
A Prayer for Holy Week
The days say to us: Enter. Come experience. Come live. Come savor. These days are ours to know. Ours to enter. Ours to walk.

The days say to us: Enter. Come experience. Come live. Come savor. These days are ours to know. Ours to enter. Ours to walk.

This sleeping, this fidgeting, this tuning in and out of worship, this longing, this loving, this holding, this noticing, it’s all worship. It’s all prayer.

I dare an open moment, an expectant silence. I dare to believe that I matter, that God has many things that God would say to me. I dare to believe that God yearns to say them.

But I also need to remember that I must praise God, and to remember I have a responsibility to do what I can to help bring this chaos into a state that God would truly call a kingdom.

Prayer, like a good pickle, adds texture and flavor to life, and offers us a chance to balance a life of busy-ness with a bit of tang or even sweetness.

Is prayer worth doing? The Revd. Giles Fraser writes in The Guardian on what prayer does and does not do. “Can everyone stop all this

Episcopal Church Presiding Bishop and Primate Michael Curry has issued the above video asking every Episcopalian to share in deep prayer for Nice, France, following

Creation Justice Ministries is urging people of faith to pray for the earth and the healing of the planet Friday, April 22 at noon (whenever