Sister Barbara Hazzard on How to Pray Without Words

Buddhist prayer flags, Sikkim
Buddhist prayer flags, Sikkim

By Barbara Falconer Newhall

“Meditation, sitting in silence, is a prayer of faith. You totally let go of being in charge, which is different from what most prayer is about, because as long as we use words, we are in control. Most of us as Christians have been trained that prayer is talking to God. We feel the responsibility to do something, to be active when we pray, but in meditation, you enter it with the idea that you will let the Spirit transform you. You don’t talk, you listen.”

— Sister Barbara Hazzard, Roman Catholic.

What is prayer anyway? I haven’t a clue. These days, when I go to pray, I often find I haven’t a thing to say to God. Every tradition I’ve come in contact with in all my years as a religion reporter and writer recommends — no, insists upon — prayer. Yet right now I don’t know how to do it. I don’t even know why to do it.

That’s the reason I find this passage from the interview I conducted with Sister Barbara so compelling. (The interview was for my book, Wrestling With God: Stories of Doubt and Faith.)

Sister Barbarawas a person with a lot of experience with prayer. A Benedictine monk, Sister Barbara was the founder of Hesed, an urban, non-resident Benedictine community in Oakland, California, which  teaches and practices Christian meditation. (Note: Sister Barbara died in 2021,

Rome's Pantheon: A pagan, then Christian, place of prayer
Rome’s Pantheon: A pagan, then Christian, place of prayer

What I’m hearing when I reread these words of hers is that there are many ways to approach — to be open to? —  the sacred.

What is prayer anyway? Why do it? And how do you pray — with words, or like Sister Barbara, without words?

Comments

0 Responses

  1. Hi Barb! Good luck with the new blog. By the way, the way I pray is to have a conversation with God. This allows me to get those things that we don’t tell others off of my mind, and in a sense hand them over. And I saw your comment about why do we learn all this and then die? Well, think of death as not the END but the BEGINNING. Essentially, in my opinion, it is graduation day! All that we learn has a purpose. I consider this earthly existence to be a sort of “boot camp” for what is awaiting us. Enjoy your life, and continue your journey to learn and explore. There is so much, still, to learn.

    Hope your blog is big success. I will add it to my favorites. I am creating a blog as well, and will send you the address.

    Good luck!!

    Cindy

  2. Hi Barbara:

    As kids we never said regular prayers before bed but we memorized numerous basic prayers (Our Father, Hail Mary, Glory Be, Apostles Creed, etc.)

    Outside of mass where everyone prays together (prayers of praise, petition and gratitude), I mostly say silent prayers of gratitude daily and an occasional request that someone be healed or relieved of pain if it is God’s will. My lack of discipline has made meditative prayer unhelpful.

    Thanks for your blog,

    Rich

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