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Pray Anyway

Madeleine L'Engle called it "practicing the scales of faith," the daily discipline of prayer

Daily prayer is a discipline. Photo by Kjekol for Thinkstock, Getty Images.
Credit: Getty Images/iStockphoto
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Like many of my fellow followers of Jesus, I was infected for a long time with an unbiblical and counter-productive attitude toward prayer.

My expectation was that prayer is (like everything else in my life, I assumed) supposed to make me feel good. I expected to “feel” like praying and, when I finished, to “feel” good for having prayed. 

Much of the time, it wasn’t like that at all. 

As a result, like many folks, I tended to stop praying (or to pray very little) because "it doesn't do anything for me."

Don't get me wrong. I have experienced beauty and bliss in prayer. But it was only when I learned to “pray anyway”–to pray regularly, habitually, even mechanically, regardless of my emotions or moods–that I experienced a new depth and breadth and blessing in prayer, sometimes unexpectedly.

Like the award-winning author Madeleine L'Engle, who talks in the video below about maintaining her discipline of daily prayer, even when it does not feel meaningful:

Share your struggle with daily prayer below, and tell us what you do to get yourself to "pray anyway."

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