I have heard, and continue
occasionally to hear, faithful Christians talk about the lack of God’s presence
in their lives. There’s no doubt they love Jesus and are eager to serve him,
whatever that might mean in practice for them. But the sense of God’s presence
alongside them is fleeting or non-existent, and this, for them, is a source of
discouragement and dismay.
Notice that it’s the sense of God’s presence that they do not
feel. If one accepts the doctrine of omnipresence, then God must be said to be
present to each and every person at all times, regardless of whether or not one
senses this presence. But this
doesn’t get to the heart of the matter. After all, who cares if God is merely present? Surely we don’t want
simply to affirm the doctrine of divine omnipresence as we struggle through
life.
However, it seems to me that,
very often, those who lack a sense of God’s presence have only the most
superficial of relationships with God. This sounds harsh, of course, especially
in the light of what I wrote in my first paragraph. But however harsh it
sounds, I believe it’s true. There’s no doubt that many Christians love Jesus
and are eager to serve him, whatever that might mean in practice for them – but
this love and service translates too often into doing things for Jesus without
the appropriate balance of spending time with him in prayer and Bible-reading.
An analogy could well be the stereotype of the hard-working man who grafts all
the hours God sends to provide for his family, but all the while without even
seeing his wife and children. So it seems to me that the reason why so many are
saddened by the lack of a sense of God’s presence in their lives is because
they do not practise any devotional exercises beyond arrow prayers or reading
the chosen passage before the sermon in church on Sundays – assuming they still
go to church, of course.
I’m being cynical and
judgemental, of course. It’s not as cut ‘n’ dried as all this. Sometimes
Christians fail to sense God’s presence despite persistent prayer and
industrious Bible-reading. But this is surely a different issue, the so-called
‘dark night of the soul’, where God is arguably so present in one’s life that, counterintuitively, paradoxically,
God’s presence is felt intensely as absence. However, the dark night aside, I
do feel that if we neglect to pray, to read the Bible, to take time out to be
with God – if we neglect these things, it’s no surprise that we will fail to
sense God’s presence in our lives. Such things are traditionally the means by
which we practise the presence of God. In the Old Testament, for example, God’s
presence is maintained among the people of Israel by the rites of atonement
(Leviticus) and by focussing on God’s word (Deuteronomy). And in the New
Testament, the Eucharist (rites) is put forward as the means by which the risen
and ascended Christ (God’s word made flesh) is made present by the Holy Spirit
to and within the Christian community. So neglecting prayer and God’s word (in
Scripture and in Christ, who is present in the Eucharist) is not really an
option for the faithful Christian if s/he wants to recognise God’s presence.
But let’s return to my opening
question: Does prayer create God? If our sense
of God’s presence is cultivated by our devotional diligence, then isn’t it fair
to say that our prayers actually create God for
us? It’s this ‘for us’ that’s important here. Our prayers do not create God
in any ontological sense; our prayers do not create God ex nihilo or conjure God up from nowhere. But our prayers and
liturgical practices, enlivened by the Holy Spirit, somehow tap into the God
who is already present and make God
‘real’ to us. The flip side of this is that when we neglect prayer or
Bible-reading, God’s presence is perceived as absence. And once this neglect is
prolonged, God, for us, may as well
not exist at all, beyond an idea or a concept or a fantasy.
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