~Anastasia~
† Handmaid of God †
- Dec 1, 2013
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So doing research on prayer... I am having a hard time grasping how prayer is done personally at the home.
I found this awesome site that offers prayers for the hours and simple morning noon evening etc prayers.
I know the prayers at the Divine Liturgy are ritualistic, and I understand why. Does this carry over into personal prayer though? Like this site, the prayers for the hours are long and repitative. Is this okay to pray or only envouraged at Church or with a group of people, alone is it more personal or recited shorter prayers? Am i making sense? If not Ill restate mu question.
http://www.holyresurrection.us/The Hours/hoursintro.html
Very short answer I'll give ...
Our priest usually starts people with very simple prayer rules. The first one he gave me was to say the Our Father at least three times through the day - preferably on awakening and before going to sleep - so that left only once more.
That's the "rule" part. Of course he encouraged me to pray as often as I felt a tug to do so, or as often as I remembered. And to pray in my own words as much as I liked. The purpose at an early stage, for him, is to get people used to remembering God and praying.
Prayer rules usually evolve with the person, and are tailored to each one. Prayer can accomplish many things, so if you share enough with your spiritual father and he knows how to guide in this, you can get a wide range of specialized advice. It's not a one-size-fits-all.
But it is very typical to pray some kind of morning prayers and evening prayers. And such prayers as before eating, before reading Scripture, and so on. There will usually be some formality to all of these, but any or all can include our own words too. We SHOULD pray in our own words part of the time.
Everything else is very variable.
There is a lot of repetition in some sets of prayers. It's important to pay attention to the prayers and not get to where we merely recite them by rote. If help is needed with that, it's a good thing to mention to one's spiritual father.
Prayer does much to teach us, and to grow us and shape us. It accomplishes much. So the answers here can be very personalized.
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