A Thinking Reed

"Man is but a reed, the most feeble thing in nature, but he is a thinking reed" – Blaise Pascal

Praying when you don’t mean it

Though my dear wife is still convalescing, I managed to pop off yesterday morning for an early “said mass” at the Church of the Advent in Boston. The service followed, more or less, the order for Holy Communion from the 1928 Book of Common Prayer, with which I’m not terribly familiar.

I was struck, in particular, by the prayer of confession:

ALMIGHTY God, Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, Maker of all things, Judge of all men; We acknowledge and bewail our manifold sins and wickedness, Which we, from time to time, most grievously have committed, By thought, word, and deed, Against thy Divine Majesty, Provoking most justly thy wrath and indignation against us. We do earnestly repent, And are heartily sorry for these our misdoings; The remembrance of them is grievous unto us; The burden of them is intolerable. Have mercy upon us, Have mercy upon us, most merciful Father; For thy Son our Lord Jesus Christ’s sake, Forgive us all that is past; And grant that we may ever hereafter Serve and please thee In newness of life, To the honour and glory of thy Name; Through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

The interesting thing about this is that if I’m honest, when praying this prayer I don’t actually feel the weight of my manifold sins and wickedness against the Divine Majesty, nor do I in fact, in an immediate and visceral way, find the burdern of them intolerable.

I don’t want to give the impression that I’m completely callous and complacent about my own misdeeds. I have keenly felt sorrow and guilt when I’ve wronged others, especially those close to me. And I can get up a fairly good head of repentance when I think about the ways, large and small, that I’ve been unjust, or selfish, or uncharitable. But I have a hard time experiencing myself as having wronged God.

I think many of us find it difficult to grasp what it might mean to offend against the Divine Majesty. We can see how we harm other people by our sins, but how can God be wronged? It’s hard to bewail wronging someone who seems, on a deep, metaphysical level, incapable of being harmed!

Philosophers talk about justice as giving to each person what was due them. But it seems to me that I don’t have a strong sense that God has things due him. And that when I don’t render to God what is his due, I’ve committed an injustice. The reflexive idea of God that I carry around in my head just doesn’t have room for that notion. Or at least, I don’t seem to have internalized it to such an extent that I actually experience my sinful acts, habits, dispositions, etc. as failing to render justice to God and for that reason occasion for repentance.

But maybe that offers a clue to why it’s important to pray prayers like the one above. Maybe the point of those prayers isn’t necessarily to express a feeling or thought that’s already present in us, but rather to teach us, or form us in such a way, so that we learn to see our actions not just as transgressions of an impersonal moral law, but as sins. That is, as failure not only to render our neighbor what she is due, but also God.

This way of looking at it would underline the importance of a relatively fixed liturgy as a way of incorporating us into the Body of Christ. As Paul says, we don’t know how to pray as we ought, or as Bonhoeffer put it, “the richness of the Word of God ought to determine our prayer, not the poverty of our heart.” Prayer is not primarily about each of us expressing our own unique self, but of joining our prayer to that of Jesus and his church. In doing so, one hopes, we are gradually enabled to see ourselves clearly and speak truthfully about ourselves, including our “manifold sins and wickedness.” We need to learn how to praise God, give thanks, and confess our sins — in our fallen state it’s not something that necessarily comes naturally.

What do you think? Is there something to be said for “insincere” prayer when looked at this way?

6 responses to “Praying when you don’t mean it”

  1. Derek the Ænglican

    I think you’ve got it! 😉 An alternate title could be: Pray it so you’ll mean it…

  2. Lutheran Zephyr

    Yes, you’ve got it right, I think. Of course, you’re wondering if it is possible to sin against God, and yes, it is – after all, it is God who gives the commandments and Jesus who said, “if you do this to the least of these, you do it to me.” Thus it seems that any offense towards others is also an offense against God. Furthremore, it would seem to me that any failure to be faithful is also an offense against God.

    That being said, in the Small Catechism Luther said that even when we don’t feel burdened by sins or when we are unable to name our sins, we shouldn’t feel compeled to make up sins. Rather, we should simply offer a general confession of sin and ask for forgiveness. That seems to be what you experienced.

    I also have some conflicting thoughts about the teaching vs. forming role of liturgy. I think that too many people attend worship expecting to “learn” something, whereas I think the church’s ministry of Word and Sacrament is distinct from its educational ministry. Surely we learn something in the liturgy, but it seems to me that the liturgy is a place where we are formed and comforted by the Gospel, and that the classroom or other settings are where we learn.

    (BTW, I don’t have my copy of the old Service Book and Hymnal with me at the moment, but the confession you quote from the 1928 prayerbook is very similar to one in the Public Order for Confession and Forgiveness in the SBH. Sounds like we Lutherans stole it from the Episcos. If you have a copy of the old Red Book, look it up . . . ).

  3. Lutheran Zephyr

    PS. The whole concept of sincerity of prayer is a slipery slope that can lead to a works righteousness of sincerity, in which one’s belief or confession is constantly evaluated for its sincerity. This is one of the gifts of a liturgical tradition – it is there for us when we feel sincere and when we don’t. Performative prayer, a la the evangelicals, depends on sincerity – or good performance skills – every day. (That’s what a Southern-Baptist-turned-Lutheran pastor told me, from her experience leading worship in both traditions). And yet, as Derek mentioned in a comment over on my blog, over time that liturgy forms us and seeps into our soul and being, perhaps quite unbeknownst to us.

  4. Excellent post, Lee. I was struck, in particular, by this comment:

    …so that we learn to see our actions not just as transgressions of an impersonal moral law, but as sins. That is, as failure not only to render our neighbor what she is due, but also God.

    Kierkegaard makes a similar point in Sickness unto Death. He argues that, while the “natural” (i.e., pagan) man is capable our understanding their actions as “wrong” or “guilty”, the Christian understands these transgressions as taking place before and against God, and thus labels them as sins. This is only possible because of the paradox of the incarnation, which teaches us that the timeless and “unharmable” God has entered historical existence, and therefore we stand (at all times) before Him. Thus, as the Lutheran Zephyr has already pointed out, what you do “to the least of these, you do it to me.”

    Sadly, it seems to me that this distinctively Christian understanding of sin, and its Christological basis, has been largely lost today, even in our churches. Most Christians, if they think about it at all, probably have the “natural” conception of sin. But thoughtful prayers, like the one you cite, are good remedies for this “sickness”.

  5. Thanks for the comments, fellas.

    LZ – I think I wouldn’t want to draw to sharp a distinction between “learning” and “being formed” though I agree of course that there are differences. And you’re right that we shouldn’t turn the liturgy into some didactic exercise – we’re primarily there to worship, after all!

    Thomas – Thanks for the Kierkegaard reference. I spent a lot of time reading Kierkegaard when I was in my early 20’s – maybe it’s time to revisit him.

  6. I don’t know if such a prayer is insincere (though I would lean towards “it’s not” since you seem to want your emotions to be formed by the prayer). However, I do resonate with what you said about not being moved by the idea that your sins are against God somehow. I’ve always had a hard time figuring that one out. My only thought is that perhaps God loves people so much that it pains him when I cause someone else to suffer. Of course “causing God pain” is still different than committing a direct offense against God…

Leave a reply to Lutheran Zephyr Cancel reply