My
Daily Prayer
There
is a prayer with which we are all familiar. Although it is called a prayer, in its written for, it looks
like a poem. No one knows who
wrote it or when it was written, even though most people attribute its
authorship to a 20th Century protestant theologian. I say we are all familiar with this
prayer; actually, it is just the first verse that everybody knows and
associates with its title.
This
ubiquitous prayer is found in more varieties of art forms and in more gift
shops and bookstores than any other, even the Lord's Prayer. If you haven't guessed by now, it is
The Serenity Prayer, its authorship often attributed to Reinhold Niebuhr (a
much disputed contention).
Another
fallacy thought about the Serenity Prayer is that it is a creation of and owned
by Alcoholics Anonymous. That's
because the Serenity Prayer is recited at the beginning or end of every twelve
step meeting in the world, and there are over 300 anonymous societies that use
the twelve step approach to deal with addictions ranging from substance abust
to overeating, compulsive shopping to gambling and about 300 other things. But, no, Twelve Step programs do not
own the Serenity Prayer.
I
would venture to say that there is not one person here—youth or adult—who has
not heard or read the first verse of this prayer. I would also bet there are relatively few who have ever
heard the full version, which I am going to read for you now.
God, grant me the Serenity
to accept the things I cannot change
Courage to change the things I can,
and the Wisdom to know the difference.
Living one day at a time;
Enjoying one moment at a time;
Accepting hardship as the pathway to peace.
Taking, as He did, this sinful world as it is,
not as I would have it.
Trusting that He will make all things right
if I surrender to His Will;
That I may be reasonably happy in this life,
and
supremely happy with Him forever in the next.
Amen
You
might be asking why I am telling you all this. The reason is that I want to talk about my (personal) daily
prayer to God, which—coincidentally—begins with the first verse of the Serenity
Prayer.
Next
comes a short phrase about God's will.
Do you want to do God's will?
The correct answer here is
"yes". Well, how
are you going to do God's will if you don't know what God's will is? And even if you know God's will, how
are you going to do it if you are not able? So, after the Serenity Prayer, the second part of my daily
prayer is:
"Grant me the
knowledge of Your will for me and the power to carry that out."
Next,
I address my stewardship of the time God gives me—the only time I have:
"Grant me the willingness
and ability to remain in this one and only day you have given
me
and use it to the fullest."
Then
I pray for the two most important personal characteristics for me as a
Christian:
"Your will, not
mine."
"Keep me
humble."
I
truly believe that my God forgives my sins even before I ask Him. This truth, this gift came by Jesus
sacrificing His life on a cross so that my sins would be forgiven. And even though I ask, every day:
"Forgive my
sins."
—and it is
important to ask—I know that because of Jesus' death, I am forgiven.
I
like and endorse the prayer of St. Francis, and I believe that it is my daily
duty to seek to exhibit the love of Christ, subduing my own ego. So I ask God to:
"Possess my mind
and body and make me an instrument of your peace."
My
prayer is then ended with a summary of its most crucial components:
"Forgive my
sins."
"Your will, not mine"
"Keep me
humble."
That's
it. God is satisfied when I pray
it; He is not happy when I don't,
which leads to the last essential component of my daily prayer, found in its
title:
"daily"
Seeking
Christian perfection is a lifetime, daily activity. My seeking is kick started every day by this personal
prayer.
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