Luke 18:9-14
Jesus addressed this parable to those who were
convinced of their own righteousness and despised everyone else. "Two
people went up to the Temple area to pray;
one was a Pharisee and the other was a
tax collector. The Pharisee took up his position and spoke
this prayer to himself, ´O God, I thank you
that I am not like the rest of humanity --
greedy, dishonest, adulterous -- or even like this tax
collector. I fast twice a week, and I pay
tithes on my whole income.´ But the tax collector stood
off at a distance and would not even raise
his eyes to heaven but beat his breast and
prayed, ´O God, be merciful to me a sinner.´ I
tell you, the latter went home justified, not the
former; for everyone who exalts himself will be humbled, and
the one who humbles himself will be exalted."
Introductory
Prayer: Lord, I believe in you. I believe that
you have created me and redeemed me from sin.
I believe that everything that is good in my
life comes from you : my existence, my faith, my
education, what virtues I have. I come to you
today in prayer to place my life before you. I
know that you are the source of all goodness
in me. So often I wonder if I really
know how to pray. I wonder how fruitful my prayer
is. In the face of my misery I offer
you the one thing I know I can offer: my
humility before your majesty.
Petition: Lord, help
me to be humble when I approach you in prayer
1.
Parallel Monologues, Not Conversation: The Pharisee went up to
the Temple to pray. We can assume that his intention
was to talk with God. As he stood there
in the Temple, he thought he was praying: he
was in the right place, he was facing the right
direction, he seemed to be doing the right thing.
But his prayer was contorted. In fact it was not
prayer at all; it was a self-righteous discourse. If
a friend were to ask him the next day
if he had said his prayers, he would have said,
“Yes.” Is my own prayer sometimes a false prayer
like the Pharisee’s? Do I think I am praying, doing
all of the right things, but in reality not
praying at all and only justifying myself?
2. The Bare
Minimum Does Not Satisfy: The poor Pharisee gets painted
as the “bad guy” in this parable. But in reality
he is not an outwardly evil person. He does
not commit grave sins. He is honest, faithful to
his wife, generous in his giving. But his pride blinds
him to a much deeper relationship with God. He
lives his religion as the bare minimum of not
committing grave sins. His prayer is sterile. I must examine
myself to make sure I am not doing the
same, thinking I am doing all the right things but
in reality barely living my faith. God does not
ask us simply to avoid evil. He invites us
to do good. True generosity is what brings peace and
fulfillment to our lives.
3. Humility - An Essential Element
of Prayer: The tax collector is justified not because he
has done all of the right things, but because
he has the humility to recognize his own sinfulness.
Perhaps he even heard what the Pharisee was saying and
it moved him all the more to plead for
God’s mercy. One of the most important characteristics of our
prayer is that it be humble. When we go
to pray we must approach God recognizing our sinfulness
and weakness and the fact that we have received
everything good that we have from him. This is what
makes our prayer fruitful. God loves a humble, contrite
heart.
Conversation with Christ: Dear Lord, grant
me a humble, contrite heart. You know my misery.
I offer you the misery of my sinfulness so that
you can purify it and do with it as
you will. I do not want to live my life
merely avoiding the big sins. I want to have
a deep and intimate relationship with you founded on
substantial humility.
Resolution: I will always make an
act of humility at the beginning of my prayer.