Where
do prayers come from?
Prayers
come from anywhere: inside yourself, outside yourself, and usually both.
There’s no “right” or “wrong” about prayers or praying. There are, however,
different prayer types and, in as much as prayers reflect the pray-er (the
person praying), pray-er temperaments.
I
tend to live a pretty structured existence, so it works well for me to let
prayers simply bubble up or happen along; I’ll jot down notes as ideas appear or
when I hear snippets of things. Then when I sit down to plan worship I fashion
prayers using the scripture and theme for each Sunday as the pattern and my
collection of notes as the fabric.
O Christ, thank you
for making us a queer church!
Thank
you for giving us the serenity to accept the things we cannot change,
including
the beautiful rainbow spectrum of sexuality.
Thank
you for encouraging us to change the things we can,
like
how we view ourselves in the mirror,
or
the way we see ourselves in the eyes of others.
We
give you great thanks, O Creator Divine,
for
those of us who are transgender,
for
those of us who are lesbian,
for
those of us who are straight,
for
those of us who are bisexual,
for
those of us who are gay,
and
for those of us who don’t like categories.
We
thank you, Ruach, for calling each of us not to be perfect,
but
to be perfectly who you formed us to be:
females
who act like boys—or like girls—or are just being ourselves,
males
who appear feminine—or masculine—or are simply comfortable in our own skin.
Let
it be.
Short
is better than long, and variety keeps things interesting. I tend to be
long-winded, so my challenge is to stay focused and write what I mean and, when
speaking, mean what I say. There are key themes that I repeat in my prayers,
but I try to re-word them so they don’t become dull; even familiar phrases from
scripture I might re-phrase in hopes of hearing them afresh.
My
father offered this ABC prayer at my high school baccalaureate service:
Dear God, help me
accept myself,
better myself,
commit myself.
Amen.