"...in prayer there is petition, supplication to what you call God, reality. You, as an individual,
are demanding, petitioning, begging, seeking guidance from something which you call God; therefore
your approach is one of seeking reward, seeking gratification. You are in trouble, national or
individual, and you pray for guidance; or you are confused and you beg for clarity, you look for
help to what you call God. In this is implied that God, whatever God may be - we won't discuss
that for the moment - is going to clear up the confusion which you and I have created. After all,
it is we who have brought about the confusion, the misery, the chaos, the appalling tyranny,
the lack of love, and we want what we call God to clear it up. In other words, we want our
confusion, our misery, our sorrow, our conflict, to be cleared away by somebody else, we petition
another to bring us light and happiness."
The First and Last Freedom, p.216 |
"At the moment when we pray we are fairly silent, in a state of receptivity; then our own
subconscious brings a momentary clarity. You want something, you are longing for it, and in that
moment of longing, of obsequious begging, you are fairly receptive; your conscious, active mind
is comparatively still, so the unconscious projects itself into that and you have an answer. It is
surely not an answer from reality, from the immeasurable - it is your own unconscious responding.
So don't let us be confused and think that when your prayer is answered you are in relationship
with reality."
The First and Last Freedom, p.217 |
"A man who is fully aware is meditating; he does not pray, because he does not want anything."
The First and Last Freedom, p.221 |