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Constitution
3 Prayer

21.
God has breathed his
very breath into us.
We speak to God with the yearning and
the words of sons to a Father because
the Spirit has made us adopted children
in Christ. The same Spirit who provides
us with the energy and impetus to follow
after the Lord and to accept his mission
also give us the desire and the utterance
for prayer.

22.
Our thoughts are not easily
God's thought,
nor our wills his will. But as we listen
to him and converse with him, our minds
will be given to understand him and his
designs. The more we come through prayer
to relish what is right, the better we
shall work in our mission for the realization
of the kingdom.

23.
We pray with the church,
we pray in community and we pray in solitude.
Prayer is our faith attending to the Lord,
and in that faith we meet him individually,
yet we also stand in the company of others
who know God as their Father.

24.
Before the Lord we learn
what is his will to be done, we ask that
no one lack daily bread, we dare to match
forgiveness for forgiveness and we plead
to survive the test. We desire that his
name be praised, that his kingdom come
and that we be his faithful servants in
the planting of it.

25.
We find prayer
no less a struggle than did the first
disciples, who wearied of their watch.
Even our ministry can offer itself as
a convincing excuse to be neglectful,
since our exertions for the kingdom tempt
us to imagine that our work may supply
for our prayer. But without prayer we
drift, and our work is no longer for him.
To serve him honestly we must pray always
and not give up. He will bless us in his
time and lighten our burdens and befriend
our loneliness.

26.
When we do serve him
faithfully,
it is our work that rouses us to prayer.
The abundance of his gifts, dismay over
our ingratitude and the crying needs of
our neighborsall this is brought
home to us in our ministry and it draws
us into prayer.

27.
There can be no Christian
community which
does not gather in worship and in prayer.
It is true of the church and true as well
of Holy Cross. The Lord's supper is the
church's foremost gathering for prayer.
It is our duty and need to break that
bread and share that cup every day unless
prevented by serious cause. We are fortified
for the journey on which he has sent us.
We find ourselves especially close as
a brotherhood when we share this greatest
of all table fellowships.

28.
Though we are an apostolic
congregation
with attachments and responsibilities
that draw us into other worshipping communities,
we in Holy Cross also have the need, in
some regular rhythm resolved upon in each
house, to pray and worship together. It
is especially fitting that we join in
the two chief hours of the church's daily
worship, morning prayer and evening prayer,
and that we all free ourselves to take
part. Beside the church's formal prayers
we also have the benefit of sound popular
devotions like those to the Mother of
God.

29.
The feasts of the liturgical year will
unite some of us as a community but call
others away. Our own feasts, however,
should give all of us the occasions as
a family to pray and celebrate together.
Chief among these is the solemnity of
Our Lady of Sorrows, the day of remembrance
in the entire congregation, for she is
the patroness of us all. We celebrate
also the solemnities of the Sacred Heart
and of Saint Joseph, the principal feasts
of the priests and the brothers. There
are as well the feasts of our saintly
predecessors in Holy Cross. As a congregation
we have our own cycle of observances when
we gather for professions, ordinations,
jubilees and funerals.

30.
Beyond the liturgy
that convokes us into church and congregation,
there is the prayer we each must offer
to the Father quietly and alone. We contemplate
the living God, offering ourselves to
be drawn into his love and learning to
take that same love to heart. We enter
thus into the mystery of the God who chose
to dwell in the midst of his people. His
eucharistic presence is the pledge of
that. It is especially appropriate then
for us to pray in the presence of the
reserved Eucharist. Each of us needs the
nourishment of at least one half-hour
of quiet prayer daily. We need as well
to assimilate sacred scripture and reflectively
to read books on the spiritual life. Members
of Holy Cross will regularly meditate
on these constitutions, which are a rule
for their lives.

31.
Each of us has the need to draw aside
from his occupations and preoccupations
every year for a retreat of several days'
undisturbed prayer and reflection. In
that pause we aim at being solely attentive
to the movement of the Spirit. We may
see our life and our work in a fresh and
brilliant light; we may find the conviction
to respond to the Spirit and to change
the course into which habit and convenience
may have settled us. Prolonged prayer
such as this can be intense enough to
rekindle our love for the commitment to
the Lord, which have a way of burning
low. Likewise periodic days of recollection
refresh our dedication.

32.
It is not merely we
who pray, but
his Spirit who prays in us. And we who
busy ourselves in announcing the Lord's
kingdom need to come back often enough
and sit at his feet and listen still more
closely.
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