Prayers for
the Day's Work, pgs.
27-43
Before
the revival in interest in Celtic spirituality in the last decade or
so, praying while working would probably have struck us as a bit odd.
Thanks to those who have taught us in recent years about our Celtic heritage,
we have discovered that the practice of noticing God's presence, even
in our daily tasks, is an ancient and revered practice. The Celts had
prayers for stoking the fire in the morning, for herding the animals,
for blessing the kitchen before cooking, and many other ordinary activities
of their day. God was found in the details of the mundane in their world,
not just in churches on Sunday.
The
theme of prayer in the midst of ordinary chores also found expression
in some of the later Christian literature. The Practice of the Presence
of God, written by Brother Lawrence at the end of the seven-teenth
century, explored what it meant to be continually aware of God's presence.
The
Abbé of Beaufort wrote that Brother Lawrence "found no more excellent
means of going to God than the ordinary actions prescribed to him by
obedience. ... It is a grave error to believe that fixed prayer times
are different from any other time, for we are as strictly obliged to
be united to God through our duties in their appropriate time as by prayer
in its time."3 And so Brother Lawrence
practiced prayer and contemplation of God while working in the kitchen
or in the
shoe repair shop, just as he did in the chapel.
Noticing
and giving thanks for God's presence while we work--whether that be
work outside the home or work that we do at home--can take a bit of
practice. We live in a culture that tells us that we should "be all
you can be" and that worships accomplishment, not as the hand or gift
of God, but as the unassisted success of an individual. Work spaces,
more often than not, do not feel like worship spaces, but that is because
we define worship spaces so narrowly. God fills our kitchens, bathrooms,
offices, and all our work sites just as fully as God inhabits a sanctuary.
Whatever work we are doing, be it paid or unpaid, we are acting as
God's hands in the world, as this prayer from The Book of Common
Prayer reminds us:
Almighty
God, our heavenly Father, you declare your glory and show forth your
handiwork in the heavens and in the earth: Deliver us in our various
occupations from the service of self alone, that we may do the work
you give us to do in truth and beauty and for the common good; for
the sake of him who came among us as one who serves, your Son Jesus
Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit,
one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
We can
take many opportunities to pray for or about our work. If we commute
to work, we can use that time to pray for guidance and to examine
whether or not we are answering God's call for us with the work we
do. At the beginning of our shift or task, we can ask God's blessing
on what needs to be done. Throughout the day we can take time to be
aware of God's presence in a meeting or an encounter at the grocery
store, to seek God's will, or to thank God for what has been accomplished
and for giving us work to do in the first place. Recognizing God's
presence in our work and thanking God for what gets accomplished reminds
us that we serve God and presents us from making work--rather than
God--the center of our existence.
WHILE COMMUTING
Make me to know
your ways, O Lord; teach me your paths.
PSALMS 25:4
BEFORE STARTING
THE DAY'S WORK
Let
the favor of the Lord our God be upon us, and prosper for us
the
work of our hands.
PSALMS
90:17 AS YOU FOCUS
ON YOUR WORK
Whatever
my task, I will put myself into it, as it is done for the Lord.
FROM
COLOSSIANS 3:23 WHEN
CLEANING
I
will sprinkle clean water upon you, and you shall be clean
from
all your uncleannesses, and from all your idols I will cleanse
you.
EZEKIEL
36:25 BEFORE
BUILDING/MAKING/CONCEIVING OF SOMETHING
Unless
the Lord builds the house, we who build it labor in vain.
PSALMS 127:1 WHEN
ANSWERING THE PHONE OR AN E-MAIL
To make
an apt answer is a joy to anyone, and a work in season,
how good
it is.
PROVERBS 15:23 WHEN
WORKING WITH CUSTOMERS/CLIENTS
Let
the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart
be acceptable
to you, O Lord, my rock and my redeemer.
PSALMS
19:14 WHEN
EXPERIENCING A DELAY
O
Lord, be gracious to us; we wait for you.
ISAIAH
33:2 WHEN
SHOPPING
I
brought nothing into the world, so that I can take nothing
out of it;
but if I have food and clothing, I will be content
with these.
FROM 1 TIMOTHY 6:7-8 WHEN
WATERING PLANTS, LAWN, OR GARDEN
Lord,
visit the earth and water it; you greatly enrich it.
PSALM
65:9 WHEN
CHANGING A LIGHT BULB
May
we, who walked in darkness, see a great light.
FROM
ISAIAH 9:2A
WHEN
THE WORKDAY IS COMPLETED
All
your works praise you, O Lord, and your faithful servants bless
you.
FROM
PSALM 145:10
From Unceasing
Prayer: A Beginner's Guide by Debra K. Farrington, Copyright ©2002
by Debra K. Farrington. Used by permission of Paraclete
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