The Godward movement [of prayer] has many aspects. It
includes the use of mind and imagination which we call meditation, it includes
the counting of God’s mercies which we call praise and thanksgiving, and
self-abasement which we call confession. But try to think of it more simply: it
means putting yourself near God, with God, in a time of quietness every day.
You put yourself with him just as you are, in the feebleness of your
concentration, in your lack of warmth and desire, not trying to manufacture pious
thoughts or phrases. You put yourself with God, empty perhaps, but hungry and
thirsty for him; and if in sincerity you cannot say that you want God you can
perhaps tell him that you want to want him; and if you cannot say even that
perhaps you can say that you want to want to want him! Thus you can be very
near him in your naked sincerity; and he
will do the rest, drawing out from you longings deeper than you knew were there
and pouring into you a trust and a love like that of the psalmist—whose words
may soon come to your lips. Forgive me for putting this so clumsily. I am
trying to say that you find you are “with God” not by achieving certain
devotional exercises in his presence but by daring to be your own self as you
reach towards him.
Michael Ramsey, The
Christian Priest Today, rev. ed. (London: SPCK, 1985; 1st ed.
1972), pp. 14–15, emphasis original
Lovely
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