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Life is Your
Prayer
by Neale Donald
Walsch
Prayer
is the most important part of the human
experience. It is the most important part of
our daily activities. The reason it is the
most important part of our experience and our
activities is because it is the process by
which we create our lives. It should be
understood by anyone examining the subject of
prayer that everything we think, see, and do
is a prayer. Life is a prayer in the sense
that it is a continuous request to the
universe and its God to present us with what
we choose and desire.
God understands our desires not just
through the occasional utterances that we call
"prayers" in the traditional sense, but
through every thought we think, every word we
speak, and everything we do. Our thoughts, our
words, and our actions are our prayers. Most
people do not think of life as a constant
prayer; most people believe they are praying
only when involved in that deliberate,
peculiar activity we know as prayer. Thus,
many people feel that their prayers either go
unanswered or or are answered sporadically and
only in the affirmative. But the truth is,
prayer does not begin with kneeling down, or
lighting a votive candle, or sitting in
meditation, or picking up our prayer beads, or
performing some outward or inner ritual.
Prayer begins at the moment of our birth
and ends with our death, if we speak in the
classic terms of most human understanding. Of
course, if we more beyond the notions of birth
and death to reach higher understandings, we
learn that birth and death are merely the
beginning and the end of an ongoing, cyclical
experience through which we move throughout
the ages and for all time.
But in normal human terms, in our relative
world, I would use the word "prayer" to create
a greater understanding among a larger number
of people. Our prayer begins within the moment
of our birth in this particular lifetime. And
at our death this particular version of our
prayer ends. But at no time between our birth
and our death do we cease our prayer.
If we understood
that every word, thought, and action was a
prayer sent right to God, a request sent right
to the Heavens, I believe we would change much
of what we think, say, and do. Further, I
believe we would better understand why our
more formalized prayers seem to be answered
only sporadically, if at all. For here is what
really happens: In our formalized prayers we
seek God's intercession or intervention in our
affairs, hoping that God will somehow alter or
create something for us. Yet these formal
prayers only take a moment or two each day, or
for some, each week. The rest of our time --
probably 95 to 99 percent -- is
spent sending,
oftentimes unwittingly, prayers to God that
work exactly in the opposite direction of our
formal prayers.
So we pray for one thing and we go out and
do another. Or we pray for one thing and we go
out and think another. Let me give you a
typical example. We may pray for greater
abundance in our life, or for help with a
financial problem. Those prayers are earnestly
offered, earnestly said, and earnestly sent to
God during our formal, ritualized time for
prayer. Then for the rest of the week we go
around harboring thoughts of insufficiency,
saving words of insufficiency, and
demonstrating insufficiency in the everyday
actions of our lives. So 95 percent of the
time we send prayers that affirm we don't have
enough and 5 percent of the time we ask God to
bring us enough. It is very difficult for the
universe to grant us our wishes when 95
percent of the time we are, in fact, asking
for something else.
This is the single most misunderstood
aspect of prayer in our human experience. This
truth is that the universe is a giant xerox,
sending us, all the time, the answer to our
prayers. And we are, in fact, sending prayers
to the universe all the time, from morning
till night, from birth till death. This is at
once both empowering and, for people who are
unwilling to take the responsibility it
inherently creates, frightening. Only for
those who understand the great gift that God
has given us -- the gift of our ability to
create what we want -- does this form of
prayer seem inviting. For those unable to
accept this level of responsibility for their
actions, this form of prayer -- morning to
night, birth to death, in the shape of our
words, thoughts, and actions -- seems
intimidating at best and unacceptable at
worst.
Only when we are
willing to accept that our words are creative,
our thoughts are creative, and our actions are
creative, could this be attractive. Many are
unwilling to accept this as truth because they
are not very proud of the majority of their
thoughts, words, and actions and certainly
don't want them to be considered as actual
requests to God. And yet they are.
The injunction then is to speak, think, and
act in a way of which we can be proud -- in a
way that sends to God our grandest thoughts
and produces our highest visions and thus
creates Heaven on Earth for all of us.
The thoughts expressed here are not new nor
are they what one would usually think of as
"new age". As a matter of fact, a wonderful
minister at the Marble Cathedral in New York
City named Dr. Norman Vincent Peale spoke many
of these same words when he authored what is
arguably one of the world's ten most famous
books,
The Power of Positive Thinking. What Dr.
Peale said is what I am saying here: Your
entire life is your prayer.
When we become consciously aware of this,
and when we accept this truth with joy, our
entire lives change -- sometimes virtually
overnight and other times more slowly and
subtly. When we accept this truth, we suddenly
understand that God is our best friend and has
given us tools of unlimited power to create
the reality we seek to experience.
I have had the beautiful gift of
experiencing my own conversation with God, and
the most urgent prayer of my life has been
answered through that conversation. Every
question I ever had in my life was answered in
that conversation, including how best to pray.
Two important points about prayer were made in
that conversation. The first point is that the
most powerful prayer is the prayer of
gratitude. When we thank God in advance for
what we wish to use and experience in our
lives, we affirm that we have already received
it and all that is awaiting is our perception
of receiving it. Therefore, the power of a
prayer exists in direct proportion to the
degree of gratitude contained within the
prayer.
The most extraordinary prayer I have ever
heard is one sentence I find myself saying
continually throughout my life: "Thank you God
for helping me to understand that this problem
has already been solved for me." This prayer
has moved me through the most difficult
moments in my life into peace and equanimity
and even serenity.
My second major point about prayer is that
everyone may have a conversation with God. The
process by which we communicate with God and
by which God communicates with us is open to
all of us, not just to a select few -- not to
the prophets, the sages, and the wisdom
bringers of all time but to the butchers, the
bakers, and the candlestick makers, and the
barbers, lawyers, homemakers, politicians,
teachers, and airline pilots -- all of us.
God's communications with us is two-way,
not one-way. God says to us that it is not
necessary to pray a prayer of supplication. A
prayer of supplication is a statement that we
do not now have something, or we would not be
asking for it. Therefore, asking for something
literally pushes it away, for one does not ask
for something one already has. In the request,
then, is hidden our scarcity. That statement
produces the result of not having. That is why
all the great sages and all the great teachers
of all the world's mystical and religious
traditions, bar none, have said to pray a
prayer of gratitude. Thank you, God, for
allowing me to know that this problem has
already been solved for me.
Then go on with your day and notice the
miracle.
This
article is excerpted from the book
The Power of Prayer, ©1998,
edited by Dale Salwak. Reprinted with
permission of the publisher, New World
Library, Novato, CA 94949.
www.nwlib.com
Info/Order this book.
About the Author
Neale
Donald Walsch lives with his wife, Nancy, at Heart Light, a retreat site
they have founded in the woodlands of southern Oregon. Together they
have formed ReCreation, an organization whole goal is to give people
back to themselves. Walsch is continually touring the country, answering
requests for lectures, and hosting workshops to support and spread the
messages contained in
Conversations with God. Visit his website at
http://www.conversationswithgod.org/
Dale
Salwak is a professor of English at Southern California's Citrus
College. He has taught courses and conducted seminars on biblical
history and literature for over twenty-five years. Professor Salwak's
works include eighteen books on
various contemporary literary figures as well as
Faith in the Family,
Wonders of Solitude and
The Power of Prayer.
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