In the Fourteenth Revelation, Julian considers what the Lord taught her about different types of prayer. She understands the prayer of thanksgiving as “a true, inward knowing, with great reverence and lovely awe,” whereby we offer all our efforts and energies to the daily tasks that are God’s will for us, all the while “rejoicing and thanking inwardly.”
Notice that Julian stresses the importance of rejoicing in the good works we are enabled to do by the grace of God. Not only that, but she declares that our prayer and our trust should never be timid, but “both alike large,” which in Middle English suggests ample and even ambitious: “For if we do not trust as much as we pray, we do not give the fullest worship to our lord in our prayer, and also we hinder and trouble ourselves.” We must constantly remind ourselves that “our Lord is the ground in whom our prayer springs” and that prayer is itself “given to us by grace of his love”; then we will be able to trust that we will receive “all that we desire.” This Thanksgiving Day, let us go deeper into The Art of Giving Thanks. Amidst the festivities, let us take some quiet time to discover a “true, inward knowing” whereby we realize that all we are, all we love, and all we have, come from our Creator who gives our lives to us out of love. Let us offer all our efforts from the past year, our joys and sorrows, our works and forms of service, “rejoicing and thanking inwardly” that we were given the grace to accomplish them! Let our Thanksgiving Day prayer of gratitude be "large" and plentiful toward all those we love and with whom we work. And let us trust “mightily” that the values we sincerely strive to live by will bear fruit eventually. How can we be sure of this? Because, as the Lord revealed to Julian: “I am the ground of your beseeching.” Our longings for justice and truth; for greater compassion for the poor, the suffering, and marginalized; for healing and mercy; for love and peace that arise in our heart during prayer come directly from the grace of divine love. Therefore, how could it be that our prayers would not be answered? This Thanksgiving Day, and every day, let us give thanks that the Spirit is always praying within us: “for we do not know how to pray as we ought, but that very Spirit intercedes for us with sighs too deep for words” (Rom 8:26 NRSV). And let us rejoice that the work of the Holy Spirit never, ever fails. I wish you all a blessed Thanksgiving! PLEASE NOTE: The excerpts above are from "An Explorer’s Guide to Julian of Norwich" (InterVarsity Academic Press, 2018). Copyright © 2018 by Veronica Mary Rolf. All rights reserved. This article may not be copied or reprinted without the express permission of the author.
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In the Fourteenth Revelation, Julian considers what the Lord taught her about different types of prayer. She understands the prayer of thanksgiving as “a true, inward knowing, with great reverence and lovely awe,” whereby we offer all our efforts and energies to the daily tasks that are God’s will for us, all the while “rejoicing and thanking inwardly.”
Notice that Julian stresses the importance of rejoicing in the good works we are enabled to do by the grace of God. Not only that, but she declares that our prayer and our trust should never be timid, but “both alike large,” which in Middle English suggests ample and even ambitious: “For if we do not trust as much as we pray, we do not give the fullest worship to our lord in our prayer, and also we hinder and trouble ourselves.” We must constantly remind ourselves that “our Lord is the ground in whom our prayer springs” and that prayer is itself “given to us by grace of his love”; then we will be able to trust that we will receive “all that we desire.” This Thanksgiving Day, let us go deeper into The Art of Giving Thanks. Amidst the festivities, let us take some quiet time to discover a “true, inward knowing” whereby we realize that all we are, and all we love, and all we have, comes from our Creator who gives it to us out of love. Let us offer all our efforts from the past year, our joys and sorrows, our works and forms of service, “rejoicing and thanking inwardly” that we were given the grace to accomplish them! Let our Thanksgiving Day prayer be large and plentiful toward all those we love and with whom we work. And let us trust “mightily” that the values we sincerely strive to live by will bear fruit eventually. How can we be sure of this? Because, as the Lord revealed to Julian: “I am the ground of your beseeching.” Our longings for justice and truth, for greater compassion for the poor, the suffering, and the marginalized, for healing and mercy, for love and peace that arise in our prayer come directly from the grace of divine love. Therefore, how could it be that our prayer would not be answered? This Thanksgiving Day, and every day, let us give thanks that the Spirit is always praying within us: “for we do not know how to pray as we ought, but that very Spirit intercedes for us with sighs too deep for words” (Rom 8:26 NRSV). And let us rejoice that the work of the Holy Spirit never, ever fails. I wish you all a blessed, holy Thanksgiving! PLEASE NOTE: The excerpts above are from "An Explorer’s Guide to Julian of Norwich" (InterVarsity Academic Press, 2018). Copyright © 2018 by Veronica Mary Rolf. All rights reserved. This article may not be copied or reprinted without the express permission of the author. In meditating on the Fourteenth Revelation, Julian writes about the great importance of thanksgiving. But she does not talk about giving thanks for “things” or “health” or “success” or even being spared from disaster. She considers thanksgiving as a continual state of mind, “a true, inward knowing, with great reverence and lovely dread” (that is, awe in God’s presence). For Julian the prayer of thanksgiving is our ongoing act of worship.
Overwhelming Julian reveals that sometimes this prayer of thanksgiving is so overwhelming that it breaks out in full voice saying: “Good lord, grant mercy, blessed may thou be!” It is a sudden realization of the sheer wonder of being alive, being loved, being liberated from sin, being blessed by God. Indeed, of simply being. At other times, when the heart feels dry and empty, or else is undergoing temptations, Julian admits that then prayer “is driven by reason and by grace to cry aloud to our Lord, remembering his blessed passion and his great goodness.” In such times, she stresses the importance of remembering all the great works (such as the work of our salvation) that Christ has done for us in the past and is doing in the present and will continue to do in the future. We are to rejoice in them all – even those that have not yet happened. Either in joy or in sorrow, Julian believes that when we remember in a spirit of thanksgiving, the power of the Lord enters the soul, enlivens the heart, begins a new spiritual work by means of grace, and enables the soul to pray more blissfully and to rejoice in him. “This is a very lovely thanking in his sight.” In fact, it is the essence of thanksgiving: to know in the depths of our soul from whom we receive our life, our breath, our courage, and our hope in every moment. Giving Thanks Let us give thanks for each other this Thanksgiving Day. Let us give thanks for specific blessings that have been bestowed upon us, and for all the times of fear and suffering that God has enabled us to survive. Let us also take time out from the hustle and bustle of preparations for the feast to spend time in silent contemplation in order to experience “a true, inward knowing, with great reverence and lovely dread.” Then, like Julian, we may feel an inspired prayer of joy-filled thanksgiving rise up in our hearts for the pure reality of God, the ground and source of all our reality: And so the power of our Lord’s word converts the soul, and enlivens the heart, and initiates a true work of the soul by God’s grace, and make the soul able to pray most blissfully and truly to enjoy ourselves in our Lord. This is complete and lovely thanksgiving in his sight. A blessed Thanksgiving to you all! PLEASE NOTE: The quotations above are from Julian's Gospel: Illuminating the Life & Revelations of Julian of Norwich (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books), Copyright © 2013 by Veronica Mary Rolf. All rights reserved. This article may not be copied or reprinted without the written permission of the author. |
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All text copyrighted © 2013-2018 by Veronica Mary Rolf. All rights reserved. No copying or reprints allowed without the express permission of the Author. |