One Prayer At A Time: A Day To Day Path To Spiritual Growth

One Prayer At A Time: A Day To Day Path To Spiritual Growth

by Lynne Bundesen
One Prayer At A Time: A Day To Day Path To Spiritual Growth

One Prayer At A Time: A Day To Day Path To Spiritual Growth

by Lynne Bundesen

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Overview

A day-by-day path through a year of healing prayer
Prayer is a sacred moment in the secular world. Whether it is a spontaneous expression of thanks, the formal prayer of an established tradition, or the deep, silent expression of Spirit, we have all prayed at some time, in some way.
One Prayer at a Time is a practical guide to integrating prayer comfortably into your daily life. It combines sacred writings from the major religious traditions with more than fifty personal testaments to the power of prayer. With sayings, observations, questions, and simple exercises that offer opportunities for reflection and contemplation, this book expands our understanding of prayer. A section of biblical quotes offers solace and inspiration on specific issues.
Framed by the compassionate and expressive voice of the author, One Prayer at a Time offers a way to understand and accept the challenges and struggles both great and small that we face every day. Whether you are just learning the language of prayer or are experienced in listening to the Divine, this book gives you an immediate voice.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780684825465
Publisher: Touchstone
Publication date: 12/09/1998
Pages: 240
Product dimensions: 5.00(w) x 8.00(h) x 0.60(d)

About the Author

Lynne Bundesen is the Religion Communities Leader for the Microsoft Online Network. A journalist for thirty years, she has covered assignments from the White House to a leper colony in the hills of Thailand, and from Alcatraz to the opening of the American Film Institute. The author of several books, including The Woman's Guide to the Bible and So the Woman Went Her Way, she is also a mother and a grandmother.

Read an Excerpt

Foreword

One way to organize and strengthen our prayer life is to integrate our prayers with the events of daily life. As our calendar merges with our prayer, our days become clearer, healthier, more sure; others are blessed and the record of our time becomes a record of our growing understanding of prayer and the God to whom we pray. You will see as you turn the pages of this book that there is room to note your schedule as you ponder quietly a variety of time-honored prayers, prayers written in our times, meditations, questions, exercises, first-person, and author experiences. The Appendix offers biblical meditations. My hope is that you will use this book as a day-by-day guide to a year of unfolding prayer in your life, one prayer at a time.

-- Lynne Bundesen

Week One

Day One

There is no one who hasn't prayed at some time in some way. From a simple, "Oh God, I hope not," to the formalized prayer of denomination, to a deep, personal, silent expression to the Divine, we all pray with the hope that the Mind of the Spirit will teach us and show us the meaning of our prayers.

Day Two

I know, Lord, that you are all-powerful.

Job 42:2

From one generation to another he shows mercy to those who honor him.

Mary, mother of Jesus. Luke 1:50

Day Three

"I saw the river on one side of me and the Empire State Building in front of me and I said, 'Oh my God!'"

These three words were enough. The pilot of the blimp had only a few moments between the time the huge airborne craft lost power and the time it would fall into the river or hit the Empire State Building.

Rather than fall intwaters; these see the works of the Lord, and his wonders in the deep. For he commandeth, and raiseth the stormy wind, which lifteth up the waves thereof. They mount up to the heaven, they go down again to the depths; their soul is melted because of trouble. They reel to and fro, and stagger like a drunken man, and are at their wit's end. Then they cry unto the Lord in their trouble, and he bringeth them out of their distresses. He maketh the storm a calm, so that the waves thereof are still. Then are they glad because they be quiet; so he bringeth them unto their desired haven. Oh that men would praise the Lord for his goodness, and for his wonderful works to the children of men!

Psalm 107:23-31


Week Two

Day One

Prayer is the language of spiritual sense.

Spiritual sense is a sixth sense. Though not as widely recognized as the five physical senses, still, spiritual sense is innate -- genetically encoded in all of us. Each individual possesses spiritual sense. And as eyes speak the language of imagery, ears the language of sound, spiritual sense speaks the language of prayer. Spiritual sense is not found in formulas but in highly original and often unexpected ways.

Day Two

I will allure her, and bring her into the wilderness, and speak comfortably unto her.

Hosea 2:14

Day Three

I'd always been a good girl. I was ten when I was sent to the convent school, fifteen when I entered the novitiate and at eighteen I became a nun. I did everything I was told and was happy to serve but when I was in my middle forties and it came time to go on our annual retreat I was feeling very burdened by all the demands on me. I really dreaded another retreat where the priest would tell me to be more obedient in order to find relief from all the work I had to do. And then I was sent to a retreat where the spiritual director was a woman and not a man. Instead of telling me what to do she asked me, "What would you like to do on this retreat?" "I'd like to go to the mountains," I said. And so I did and for two weeks I just sat on the mountainside and looked at the flowers and the clouds and enjoyed the sun and the wind, and I thought, Oh God, this is so beautiful. I just lay there in the grass and the most remarkable thing happened. I heard a voice -- it sounded just like my voice except it wasn't -- and the voice said, "Angie, I think you should go into politics." I couldn't believe it but I was pretty excited and I ran to tell my spiritual director and she just looked at me. Well, to make a long story short I went back to my order, asked for permission to run for City Council and now I have been on the Council for twelve years.

