Alison Francis OSCAlison Francis, another sister of the Community of St Clare,
reflects on the same quest for balance.
Work can be organized, but I can’t organize whatever it is we
call prayer. All I can do is attend our daily eucharist and divine
office, and set aside time each day for nothing but prayer. Although
I don’t dare to say I am aware of God during either prayer or work,
whenever I am not wholly concentrated on anything else I am involved
in the quest of God and the question of God, just as I have a
background awareness of the weather at any time. I feel close to St
Francis in the tension between his desire for active service for
others and for complete devotion to prayer, and in our community
vocation a tension between intercession and praise and
contemplation.
In the lives of the earliest monks in the desert we read of
their assiduous daily recital of the psalter, and I notice that even
my somewhat inattentive participation in our recitation of psalms –
combined with the lectionary readings – provides my imagination and
intellect with its daily bread.
Click here to read the rest of this article (opens a new
window, PDF format)
Links to other 'How I pray' pages:
Back
to Franciscan Praying
|