is to seek to be servants of love
and to follow resolutely by means of this path of prayer Him who has loved us so
much (L 11:1), living for another, the Friend: Once you are placed in so high a
degree as to desire to commune in solitude with God and abandon the pastimes of
the world ... Let His Majesty lead the way along the path He desires. We belong no
longer to ourselves but to Him (L 11:12). Prayer follows the kind of life we lead.
We are what our prayer is, which is to say, what our friendship with God is. For this
reason, prayer is a relationship of friends, it is to bring about and deepen our
friendship with God.
3. -- TERESA'S VIEWPOINT ON PRAYER
From her personal prayer experience Teresa set out her teaching. Prayer is an
intimate sharing between friends; it means taking time frequently to be alone with
Him who we know loves us (L 8:5). Leaving aside the enormous biblical
resonances in this definition and the revolution which it entails in the history of
spirituality, we wish now to call attention solely to something which is obvious apart
from this. It is this: the entire emphasis in the Teresian concept of prayer is on the
persons, who here and now live engrossed in one another in a friendly way. The
definition shows that to pray is to reach out to the Person with one's entire person;
welcoming and giving, listening and speaking; intimate sharing.
When in the Way the direct question is asked, what is mental prayer (cf. W 22:
title), she does not take the definition given in the Life, but revealingly at the end of
the chapter she will say: This is mental prayer.... to understand these truths. A
careful reading of the chapter shows us that these truths are not an abstraction.
They are the truths about God and the human person, about the who of God
and the who of the human person. A discovery leading to an existential
encounter, to conform my way of life to His (W 22:7).
Teresa wants all the attention of the one praying focused on the divine Person,
looking at the Person. I'm not asking you to do anything more than look at
Him (W 26:3); With the intellect quiet . . . look at Christ who is looking at us (L
13:22). What is said or how it is said is not important. What matters is being with
Him, the action of being present.
We said, attention to the Person, with a very Teresian shading: paying attention to
God's love for us. It forms part of her definition: who we know loves us.
Carefully, Teresa notes that the first lesson of Christ, Master of prayer, is the love
He has for us: In the first word (of the Our Father) you will understand
immediately the love He has for you (W 26:10). To know one is loved, is the
starting point for a loving response: love begets love (L 22:14). Therefore, it is
always necessary to look at the love God has for us: do that which best stirs you
to love (IC IV 1:7).
Prayer is a loving encounter, an encounter in truth: God's truth and our truth. In
prayer God reveals Himself to us. He shows us his truth: that He loves us, that He
gives to us. God loves to give. He never tires of giving and without measure.
He goes around looking to have someone to give to. This is the God Teresa
discovered in prayer. We get to know people -- God included -- only when we reach
the intimate sharing of friendship with them.
This goes also for self-discovery. To pray is to enter within ourselves, to get to
know ourselves: our richness and our misery, our moral state. The first words
Teresa entices us with at the beginning of the Interior Castle are about our
marvelous capacity, dignity, beauty, that we are a palace made entirely out
of a diamond or of very clear crystal. We have the power to converse with none
other than God (IC I 1:6).
Prayer also reveals to us our moral state. Of herself she tells us that through the
practice of prayer... I knew... the bad road I was following (L 19:12); in prayer I
understood more clearly my faults (L 7:17).
Because it is a personal encounter, prayer is also a transforming encounter. Prayer
creates new people. Intimate friendly sharing means that the friendship grows
stronger and is consolidated. This is the thesis defended by our Holy Mother in all
her Works. The LIFE defends the thesis that prayer is transforming, and in proof of
this statement she points to her own life, the fruit of prayer. The external structure
of the work corresponds with this thesis. The WAY deals with the same thing:
prayer, the way of perfection. The INTERIOR CASTLE presents prayer as a
movement inward, of approach to the centre of our beings where God is abiding, of
deepening our relations with Him.