I got that water system for the poor part of town passed the second year I was on the Council.

Sister Angelo

Day Four

We all live in a context. The question is, what is that context? Is it theology, biology, an endless round of evil and despair, overworked lives and out-of-reach promises? Or is the context Divine -- the essence of Truth. Is it what our poets, prophets and saints have told us, that "in him we live, and move, and have our being"?

(Paul: Acts 17:28)

What context do I live in, move in and acknowledge as my individual life?

Day Five

Prayer is hearing the Divine Context as if it is our own voice.

Day Six

One test of whether the voice you hear speaking is Spirit is to ask yourself. will others be benefited too?

No?

Yes?

Day Seven

...[W]hat doth the Lord require of thee, but to do justly and to love mercy, and walk humbly with thy God?

Micah 6:8


Week Three

Day One

Prayer is saying No.

Prayer is a resounding No to helpless victimization anytime, anywhere.

No to fear.

No to apathy.

No to being stuck.

Day Two

I call heaven and earth to record this day against you, that I have set before you life and death, blessing and cursing: therefore choose life, that both thou and thy seed may live.

Deuteronomy 30:19

Day Three

It started with a pain in my leg. I limped along in that pain for a while until the day my boss told me I couldn't come back to work unless I went to the doctor. The doctor said the X rays showed I had cancer of the spine. I got my affairs in order and moved back home to die. But instead of dying conveniently I got worse and couldn't walk or eat at all. A second doctor said I might have poison chemicals in my system from the time I spent in Asia. A third doctor told me I could possibly be cured through electric shock. My family sent me to a hospice to die. Still I didn't die. A friend took me to her home to spend my last days. She pulled a chair up across the room from my bed and said, "What do you think this is? Is it cancer, is it an unknown disease, is it a broken heart or something you did in a past life?"

"It's nothing," I said. I am not sure where those words came from but that's what I said, "It's nothing."

She left the room, discouraged. I took a nap, woke an hour or so later , walked into the shower and realized I was standing for the first time in five months and that I was completely well. I went to Italy the next week for the summer. That was about twenty years ago.

Day Four

Dear Miss Manners:

I agree with your theory about how to say "No." But I have tried it, and I just can't stop after that one word "No." It sounds so curt. So to cover that, I go back into all that complicated talk, and get myself right back into the trouble I am trying to avoid. Help!

Gentle Reader:

The way to say "No" is often.

Miss Manners

Day Five

All evil strivings are directed against life. Destructiveness is the outcome of an unlived life. The evil has no independent existence of its own, it is the absence of the good, the result of the failure to realize life.

Erich Fromm

Day Six

Prayer is saying Yes.

Yes to life.

Yes to love.

Yes to change.

Prayer is a resounding yea! to all possible combinations of good.

I say Yes to the following:


Day Seven

Just say, "Yes" or "No" -- anything else you have to say comes from the Evil One.

Jesus of Nazareth. Matthew 5:37
The Holy Bible: Today's English Version


Week Four

Day One

We pray when we love our neighbor.

Day Two

Do unto all men as you would wish to have done unto you; and reject for others what you would reject for yourselves.

Islamic Wisdom

Day Three

I work on the religion section of one of the major on-line bulletin boards. Every day before I log on I spend time in prayer. I pray to be of service, to know where to go on the board and to be t here if anyone should need help. I do this as a matter of course and didn't think much about it until one night, late, just before I was getting ready to sign off it occurred to me to go look at a Faith topic I hardly ever visit. Suicide, a woman had written. Her note had been posted just a minute before, so I wrote her back immediately and told her to hang on and I called right away to the headquarters of the BB service. It was 3:45 in the morning there and they woke up the supervisor at home and he called the police in the town where the young woman lived and they went to her house and saved her. All this took about ten minutes. I was in Hawaii, the bulletin board headquarters in New York, the young woman in Oklahoma. A few hours later the young woman wrote back: "Thank you. The police were here."

Prayer works, I think, even before we know exactly where and how. All the dimensions of this event made me think how many dimensions there are to God, to prayer, to time and to space. Surely all physical barriers were nonexistent and technology was the tool for the answered prayer of the young woman and of myself. Twenty years ago I would never have thought of a computer or cyberspace. Now I wonder what the next century will be like and how much more immediate God and prayer will seem.

And now, quite a few of us write the woman regularly. She knows she has friends in cyberspace and on earth.

Day Four

There are only two duties which our Lord requires of us, namely, the love of God, and the love of our neighbour. In my opinion, the surest sign for discovery whether we observe these two duties is the love of our neighbour; since we cannot know whether we love God, though we may have strong pr oof of it; but this can be more easily discovered respecting the love of our neighbour. And be assured, that the further you advance in that love, the more will you advance in the love of God likewise.

Saint Teresa of Avila

Day Five

Loving our neighbor as ourselves has been interpreted in and for each generation in near countless ways. I wonder myself if it isn't a life's work to know what it means to love my neighbor as myself.

Day Six

Confucius was asked: Is there one principle upon which one's whole life may proceed? His response was: Is not Reciprocity such a principle? What you do not yourself desire, do not put before others.

Day Seven

I find life an exciting business, and most exciting when it is lived for others.

Helen Keller

Copyright © 1996 by Lynne Bundesen

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