Posted on 03/06/2015 7:28:02 AM PST by Salvation
Some years ago I was addressing a group of young adults at a “Theology on Tap” gathering. I was asked by an attendee of some ways to avoid temptation. Among the things I offered was to meditate frequently on death, especially at night before going to bed. The bar got very quiet and everyone looked at me as though I had just been speaking Swahili. “What did he just say?…Could you repeat that?” Perhaps my remarks were the right answer but the wrong answer at the same time. In these modern, medically advanced times, those in their 20s don’t really relate to death as a concept or near reality. Meditating on death seems strange and foreign to most of them.
But the instinct of the Church has always been to link night prayer to death, by way of a kind of “dress rehearsal.” Consider these prayers:
1. Into your hands O Lord I commend my sprit. This is a reference to Jesus’ dying words, “Father! Into your hands I commend my spirit” (Lk 23:46).
2. Lord, now you let your servant go in peace, your word has been fulfilled. My own eyes have seen the salvation which you have prepared in the sight of your people. These are the words of Simeon, who had been promised he would not see death until he had beheld the Messiah. Now that he has held the infant Jesus in his arms he can die peacefully.
3. May the Lord grant us a peaceful night and a peaceful death. This is the concluding line of night prayer just before the Salve Regina, where we ask the Blessed Mother to “tuck us in” for the night.
There are also many beautiful references in the hymns of night prayer. For example,
Guard us waking guard us sleeping;
and when we die,
May we in thy mighty keeping
all peaceful lie.
When the last dread call shall wake us,
Do not thou Or God forsake us
But to reign in glory take us
With thee on high.
(From the Hymn “Day is Done” – 2nd Verse)
Teach me to live that I may dread
The grave as little as my bed;
Teach me to die, so that I may
Rise glorious at the awful Day.
(From the Hymn “Glory to Thee, my God this night.”- 3rd verse)
These are just some of the references. But night prayer is a time to remember that we will die and to ponder this with sobriety. Sleep is, to some degree, like death; we become “dead” to the world. We are no longer aware of the rhythms, demands, and fascinations of this world. We are “out” to this world, out of touch with it. We lie still as in death, unaware and disinterested, at a kind of comatose distance from the things that obsess us in our waking hours. And though we awake from sleep, one day we will sleep to this world and never awake, never return to its demands. Our coffin, like a little bed, will claim us. It will be closed and this world will know us no more.
Night prayer serves as a gentle reminder of this looming summons. We entrust ourselves to the care of our Lord, who alone can lead us over the valley of the shadow of death. We ask, too, Our Lady’s prayers. We ask that she, as a good mother, console us and assure us that after this our exile we will see the glorious face of her Son and be restored to our Father in the warm love of the Holy Spirit.
Even if you don’t have time to pray the other hours of the Divine Office, I strongly recommend night prayer (Compline). It is brief and beautiful, sober and serene. It is the great dress rehearsal for our death. If we are faithful, this will be the greatest day of our life on this earth. On that day, we will be called to Him who loves us. Surely our judgment looms, but even that, if we are faithful, will usher in our final purification and freedom from the shackles of sin and the woes of this world.
May the Lord grant us a restful night and a peaceful death.
God, who made the earth and heaven,
Darkness and light:
You the day for work have given,
For rest the night.
May your angel guards defend us,
Slumber sweet your mercy send us,
Holy dreams and hopes attend us
All through the night.
And when morn again shall call us
To run life’s way,
May we still, whatever befall us,
Your will obey.
From the power of evil hide us,
In the narrow pathway guide us,
Never be your smile denied us
All through the day.
Guard us waking, guard us sleeping,
And when we die,
May we in your mighty keeping
All peaceful lie.
When the last dread call shall wake us,
Then, O Lord, do not forsake us,
But to reign in glory take us
With you on high.
Holy Father, throned in heaven,
All holy Son,
Holy Spirit, freely given,
Blest Three in One:
Grant us grace, we now implore you,
Till we lay our crowns before you
And in worthier strains adore you
While ages run.
Yes, I say that one twice a day. I have just recently — past 2 years or so —reconnected in prayer to my Guardian Angel.
Same here. We need his help increasingly against “the wickedness and snares of the devil”.
Yes the devil seems to have become a workaholic.
“Now I lay me down to sleep,
I pray the Lord my soul to keep,
if I should die before I wake,
I pray the Lord my soul to take.”
I always slept in complete confidence as a child. However,I don't say that prayer any longer and maybe I should, I think Father was onto something with his advice. Thanks again for all the work you do in this section of FR.
For later
A second ditto to that
And Michael turns to God and asks, “Is now the time, Lord?”
Maybe so...
I will pray for her today, if that isn’t offensive to you.
My comment was meant as something of a joke. For years now, I’ve volunteered to assist a Viet Nam veteran buddy of mine and month after month, I’d take him to the VA for his checkups, (he had a stroke, then blood clots in the lungs, etc).
Anyway, we’d pull up to the VA and there were always these guys in wheel chairs with oxygen tanks strapped to the chairs, tubes up their noses, smoking away in the designated smoking zone. And yes, I was told by a VA Doctor that occasionally, one of them would go up in flames.
If you tell her I'll deny it the whole thing. ;)
I do BAKER. Blessings askings. Kill (sins) embraced by jesus. Resolve to do better tomorrow
Why do Catholics always read their prayers or pray memorized prayers?
Why do Catholics always read their prayers or pray memorized prayers?In high school, we were coached on how to deal with T/F questions we didn't know the answers to. One of the rules was that propositions that included the universals 'always' and 'never' were generally false.
The Compline prayers would make an excellent close to the evening “calling hours” at a Funeral Home.
Prayers for your mother in law.
Not always. The other night — actually three nights when I couldn’t sleep because of pain, I was talking with Jesus (praying) all the time about his pain and my pain.
You’d think they’d be grateful their person was still alive! Art Linkletter was right: people are funny...
What a blessing! Their feast is celebrated on Oct 2.
We don’t always. Some are prayers we learn as children; some are written by the saints. The prayers referred to in the article are part of the Liturgy of the Hours: prayers said, usually by religious, at certain times of the day, so that at all times, 24/7, prayers are going up to God. These are mostly Scriptural, with intention pertaining to the Liturgical season. It’s sort of the earthly version of Revelation, where the living creatures did not cease to play to God before His Throne.
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