Shannon Craigo-Snell

Disciplined Hope


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repentance, joy, and love. Other possible affections, such as resentment or disappointment, are discouraged.

      Habits of mind and emotion, cultivated in a particular community, are connected with that community’s understanding of God. For example, a group that views the Holy as intimately connected with nature might develop affections of reverence for the Earth.

      Prayer is a practice that forms affections in those who pray, and those affections cohere with how the one who prays understands God. This coherence is part of a multi-directional dynamism. The one who prays does so in a certain way because of her understanding of God (God is just; I will pray for justice), and praying in such a way shapes her understanding of God (I pray for justice; I see justice as holy). This might seem circular, but it is not a vicious circle, for there are lots of influences and checks that come into play. For religious communities, the tradition itself guides this dynamic with prior affirmations of who God is and isn’t. Some of these most basic affirmations are in the form of exemplary prayers. Faithful Jews pray daily, “Hear O Israel, the LORD is our God, the LORD is One.” Faithful Christians recite, “Our Father, who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name.” Learning how to pray with such examples teaches those who pray about God. These prayers, themselves, are rooted in Scripture, which also teaches Jews and Christians about God. Sacred rituals and writings from other traditions function similarly to convey a vision of the Holy and form members of community in affections that cohere with this vision.

      Another element in this dynamic is God. When we reach out to relate to God in prayer, God does not leave us hanging. God responds. This means the dynamic of prayer is not a vicious circle, but a back-and-forth of increasing familiarity. Some people hear God audibly; others sense God’s presence; some see visions; others simply experience a lessening of burdens or a bit of calm. For most who pray, the received communication varies, and often includes long periods where it seems that God is not present to the conversation at all. Often, prayers for particular outcomes lead to disappointment and feel like rejection or absence. And yet, somehow, for many of us, stubborn persistence in prayer subtly influences our daily lives and our vision of God. We become aware of God as a permanent co-resident of our lives. Drawing again on McCord Adams’s analogies, we become aware of God rattling around the house with us, like a spouse or a parent, and we get a sense of God’s own habits and peculiarities. They start to rub off on us.

      Intercessory Prayer

      The combination of empathy and intentional relationship with God leads to the particular kind of prayer that the virtual community I’m describing engaged in throughout 2017—intercessory prayer, often including specific requests for aid, blessing, protection, or healing for the person who is the subject of the prayer. At other times, it can be a matter of holding a person “in the Light” or in the presence of God. One can imagine the practice of intercessory prayer as standing in the space between God and a person and bridging the distance.

      One of the first questions to arise whenever intercessory prayer is mentioned is “does it work?” What’s meant by this question is something like “does what the intercessor asked for actually happen?” Does the person recover from illness, get the job, have a child?

      In my year of political prayer, I let my own intercessory prayers go public. A community of prayer developed in response, as people prayed with me, made prayer requests, and responded. This afforded me a glimpse into the intercessory prayers of others. I’ve come to believe that intercessory prayer (expansively defined) is extremely common and almost instinctual. When we learn of someone suffering, we want to channel all the goodness of the universe in their direction. We want to comfort them, shield them from harm, and surround them with healing. Our desire for their well-being means that we connect the person, in our thoughts and emotions, with all that we know of goodness and love. And we use whatever language we have at hand—given by religious communities, borrowed from science-fiction, salvaged from a past we barely remember, or invented on the spot—to bring that person to God.