Calendar of exercises

July 2019


A Contemplative Exercise for July

 

The following is a possible framework for the Witnessing of the Word. It can be personalised, or altered: its purpose is to serve as an example of how this Saying might be used primarily in the context of a Prayer Group, but it may be used by individuals if so wished. It is not intended to be definitive.

 

In the context of a group: the periods of silence should be appropriate for your group - probably not less than 5 minutes, or more than 15 minutes.

 

Saying for the month

 “Be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect”    Matthew 5.48  (ASV)

 

To begin the exercise, first spend a short while in relaxation and preparing to be still; become aware of the sounds around you and put them aside; offer this time of prayer to God.

 

Say this introductory invitation to prayer, then keep a further minute or two of silence:

"Come to me, all you who are weary and heavy laden, and I will give you rest"   Matthew 11.28 

 

Introduction to the first silence - a preparation for listening with the mind:

 Be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect”

This saying comes towards the beginning of the Sermon on the Mount.  Jesus says: “You are salt … you are light”.  But how?  Jesus doesn’t give us the answers to all the questions we want to ask.   He says earlier in the Sermon: “Do not think that I have come to abolish the law or the prophets; I have not come to abolish them, but to fulfil them”.  The law of the past is not going to disappear – it is always going to be there.  What the disciple of Jesus has to do is to surpass that old law

Jesus then lists six issues, each one introduced with the words: “You have heard that it was said of old time … but I tell you …”  He speaks of murder, adultery, divorce, taking an oath, receiving an insult, loving your enemy …

What Jesus does is to give us neither a complete detailed ethical rule book, nor even a theological statement of ethical principles.  What he does is to give various examples of how the principles of the teaching of Jesus should work out in practice – contrasted with the rules previously and virtually universally accepted.

What Jesus is doing is introducing a new situation which completely transcends what has gone before.

The overriding principle is ‘love’ – love your neighbour, certainly, but also love your enemies and those who persecute you.  If salt and light seem to be qualities that might separate a disciple from the world, here is something different.  There is a sweeping universality to the love that Jesus demands of us which has no parallel in other Jewish writings.  It is not just a sentimental feeling, but an earnest desire for their good.  Luke gives it an extra emphasis when he records: “do good to those who hate you.”

What Jesus sets before us is a law which is far more exacting than the detailed laws of the past.  The final summary which Jesus makes demands more than ever before “Be perfect as your Heavenly Father is perfect”.   Jesus uses the Greek word ‘teleios’ for perfect.  The requirement goes far beyond any mere legal conformity.  It is even wider than more perfection.  Teleios means ‘completeness’, ‘wholeness’, ‘maturity’ (see 1 Cor 2.6, 14.20, Phil 3.15)   It is a life totally integrated with the will of God.

It is a life that reflects his character.  There is an echo of Leviticus 11.44, 19.2, 20.26 – those repeated words of God: “You shall be holy, for I am holy”.

It is not that the law of Jesus is more difficult to keep – it is impossible to keep.  The reason is that he puts before us the perfection of love which lies beyond our capability.  As we live out this law in our own lives we become utterly dependent on the mercy of God.

“Be perfect as your heavenly Father is perfect”

Allow the words to flow slowly through your mind …

“Be perfect as your heavenly Father is perfect” 

A time is now kept for silence of the mind - between 5 and 15 minutes

 

The silence concludes with a short thanksgiving, and/or repeat the Saying:

 Father, we thank you for the gift of your Word.

Be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect”   

 

Introduction to the second silence - a preparation for listening with the heart:

Be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect”

Every disciple is faced with this challenge.  It is a goal for every disciple of Jesus.  Maybe it is only really accessible to us as we seek to receive it in contemplation.  As we do this we allow the words to become part of us to such an extent that we can leave the words themselves behind and be left with – well, with what?  With completeness, perfection, wholeness, maturity – indeed perfection.

The perfection of which Jesus speaks has also the sense of something that has been accomplished, a conclusion, an achievement.   When someone once asked the saintly Coptic leader Pope Shenouda iii “How can anyone be perfect?”, he responded by drawing the attention of his listeners to a child painting a picture.  To the casual observer it is rather ugly and crude and incomplete.  But to the child it is perfect, the very best that they can do.

So the perfection of which Jesus speaks has a strong sense of the potential of which we are capable.  We know we are not perfect, but what we can do is to move towards it.  St Paul in 2 Corinthians 3.9 records his prayer:  ‘… our prayer is for your perfection.’  From the divine perspective in Genesis 1 the whole of creation was ‘good’, but has been forever in a state of incompleteness and endlessly moving towards perfection.

As we look towards Jesus and see there his perfection in an imperfect world – his perfection shown to us in his life and ministry, in his suffering and death, and in his resurrection and glory.  We are to be united with him and pray always that God, in his mercy, looks on him rather than on our struggles to be perfect.

Just as many in the healing ministry speak of ‘wholeness’, so today we are listening to Jesus speaking of perfection.  Completely unattainable for us in our sinful incompleteness, of course.  But a goal, an aim, a movement for us towards the example that Jesus has given to us, and all the time we are surrounded by mercy, compassion and the perfect love of God himself.

Be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect”

A time is now kept for silence of the heart - between 5 and 15 minutes

 

Conclude the silence with a short thanksgiving and/or repeat the Saying:

Father, we thank you that your Word is alive and within us.

Be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect”

 

Introduction to the time of intercession – we use our will to reflect God’s Word outwards.

Be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect”

In this third part of our time, we seek to allow God to speak these same words through us to those for whom we wish to pray.

We hold the person or people before God and allow him to speak the words to them.  It is the opposite of what most of us are used to in church or in our own prayers where we address God and ask him for things.  Here we are allowing him to speak and to act in the lives of those we hold before him.

Say the name of a person or a group of people, and after a short pause, repeat the saying.

Conclude the time of intercession with words of thanksgiving: 

Father, we thank you that your Word has gone out through us to those for whom we pray.

 

Use the Fellowship Prayer or another closing prayer to conclude your time of contemplative prayer.

Ever Loving God, we thank you for all your unsearchable riches which pour forth from you as light from the sun, in boundless profusion and generosity, whether received, ignored or rejected. And now we offer to you, in so far as we are able, as an emptiness to be filled with your divine fullness, ourselves, our souls and bodies; all that we are, all that we have and all that we do, until you are all in all and we are complete. Amen 

 You may wish to say the Grace together before departing.  

 

A Watchword for this month  …  Be perfect”  ….   “Heavenly Father”

 

                                                                     This month's exercise was contributed by AE