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1170809_archivum__old_library_I consume a lot of books. There are bookshelves in nearly every room of my house and extra book stacks on the floor for easy access. Some books provide me important information, like how to cook chicken with goat cheese and balsamic syrup. Others mess with my insides and meddle with my thoughts long after I’ve finished reading.

In Living Prayer, Robert Benson refers to the latter kind of book reading as formational reading. It is “reading that is not about our working on the stuff that is written on the page, it is about the stuff on the page working on us.”

Books that form me become my mentors and friends. Their authors can be blamed for much of the change that the Spirit works within my damaged soul, altering me more and more into the image of Christ. This renovation process is not comfortable, but one I suspect the writers of the books I read have already been through themselves.

Robert Benson is one of those authors. I’ve read most of his books—laughing, crying and arguing with him all the way through each of them. Mark Buchanan is another mentor that interferes with my sainthood by humorously peeling away my smug assumptions and leaving me clinging to Jesus. Then there is Joan Chittister who sometimes causes me to wonder if she is a Christian, then sneaks up behind me and knocks me down with wisdom culled from her relationship with Jesus.

Someday, in eternity future, I intend to sit down with these authors and thank them for their contribution to my spiritual development. We’ll drink coffee with heavy cream in the Great Library of the King, and eat chicken with goat cheese and balsamic syrup while discussing the Spirit’s work of using words to transform us. I hope you’ll join us. If so, I’ll introduce you to Robert, Mark, Joan, and many others.

What book are you currently reading that is working on you—a book that is messing with your insides and meddling with your thoughts?

In Him together, Susan Gaddis

464959_angelicPraying the hours, or fixed-hour prayer, is a corporate melody of prayer from believers to the Holy. This shared dialogue of worship is offered to God and for God as a type of communal prayer presented to the One who calls us by His name. In an earlier post we introduced this ancient spiritual discipline. I like to dig a little deeper in this post.

Practice

The Jewish people and the early church offered prayers at certain hours of each day. Many branches of Christianity still include praying the hours. Such prayer services include a call to prayer, a psalm, a hymn of praise, Scripture readings and formal prayers based on the Scriptures.

Also called the daily office, praying the hours can be practiced as a church community or in a small group. Prayed alone, I sense the connection with others throughout the world who are praying the same words at the same time–distant, yet together in spirit. Praying the hours secures my day when the rest of my schedule seems hectic. Like an old friend, the daily office can be boring at times, yet comfortable and secure.

“The truth is that for most of the time—for all time, according to the ones that have gone before us—the office has a kind of mundane, everyday sort of feeling. There is a blessed ordinariness to it. The daily office is not called daily for nothing, you know,” says Robert Benson in his book, In Constant Prayer. (For more on this excellent book, click on its cover in the sidebar.)

Perspective 

The daily office is enriched when viewed from the perspective of varying Christian traditions. For several years, I have cracked open Celtic Daily Prayer throughout the day. Recently I picked up the Divine Hours series by Phyllis Tickle, one of my favorite Episcopalian authors and founding editor of the Religion Department of Publishers Weekly. I’m currently using her book, Christmastide: Prayers for Advent Through Epiphany from The Divine Hours—quite a jump for a Charismatic girl.

Most of my prayer life has centered on the Charismatic tradition of supplication, spiritual warfare, and an intercessor’s stance as a watchman. Intercessors, God’s End-time Vanguard is the result of walking in that arena of prayer. I’ve also enjoyed the ancient practice of contemplative prayer. Incorporating the daily office into my routine has increased my learning curve and stretched me into new ways of praying.

Preview 

Interested? Vineyard Church of Ann Arbor gained permission to post the Divine Hours by Phyllis Tickle on their website. This is a great place to explore and gain some experience in the practice of fixed-hour prayer. “Phyllis Tickle Responds” is an insightful article providing the history of fixed-hour prayer and some common sense advice for living out this type of prayer in the midst of a busy life.

I’d love to hear and learn from those of you who practice fixed-hour prayer or are just looking into the possibility of using it as a way to ignite the holy in your daily.

In Him together, Susan Gaddis

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