The best prayer will always be that which most renews one's life: I would not wish
for any other prayer except that which makes me increase in virtue. Oh!, that
this is true prayer and not just something that pleases us and nothing more (letter
to Fr. Gracian, 23.10.76). Therefore, it is necessary to look to one's life to discern if
prayer is real. Again, when dealing with mystical prayer: It is in the effects and
deeds following afterwards that one discerns the true value of prayer; there is no
better crucible for testing prayer (IC IV 2:8; cf. IC VI 8:10; ST 58:16). In
practice, it is necessary to look to a person's life to discern if their prayer is true:
What each of you will understand, daughters, if you are advanced, will be that you
are the most wretched of all (...) and not in having more delights and raptures in
prayer, or visions, or favors of this kind that the Lord grants; for we shall have to
wait for the next world to see the value of such experiences (W 18:7).
Since it is a friendly encounter, prayer is essentially open to growth and
development. Prayer is not something over and done with. Prayer is a living reality,
dynamic, ongoing.
It is particularly important to highlight this dynamism of prayer so as not to impede
but rather to support a person's prayer positively in every stage of the process.
Our Holy Mother has spoken graphically of the dyna-mism of prayer with the use of
comparisons: various ways of watering the garden, in her Life; of the various levels
of communication in the history of the interpersonal relations between God and
human beings, in the Interior Castle. In both comparisons one sees a progression in
the definition of the two protagonists: God and the human person. God's activity
increases and, consequently and in parallel, the passivity of the human person
increases. In her Life the Saint points out that the work of the gardener (the
human person) becomes increasingly less, yet the harvest is greater. God
progressively gains control of the scene until finally he commands it. In the Interior
Castle, where she is speaking of prayer as an inward movement, the levels at which
this encounter takes place are more in evidence: God and the human person
share intimately at ever more intimate and profound levels (this is the meaning
of the different mansions).
Mystical prayer is the field par excellence of Teresian teaching. She tries to fill an
existing lacuna in books on prayer (IC I 2:7; L 14:7). Which is, to state what is
most important in this friendly encounter but which is often passed over in silence:
The link between prayer and solitude is so close that Teresa considers it a sign for
the discernment of prayer: this desire (of solitude) is continually present in souls
that truly love God (F 5:15). Growth in prayer is manifested by an increasing
desire for solitude. With regard to Physical solitude she says: to get used to
solitude is a great help for prayer (W 4:9). She refers to the practice and teaching
of Jesus: you already know that His Majesty teaches that it be recited in solitude.
This is what He always did when He prayed (W 24:4).
Spiritual solitude is solitude from loves and presences which vitiate at source
meeting with Him. Spiritual solitude is eager attention, loving attraction towards
the Friend, presence of one's entire being to Him. This culminates in not going out
from that centre. The essential and the best of the person is always with
Him. Spiritual solitude is inwardness (IC VII, 1:10; 2:4).
Our Holy Mother also speaks of seeking association with other persons having the
same interest, shared prayer (L 7:20-22; W 20:3). Friendship with those who
practice prayer -- and in the first place with those of one's own community -safeguards and strengthens personal prayer, it trains one to pray.
The Saint speaks about a diversified group (L 16:7) and a stable, praying
community which engages in prayer and has no need to hide its identity from
outsiders (W 20:4-6).
She attributes extraordinary importance to the group in the promotion,
safeguarding and demands of prayer the complete remedy of a soul lies in
consulting the friends of God (L 23:4), that is, with people of prayer. It is a
wonderful thing for a person to talk to those who speak about this (IC II 1:6).
Teresa rejoices about the conduct of her sisters: Sometimes it is a particular joy
for me to see these Sisters gathered together and feeling such great joy at being in
the monastery that they praise our Lord as much as possible (IC VI 6:12).
Linked with this is the importance of a teacher of prayer. She is convinced that
without a wise and experienced teacher it will be almost impossible to make
progress in prayer. She complains that they are not available, at least not as good
as she would wish. Her teaching seeks to supply in some way for this possible lack.
Conclusion. - Prayer defines and embraces the entire spiritual life, according to
Teresa. In questioning ourselves about prayer we are questioning ourselves about
what characterizes us and identifies us in the ecclesial community.
POINTS FOR DISCUSSION
In the light of Teresian experience about personal problems in prayer,
1) What are the ones you have experienced most in yours?
Bearing in mind her method of praying and what she proposes to us in more
detail in the Way 26-29,
2) How and to what point has this helped you in your prayer?
Knowing that prayer, an intimate sharing between friends with God, is a living
thing, always ongoing,