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Introduction to the Jesus Prayer
by Mother Alexandra
formerly Her Royal Highness, lleana Princess of Romania
and Archduchess of Austria
We were created to live on earth unlike animals who die and disappear
with time, but with the high purpose to live with God - not for a hundred years or so - but for eternity!
I have often read the Jesus Prayer in prayer books and heard
it in church, but my attention was drawn to it first some years
ago in Rumania. There in a small Monastery of Smbata, tucked away
at the foot of the Carpathians in the heart of the deep forest,
its little white church reflected in a crystal clear mountain
pond, I met a monk who practiced the "prayer of the heart".
Profound peace and silence reigned at Smbata in those days; it
was a place of rest and strength - I pray God it still is.
I have wandered far since I last saw Smbata, and all the while
the Jesus Prayer lay as a precious gift buried in my heart. It
remained inactive until a few years ago, when I read The
Way of a Pilgrim. Since then I have been seeking to practice
it continually. At times I lapse; nonetheless, the prayer has
opened unbelievable vistas within my heart and soul.
The Jesus Prayer, or the Prayer of the Heart, centers on the
Holy Name itself. It may be said in its entirety: "Lord Jesus
Christ, Son of God, have mercy upon me, a sinner"; it may
be changed to "us sinners" or to other persons named,
or it may be shortened. The power lies in the name of Jesus; thus
"Jesus" alone, may fulfill the whole need of the one
who prays.
The Prayer goes back to the New Testament and has had a long,
traditional use. The method of contemplation based upon the Holy
Name is attributed to St. Simeon, called the New Theologian (949-1022).
When he was 14 years old, St. Simeon had a vision of heavenly
light in which he seemed to be separated from his body. Amazed,
and overcome with an overpowering joy, he felt a consuming humility,
and cried, borrowing the Publican's prayer (Luke 18:13), "Lord
Jesus, have mercy upon me." Long after the vision had disappeared,
the great joy returned to St. Simeon each time he repeated the
prayer; and he taught his disciples to worship likewise. The prayer
evolved into its expanded form: "Lord Jesus Christ, Son of
God, have mercy upon me, a sinner." In this guise it has
come down to us frown generation to generation of pious monks
and laymen.
The invocation of the Holy Name is not peculiar to the Orthodox
Church but is used by Roman Catholics, Anglicans, and Protestants,
though to a lesser degree. On Mount Sinai and Athos the monks
worked out a whole system of contemplation based upon this simple
prayer, practiced in complete silence. These monks came to be
known as Quietists (in Greek: "Hesychasts").
St. Gregory Palamas (1296-1359), the last of the great Church
Fathers, became the exponent of the Hesychasts. He won, after
a long drawn out battle, an irrefutable place for the Jesus Prayer
and the Quietists within the Church. In the 18th century when
tsardom hampered monasticism in Russia, and the Turks crushed
Orthodoxy in Greece, the Neamtzu monastery in Moldavia (Rumania)
became one of the great centers for the Jesus Prayer.
The Prayer is held to be so outstandingly spiritual because it
is focused wholly on Jesus: all thoughts, striving, hope, faith
and love are outpoured in devotion to God the Son. It fulfills
two basic injunctions of the New Testament. In one, Jesus said:
"I say unto you, Whatsoever ye shall ask the Father; in my
name, he will give it you. Hitherto have ye asked nothing in my
name: ask, and ye shall receive, that your joy may be full."
(John 16:23, 24). In the other precept we find St. Paul's injunction
to "pray without ceasing" (I Thess. 5:17). Further,
it follows Jesus' instructions upon how to pray (which He gave
at the same time He taught His followers the Lord's Prayer). "When
thou prayest, enter into thy closet, and when thou hast shut thy
door, pray to thy Father which is in secret; and thy Father which
seeth in secret shall reward thee openly" (Math 6:6). And
Jesus taught that all impetus, good and bad, originates in men's
hearts. "A good man out of the good treasure of his heart
bringeth forth that which is good; and an evil man out of the
evil treasure of his heart bringeth forth that which is evil:
for of the abundance of the heart his mouth speaketh" (Luke
6:45).
Upon these and many other precepts of the New Testament as well
as the Old, the Holy Fathers, even before St. Simeon, based their
fervent and simple prayer. They developed a method of contemplation
in which unceasing prayer became as natural as breathing, following
the rhythmic cadence of the heart beat.
All roads that lead to God are beset with pitfalls because the
enemy (Satan) ever lies in wait to trip us up. He naturally attacks
most assiduously when we are bent on finding our way to salvation,
for that is what he most strives to hinder. In mystical prayer
the temptations we encounter exceed all others in danger; because
our thoughts are on a higher level, the allurements are proportionally
subtler. Someone said that "mysticism started in mist and
ended in schism"; this cynical remark, spoken by an unbeliever,
has a certain truth in it. Mysticism is of real spiritual value
only when it is practiced with absolute sobriety.
At one time a controversy arose concerning certain Quietists
who fell into excessive acts of piety and fasting because they
lost the sense of moderation upon which our Church lays so great
a value. We need not dwell upon misuses of the Jesus Prayer, except
to realize that all exaggerations are harmful and that we should
at all times use self-restraint. "Practice of the Jesus Prayer
is the traditional fulfillment of the injunction of the Apostle
Paul to 'pray always' it has nothing to do with the mysticism
which is the heritage of pagan ancestry."
