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The Alphabet of Lent – Letter P

P for Pray

To pray – we want to…
We get down to is… we try… but we do not feel up to it..

Precisely, perhaps we should not try to be ‘up to it’.
Because to pray is not to present a performance, or to realize a feat.
We must not attempt to… follow the rules and succeed.

It is true that bookshops and libraries often have many rows of books on this topic.
There are also, of course, many learned spiritual authors and gurus of all kinds who speak at length about this.
We often ask ourselves what to choose and which of them to follow.

It is surprising that Jesus, yes, Jesus himself, has taught us only one prayer.
To his apostles who were asking him how to pray, he simply said (Matthew 6:9-13):

“This, then, is how you should pray: ‘Our Father’…”

This prayer is well known to us, too much so perhaps… we believe that we should move on to something else!
And yet, everything is there!

One day, a read some guideline on the subject: ‘How to pray’ and, to my surprise, the author was saying:
 » attitude, Pray as you can, Pray as you can”!
Surprising and so encouraging!

But praying, is it not this: simply ‘Being with God’?
And being with God as we feel like at any given moment – without fuss, or complication!
Allowing what is deepest within us to surge spontaneously and allowing it to rise towards him.

Not believing that one must be at a precise spot,
taking on a specific attitude,
using prescribed words,
for a definite period of time.

Praying as we can… Praying as we are…
And leaving everything else to him!…

In fact, he has told us clearly (Matthew 6:7-8):
 
“When you pray, do not keep on babbling like pagans,
for they think they will be heard because of their many words… 
Your Father knows what you need before you ask him”.

To this, nothing needs to be added…

 

Source: Images: unsplash.com (Ben White, Diana Simumpande)

World Day for Decent Work – 7 October

Workers from around the world will be holding activities to mark the 11th World Day for Decent Work on 7 October.

This year’s global theme, “Change the Rules”, highlights the deeply entrenched injustice of the global economic system alongside shrinking democratic space and deteriorating labour rights in many countries, documented in the ITUC Global Rights Index.

“The rules are stacked against working people, and that is why we have unprecedented and destructive levels of economic inequality and insecurity while a small number of global conglomerates like Amazon amass incalculable riches for a very few. There is enough wealth in the world to meet the challenges of our time – creating decent work for all, ensuring universal social protection, tackling climate change and all the other things that need to be done to ensure that people can live in dignity on a sustainable planet. But the rules need to change. And to achieve that, we need to build workers’ power. The World Day for Decent Work is an important milestone on the way to the ITUC World Congress in Copenhagen in December, where we will finalise an ambitious and comprehensive trade union agenda for change and economic renewal,” said ITUC General Secretary Sharan Burrow.

“Since the inaugural World Day for Decent Work in 2008, tens of millions of people have taken part in activities in more than 100 countries to celebrate the achievements of trade unions, to pay homage to those who have sacrificed so much on the front lines of struggles for democratic rights and freedoms, and to advance the cause of social and economic progress which benefits all instead of the privileged elite. This year again, unions and other progressive movements will mobilise around 7 October to show our determination to reclaim democratic space and overhaul the rules of the global economy through organising, campaigning and advocating for a better world.”

With the presidential election in Brazil taking place on 7 October, unions will be stepping up the demand for former President Lula to be released from prison. Lula was unjustly sentenced to a 12-year prison sentence and, while he was by far the most popular candidate, prevented from standing in the election.                                                                                                                                                                 

Source: Text: www.ituc-csi.org Image: giortazei.græ