|| Pope Shenouda || Father Matta || Bishop Mattaous || Fr. Tadros Malaty || Bishop Moussa || Bishop Alexander || Habib Gerguis || Bishop Angealos || Metropolitan Bishoy ||
The Contrite Prayer
The Contrite Prayer
There are many characteristics that distinguish a spiritual prayer. One of these is to pray with faith and humility, with understanding, concentration, love, depth and warmth. It is a prayer from the heart, not only from the lips. We would like to talk now about prayer from a contrite heart.
"The sacrifice acceptable to
God is a broken spirit, a broken and contrite heart." (Ps.51 :17).
God never rejects the contrite. The contrite prayer of the tax-collector was
accepted by God.
So the tax-collector went out justified though his words were few... only
one sentence.
The contrite prayer is a
prayer of a person who confesses his sins and his unworthiness.
There is no self-justification in such a prayer, nor excuses but confession
that one deserves judgement. In such a prayer, the tax-collector did not
dare to lift up his eyes but stood afar in humility...
The contrite prayer might
sometimes be accompanied with tears.
It is like the prayer of Hannah, the mother of Samuel and like Peter's tears
after he denied the Lord. But these tears should not be artificial or fake
nor be a matter of boasting that makes oneself great in one's own eyes or in
the eyes of others.
The contrite prayer gives more thanks than demands. In such a prayer one feels unworthy to ask for anything or feels so ashamed of one's sins that one does not dare to ask for anything except God's mercy. In such a prayer one thanks for everything, feeling that one deserves nothing.
The contrite prayer is at
the same time a solemn prayer.
In prostration, it is not only the head that clings to the dust, but one
says with the psalmist, "My soul clings to the dust." (Ps. 119 :25).
It is a prayer that stands in reverence before God, talks to Him with
respect, understanding and humble words.
The contrite prayer is a
prayer of dust and ashes. It is the prayer of one who sees himself as
nothing more than dust and ashes. Like Job after the trials (Job42 :6) and
our father Abraham (Gen.10 ) and Nehemiah in his humility, tears and
confession (Neh.1 ).
"Who am I Lord to talk to You?! It is a great modesty from the Lord of Lords
to listen to dust."