The Orthodox Church is full of deep mystic life which she guards
and encompasses with the strength of her traditional rules; thus
her mystics seldom go astray. "The 'ascetical life' is a
life in which 'acquired' virtues, i.e., virtues resulting from
a personal effort, only accompanied by that general grace which
God grants to every good will, prevail. The 'mystical life' is
a life in which the gifts of the Holy Spirit are predominant over
human efforts, and in which 'infused' virtues are predominant
over the 'acquired' ones; the soul has become more passive than
active. Let us use a classical comparison. Between the ascetic
life, that is, the life in which human action predominates, and
the mystical life, that is, the life in which God's action predominates,
there is the same difference as between rowing a boat and sailing
it; the oar is the ascetic effort, the sail is the mystical passivity
which is unfurled to catch the divine wind". The Jesus Prayer
is the core of mystical prayer, and it can be used by anyone,
at any time. There is nothing mysterious about this (let us not
confuse "mysterious" with "mystic"). We start
by following the precepts and examples frequently given by our
Lord. First, go aside into a quiet place: Come ye yourselves apart
into a desert place, and rest awhile" (Mark 6:31); "Study
to be quiet" (I Thess. 4:11); then pray in secret - alone
and in silence.
The phrases "to pray in secret alone and in silence"
need, I feel, a little expanding. "Secret" should be
understood as it is used in the Bible: for instance, Jesus tells
us to do our charity secretly - not letting the left hand know
what the right one does. We should not parade our devotions, nor
boast about them. "Alone" means to separate ourselves
from our immediate surroundings and disturbing influences. As
a matter of fact, never are we in so much company as when we pray
"
seeing we also are compassed about with so great a
cloud of witnesses
" (Hebrews 12:1). The witnesses are
all those who pray: Angels, Archangels, saints and sinners, the
living and the dead. It is in prayer, especially the Jesus Prayer,
that we become keenly aware of belonging to the living body of
Christ. In "silence" implies that we do not speak our
prayer audibly. We do not even meditate on the words; we use them
only to reach beyond them to the essence itself.
In our busy lives this is not easy, yet it can be done - we can
each of us find a few minutes in which to use a prayer consisting
of only a few words, or even only one. This prayer should be repeated
quietly, unhurriedly, thoughtfully. Each thought should be concentrated
on Jesus, forgetting all else, both joys and sorrows. Any stray
thought, however good or pious, can become an obstacle. When you
embrace a dear one you do not stop to meditate how and why you
love - you just love wholeheartedly. It is the same when spiritually
we grasp Jesus the Christ to our heart. If we pay heed to the
depth and quality of our love, it means that we are preoccupied
with our own reactions, rather than giving ourselves unreservedly
to Jesus - holding nothing back. Think the prayer as you breathe
in and out; calm both mind and body, using as rhythm the heartbeat.
Do not search for words, but go on repeating the Prayer, or Jesus'
name alone, in love and adoration. That is ALL! Strange - in this
little there is more than all!
It is good to have regular hours for prayer and to retire whenever
possible to the same room or place, possibly before an icon. The
icon is loaded with the objective presence of the One depicted,
and thus greatly assists our invocation. Orthodox monks and nuns
find that to use a prayer rope helps to keep the attention fixed.
Or you may find it best quietly to close your eyes - focusing
them inward.
The Jesus Prayer can be used for worship and petition; as intercession,
invocation, adoration, and as thanksgiving. It is a means by which
we lay all that is in our hearts, both for God and man, at the
feet of Jesus. It is a means of communion with God and with all
those who pray. The fact that we can train our hearts to go on
praying even when we sleep, keeps us uninterruptedly within the
community of prayer. This is no fanciful statement; many have
experienced this life-giving fact. We cannot, of course, attain
this continuity of prayer all at once, but it is achievable; for
all that is worthwhile we must "
run with patience
the race that is set before us
" (Hebrews 12:1).
I had a most striking proof of uninterrupted communion with all
those who pray when I lately underwent surgery. I lay long under
anesthesia. "Jesus" had been my last conscious thought,
and the first word on my lips as I awoke. It was marvelous beyond
words to find that although I knew nothing of what was happening
to my body I never lost cognizance of being prayed for and of
praying myself. After such an experience one no longer wonders
that there are great souls who devote their lives exclusively
to prayer.
Prayer has always been of very real importance to me, and the
habit formed in early childhood of morning and evening prayer
has never left me; but in the practice of the Jesus Prayer I am
but a beginner. I would, nonetheless, like to awaken interest
in this prayer because, even if I have only touched the hem of
a heavenly garment, I have touched it - and the joy is so great
I would share it with others. It is not every man's way of prayer;
you may not find in it the same joy that I find, for your way
may be quite a different one - yet equally bountiful.
In fear and joy, in loneliness and companionship, it is ever
with me. Not only in the silence of daily devotions, but at all
times and in all places. It transforms, for me, frowns into smiles;
it beautifies, as if a film had been washed off an old picture
so that the colors appear clear and bright, like nature on a warm
spring day after a shower. Even despair has become attenuated
and repentance has achieved its purpose.
When I arise in the morning, it starts me joyfully upon a new
day. When I travel by air, land, or sea, it sings within my breast
When I stand upon a platform and face my listeners, it beats encouragement.
When I gather my children around me, it murmurs a blessing. And
at the end of a weary day, when I lay me down to rest, I give
my heart over to Jesus: "(Lord) into thy hands I commend
my spirit". I sleep - but my heart as it beats prays on:
"JESUS."