Wednesday, February 13, 2013


IN THE SPIRIT OF TRUTH

This is the introduction to a prayer booklet that I have written for the congregation I serve for Lent 2013.  I am posting the prayers on facebook.  If you are not on facebook, please friend me there.

     I had some difficulty coming up with a theme for a Lenten guide for this year.  I hope that my decision to write prayers related to the work of the Holy Spirit among us was a decision inspired or influenced by the Holy Spirit.
     Writing about the Holy Spirit for Lent may seem to be jumping ahead of things a bit, since we don’t see the dramatic outpouring of the Spirit until after the resurrection, at Pentecost.  But as we look at the life of Jesus, as witnessed to in the gospels, we see that Jesus’ birth is described as a work of the Spirit, and we see Jesus invested with the Holy Spirit at his baptism.  In other words, Jesus’ entire life and ministry are done with the guidance and in the power of the Holy Spirit. 
     If I were to write a more systematic treatise about the work of the Holy Spirit, I could reasonably include discussion of every event in Jesus’ life and in the life of the church as described in the book of Acts.  I have not written something like that.  So, I have had to make some choices: first, I have chosen to write prayers related only to passages that actually mention the Spirit or Holy Spirit; second, I have chosen not to write prayers related to parallels.  So, for instance, there is only one prayer related to the Holy Spirit’s presence at Jesus’ baptism, even though there are four baptism stories.  Third, I have chosen not to be comprehensive.  So, instead of trying to cover all that the Bible says about the work of God’s Spirit, I have started at Matthew and written until I had enough prayers for the forty days of Lent.  This has taken me most of the way through the book of Acts, which means I can keep writing on this theme for a prayer guide for 2014 (a sequel including much more about the gifts and fruit of the Spirit!).
     There is plenty of theology in these prayers if you are inclined to think about a theology of the Holy Spirit.  In some quarters of the church, we sometimes seem to forget about the Holy Spirit’s presence and work in our lives.  Our God seems more like a duality than a Trinity.  Perhaps these prayers will be a reminder of the Spirit’s presence and God’s fullness.
     The primary point of the prayers is to get us or keep us praying for God’s guidance and empowerment in our lives. 
     Please use these prayers to guide you into more personal and specific prayer for yourself and for the life of the Christian community to which you are committed.  Edit the prayers for yourself.  Go off on tangents.  Let the Spirit lead you!

     I have followed my usual pattern of writing prayers in the first person plural, as a reminder that we always pray as part of the church.  We are part of the holy people that God is creating for communion and for God’s own glory.  We are not individual stragglers in the faith, even though it sometimes seems that way.
     I have not followed my usual pattern of providing an overwhelming number of scriptural passages to read.  Anyone who previously felt compelled to read all of them can breathe a sigh of relief.

     I always welcome feedback (try: facebook David Antieau, send a message through my blog, or speak to me at church). If I receive positive feedback, I smile, thank God, and move on with some sense that I’m on the right track in terms of the use of the gifts God has given me, while trying to keep my head from expanding beyond the size of my hat.  If I receive negative feedback, I get a little bit grumpy at first (maybe more than a little sometimes!), then think about the feedback until I have discerned the truth that may be contained therein.  I then try to let that feedback correct my own thinking, theology or writing as it seems appropriate.

     If I haven’t lost you already, I pray that the Holy Spirit will guide and empower you for your journey of faith as you pray these prayers and add your own.

David K. Antieau
Pastor
St. Nicolai United Church of Christ

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