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The Jesus Prayer
by Metropolitan Anthony Bloom
Those who have read The
way of a Pilgrim are familiar with the expression 'The
Jesus Prayer'. It refers to a short prayer the words of which
are: 'Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me, a sinner'
constantly repeated. The
Way of a Pilgrim is the story of a man who wanted to learn
to pray constantly (1 Thessalonians 5:17). As the man whose experience
is being related is a pilgrim, a great many of his psychological
characteristics, and the way in which he learned and applied the
prayer, were conditioned by the fact that he lived in a certain
way, which makes the book less universally applicable than it
could be; and yet it is the best possible introduction to this
prayer, which is one of the greatest treasures of the Orthodox
Church.
The prayer is profoundly rooted in the spirit of the gospel,
and it is not in vain that the great teachers of Orthodoxy have
always insisted on the fact that the Jesus Prayer sums up the
whole of the gospel. This is why the Jesus Prayer can only be
used in its fullest sense if the person who uses it belongs to
the gospel, is a member of the Church of Christ.
All the messages of the gospel, and more than the messages, the
reality of the gospel, is contained in the name, in the Person
of Jesus. If you take the first half of the prayer you will see
how it expresses our faith in the Lord: 'Lord Jesus Christ, Son
of God.' At the heart we find the name of Jesus; it is the name
before whom every knee shall bow (Isaiah 45:3), and when we pronounce
it we affirm the historical event of the incarnation. We affirm
that God, the Word of God, co-eternal with the father, became
man, and that the fullness of the Godhead dwelt in our midst (Colossians
2:9) bodily in his Person.
To see in the man of Galilee, in the prophet of Israel, the incarnate
Word of God, God become man, we must be guided by the spirit,
because it is the spirit of God who reveals to us both the incarnation
and the lordship of Christ. We call him Christ, and we affirm
thereby that in him were fulfilled the prophecies of the Old Testament.
To affirm that Jesus is the Christ implies that the whole history
of the Old Testament is ours, that we accept it as the truth of
God. We call him Son of God, because we know that the Messiah
expected by the Jews, the man who was called 'Son of David' by
Bartimaeus, is the incarnate Son of God. These words sum up all
we know, all we believe about Jesus Christ, from the Old Testament
to the New, and from the experience of the Church through the
ages. In these few words we make a complete and perfect profession
of faith.
But it is not enough to make this profession of faith; it is
not enough to believe. The devils also believe and tremble (James
2:19). Faith is not sufficient to work salvation, it must lead
to the right relationship with God; and so, having professed,
in its integrity, sharply and clearly, our faith in the Lordship
and in the Person, in the historicity and in the divinity of Christ,
we put ourselves face to face with Him, in the right state of
mind: 'Have mercy on me, a sinner'.
These words 'have mercy' are used in all the Christian Churches
and, in Orthodoxy, they are the response of the people to all
the petitions suggested by the priest. Our modern translation
'have mercy' is a limited and insufficient one. The Greek word
which we find in the gospel and in the early liturgies is eleison.
Eleison is of the same root as elaion, which means olive
tree and the oil from it. If we look up the Old and New Testament
in search of the passages connected with this basic idea, we will
find it described in a variety of parables and events which allow
us to form a complete idea of the meaning of the word. We find
the image of the olive tree in Genesis. After the flood Noah sends
birds, one after the other, to find out whether there is any dry
land or not, and one of them, a dove - and it is significant that
it is a dove - brings back a small twig of olive. This twig conveys
to Noah and to all with him in the ark the news that the wrath
of God has ceased, that God is now offering man a fresh opportunity.
All those who are in the ark will be able to settle again on firm
ground and make an attempt to live, and never more perhaps, if
they can help it, undergo the wrath of God.
In the New Testament, in the parable of the good Samaritan, olive
oil is poured to soothe and to heal. In the anointing of kings
and priests in the Old Testament, it is again oil that is poured
on the head as an image of the grace of God that comes down and
flows on them (Ps 133:2) giving them new power to fulfil what
is beyond human capabilities. The king is to stand on the threshold,
between the will of men and the will of God, and he is called
to lead his people to the fulfilment of God's will; the priest
also stands on that threshold, to proclaim the will of God and
to do even more: to act for God, to pronounce God's decrees and
to apply God's decision.
The oil speaks first of all of the end of the wrath of God, of
the peace which God offers to the people who have offended against
him; further it speaks of God healing us in order that we should
be able to live and become what we are called to be; and as he
knows that we are not capable with our own strength of fulfilling
either his will or the laws of our own created nature, he pours
his grace abundantly on us (Rom 5:20). He gives us power to do
what we could not otherwise do.
The words milost and pomiluy in Slavonic have the same root as
those which express tenderness, endearing, and when we use the
words eleison, 'have mercy on us', pomiluy, we are not just asking
God to save us from His wrath - we are asking for love.
If we turn back to the words of the Jesus Prayer, 'Lord Jesus
Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me, a sinner', we see that the
first words express with exactness and integrity the gospel faith
in Christ, the historical incarnation of the Word of God; and
the end of the prayer expresses all the complex rich relationships
of love that exist between God and his creatures.
The Jesus Prayer is known to innumerable Orthodox, either as
a rule of prayer or in addition to it, as a form of devotion,
a short focal point that can be used at any moment, whatever the
situation.
Numerous writers have mentioned the physical aspects of the prayer,
the breathing exercises, the attention which is paid to the beating
of the heart and a number of other minor features. The
Philokalia is full of detailed instructions about the
prayer of the heart, even with references to the Sufi technique.
Ancient and modern Fathers have dealt with the subject, always
coming to the same conclusion: never to attempt the physical exercises
without strict guidance by a spiritual father.
What is of general use, and God given, is the actual praying,
the repetition of the words, without any physical endeavour -
not even movements of the tongue - and which can be used systematically
to achieve an inner transformation. More than any other prayer,
the Jesus Prayer aims at bringing us to stand in God's presence
with no other thought but the miracle of our standing there and
God with us, because in the use of the Jesus Prayer there is nothing
and no one except God and us.
The use of the prayer is dual, it is an act of worship as is
every prayer, and on the ascetical level, it is a focus that allows
us to keep our attention still in the presence of God.
It is a very companionable prayer, a friendly one, always at
hand and very individual in spite of its monotonous repetitions.
Whether in joy or in sorrow, it is, when it has become habitual,
a quickening of the soul, a response to any call of God. The words
of St Symeon, the New Theologian, apply to all its possible effects
on us: 'Do not worry about what will come next, you will discover
it when it comes'.
from Living
Prayer
Templegate Publishers Springfield, IL, 1966, p. 84 - 88
Books on Prayer by Metropolitan Anthony Bloom