Kahlil Gibran

Kahlil Gibran on Prayer

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You pray in your distress and in your need; would that
you might pray also in the fullness of your joy and in
your days of abundance.
For what is prayer but the expansion of yourself into the
living ether?
And if it is for your comfort to pour your darkness into
space, it is also for your delight to pour forth the
dawning of your heart.
And if you cannot but weep when your soul summons you
to pray, she should spur you again and yet again, though
weeping, until you shall come laughing.
When you pray you rise to meet in the air those who are
praying at that very hour, and whom save in prayer you
may not meet.
Therefore let your visit to that temple invisible be for
naught but ecstasy and sweet communion.
For if you should enter the temple for no other purpose
than asking you shall not receive:
And if you should enter into it to humble yourself you
shall not be lifted:
Or even if you should enter into it to beg for the good
of others you shall not be heard.
It is enough that you enter the temple invisible.

I cannot teach you how to pray in words.
God listens not to your words save when He Himself utters
them through your lips.
And I cannot teach you the prayer of the seas and the forests
and the mountains.
But you who are born of the mountains and the forests and the
seas can find their prayer in your heart,
And if you but listen in the stillness of the night you shall
hear them saying in silence,
"Our God, who art our winged self, it is thy will in us that
willeth.
It is thy desire in us that desireth.
It is thy urge in us that would turn our nights, which are
thine, into days which are thine also.
We cannot ask thee for aught, for thou knowest our needs
before they are born in us:
Thou art our need; and in giving us more of thyself thou
givest us all."

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