Session 90

Session 90  Prayer in Secret

Father Keating begins this session with a question he ended the last session with, “The next question I want to take up is how do you get into this marvelous process of ever deepening knowledge of God, ever deepening unity with God, and ever deepening union with other people? It’s a fact and even physics today, the quantum mechanics and other sciences, are speaking in religious tones, although they don’t mean to; but someone with religious ears notices these sayings with great interest.

For instance, some biophysicists are saying that you can’t have a thought – that is, a mental reflection – without affecting everything in creation instantaneously. So, we know from particle physics that particles are separated by enormous distances, if they’ve ever been joined, react in exactly the same way. When you change the spin of one of them, the other changes without ever being touched, in certain experiments. This tells us that at the source of all there is a kind of universal, what shall we call it, vibration?

In which the original word of God in creation, the Incarnation, the moment in which the Word of God spoke and things came into being. “Word” in the Greek is not just a sound but is any action that manifests the interior dispositions of someone. So, the “Word of God” as a reality has been present in all creation from the beginning of time, from the big bang, or perhaps; before – if there are other worlds, I don’t know. In any case this presence of the “Word” as the Source of everything that is and that continues to support everything in existence so that it doesn’t go away is now something that science is preaching, so to speak, or is offering empirical evidence to back up.”

Father Keating tells us that what we think and how we perceive the world affects all other people.  How do we learn to let go of our thinking that we don’t want to affect the world negatively?  For this, Father Keating recommends “Prayer in Secret” and “going to your inner room” as suggested in Mathew 6:6 “But whenever you pray, go into your room and shut the door and pray to your Father who is in secret; and your Father who sees in secret will reward you.”

How do we access our Inner Room?  Keating begins, “The first thing to notice in this saying is what Jesus calls the Ultimate Reality. He calls this reality not just “Father” which means the Source of everything that is, but “Abba,” a loving Father.”   

He follows this with noting that we need to remain aware that God is “loving, close, relational, concerned, bending over us with tenderness and care, motherly in a certain sense. And this, then, is the necessary disposition to be able to enter with confidence into the Inner Room which, for most of us, is unknown territory.  It is important for us to “Be not Afraid” and realize that we are entering into a Loving Presence when we enter our Inner Room. 

Father Keating wants us to realize that God “. . . is the God of infinite mercy and this is the God one discovers in contemplative prayer. And that’s why contemplative prayer is so important..  “

And “A second important aspect to keep in mind in trying to understand the word “pray.” Remember Jesus says that: if you want to pray. Well, in the teaching of Centering Prayer, we always emphasize that prayer is, above all, a relationship. “  

Our prayer then is to be in relationship with God and to have no fear.  Father Keating notes that fear is used in the Bible as a notation of “alertness” or “awareness”, not the way we perceive “fear” in our culture today.  He then goes on to further specify the results of “prayer in secret” or centering prayer, “The movement, then, is from our ordinary ways of relating to reality to a new way of relating to reality which is simply better, or more profound, or more liberating. Because when we are locked into our ordinary psychological awareness, we’re often dominated by the experience and noise and the tumult and ... our emotional reactions so that we don’t freely respond to reality or evaluate it objectively, but are constantly being influenced and prodded by the values of the local culture or the environment or what people think of us or don’t think of us and so on. There’s a kind of straight jacket or tyranny of over-identification with what’s going on, on the surface of our consciousness that prevents us from experiencing the deeper level which of its very nature tends to be more centered, more peaceful, more calm and more open to the influence, as time goes on, of the presence of the divine indwelling that is there. “

In addition, “To this Jesus adds the injunction: close the door ... to emphasize how firmly we need to let go of external stimuli while we’re engaged in this practice.  . . . The closing of the door is obviously an act of choice or of the will. So, it means that at least in our will, we’ve given up the psychological level. So, if thoughts keep coming down – as they will – they’re a normal part of this prayer – we don’t get excited, disturbed. We just continue to disregard them or to pay no attention to them.”

Father Keating concludes that we can take a vacation from our thoughts and as we sit in our inner room, we get better at letting go of our thoughts and we have more and more opportunities to take a vacation from our thinking, it gets easier and quicker as we sit in relationship with God.  And so, “the energy, instead of going no place fast and being wasted on trivia, will become available for the service of God and for others and for enormous growth of our creativity and everything else that is positive and valuable and good.”