HomeIgnatian PrayerThe What-How-Why of Prayer

The What-How-Why of Prayer

Over the last few months we’ve added much material to the Ignatian Prayer section of Ignatian Spirituality.com.  There’s a new page called “The What-How-Why of Prayer”  that collects some excellent articles about prayer.  See it by clicking here.

You might also browse new links added to the sections on the Spiritual Exercises, Daily Examen, and Prayers by Ignatius and Others.

Do you have a favorite article, video, or podcast on prayer that might suit IgnatianSpirituality.com?  Tell us about it.  Send an email to contact@ignatianspirituality.com.

Here’s one of those prayers, by John Veltri, SJ, called “Teach Me to Listen.”

Teach me to listen, O God, to those nearest me, my family, my friends, my co-workers.

Help me to be aware that no matter what words I hear, the message is, “Accept the person I am. Listen to me.”

Teach me to listen, my caring God, to those far from me- the whisper of the hopeless, the plea of the forgotten, the cry of the anguished.

Teach me to listen, O God my Mother, to myself. Help me to be less afraid to trust the voice inside — in the deepest part of me.

Teach me to listen, Holy Spirit, for your voice — in busyness and in boredom, in certainty and doubt, in noise and in silence.

Teach me, Lord, to listen.  Amen.

Jim Manney
Jim Manneyhttps://www.jimmanneybooks.com/
Jim Manney is the author of highly praised popular books on Ignatian spirituality, including A Simple, Life-Changing Prayer (about the Daily Examen) and God Finds Us (about the Spiritual Exercises). He is the compiler/editor of An Ignatian Book of Days. His latest book is What Matters Most and Why. He and his wife live in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

2 COMMENTS

  1. Ah, to listen ~ open, attentive, focused on the other, bathed in the Holy Spirit ~ present to the brother or sister Christ called me to love.

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