What is mental prayer and how you can do it?

St. Therese of Lisieux. (Public Domain).

St. Therese of Lisieux. (Public Domain).

Catholics divide prayer into 2 broad categories – vocal and mental. Vocal prayer includes prayers written for recitation. Mental prayer is prayer in one’s own words.

St. Teresa of Avila wrote, “Mental prayer, in my view, is nothing but friendly intercourse, and frequent solitary converse, with Him Who we know loves us.” St. Thérèse of Lisieux likewise wrote, “With me prayer is an uplifting of the heart; a glance towards heaven; a cry of gratitude and love, uttered equally in sorrow and in joy.”

Catholics are generally comfortable with vocal prayer, but mental prayer can leave us at a loss. How can you spend 20 minutes or more in prayer without a pre-written text? How can you keep your prayer from becoming mere rambling?

St. Teresa strives to make mental prayer simple and accessible to all. Since each soul is unique, each person’s prayer is unique as well. There is no one-size-fits-all model. The method of mental prayer takes 2nd place to the attitude of the heart. Still, for beginners especially, a general format to follow is helpful.

If you don’t know how to pray, try this

This method is taken primarily from St. Frances de Sales, but also incorporates other authors’ suggestions. Feel free to adapt it to your own situation and temperament.

St. Teresa of Avila. (Photo Credit: Wikipedia).

St. Teresa of Avila. (Photo Credit: Wikipedia).

– Preparation. Place yourself in God’s presence. Think about His omnipotence or His residence in your heart. Quiet your soul and set aside distractions.

– Meditation. This is the key to the conversation. Read a short passage from Scripture or another spiritual book. Or, if you have a vivid imagination, visualize an event from the Gospels. You could even gaze at a holy picture. Although many subjects are suitable for meditation, you should most often focus on Christ. This is how we get to know Him and are inspired to speak with Him. Reflect on the passage or image. You may find it helpful to ask who, what, where, and why. How does your subject affect you?

– Conversation. This is the goal of your mental prayer and should make up 20 minutes or more of a half-hour prayer time. Speak to God from your heart about your subject. Thank and adore Him, asking His help in acquiring virtues you have thought about or overcoming related temptations. Examine your conscience. Think of concrete ways you can change your life, and make resolutions. Offer other petitions that are on your heart. If you run out of things to say, return briefly to your meditation for more inspiration.

– Conclusion. Thank God for the time you have spent with Him and the insights you have gained. Consider how to improve your prayer next time. You could add a heartfelt Our Father or Hail Mary or invoke the saints to whom you are devoted or who are connected with your subject. Ask them to help you keep your resolutions, to bring you back to prayer tomorrow, and to maintain a prayerful attitude all day.

Remember, as the Catechism says, “[A] method is only a guide; the important thing is to advance with the Holy Spirit, along the way of prayer: Jesus Christ” (#2707).

Connie Rossini

Share with us: How do you practice mental prayer?

Advertisement

About Connie Rossini

Connie Rossini gives whole families practical help to grow in holiness. She is the author of Trusting God with St. Therese and the free ebook Five Lessons from the Carmelite Saints That Will Change Your Life. She writes a spirituality column for The Catholic Voice of the Diocese of Omaha, Nebraska, and blogs at Contemplative Homeschool. She is also a columnist for SpiritualDirection.com. Connie and her husband Dan have four young sons.
This entry was posted in Prayer and tagged , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

9 Responses to What is mental prayer and how you can do it?

  1. I learned and practiced mental prayer as you have outlined it when I was a member of the Sodality of Our Lady in high school. I used this form of meditation for maybe 15 years. Gradually my prayer took on a different form, but sometimes I return to the way you have suggested. It’s a tried and true way.

  2. My experience is similar. I learned this as an OCDS postulant. I don’t usually follow it strictly any more, but it still helps on days when I am really distracted or tired.

  3. For me music is a great help. In fact I pray better with music–religious or secular–than with spiritual books. Sometimes just a line in a song is a wonder steppingstone to mental prayer. I also listen to music if I’m out walking–primarily because it takes my mind off the fact that I don’t partiuclarly like to walk for an extended time. However, the music also sometimes turns my waling into a time for prayer. Journaling is also helpful to me.

  4. It’s wonderful how prayer time can be so different for each person. In clement weather (which we don’t experience much in winter here in Minnesota) my husband likes to take a “prayer walk.” It keeps him from falling sleep! I’m more of an imagination person. Thanks for visiting and commenting!

  5. Nancy says:

    What a excellent post – thank you for the inspiration. I am greatly helped by praying (or at least starting out praying) with music. I also want to let you know that I’ve nominated you, from my blog the Breadbox Letters, for a “Liebster” blog award. You can check that out at http://thebreadboxletters.blogspot.com/2013/02/id-like-to-thank-academy.html. Don’t even know if the “rules” would fit your format, but I thought I’d give you the chance to decide :)!

  6. I learned to pray for inspiration as a young mother with three children under five. I always wanted to be a mother and raise my children unto God, but as time went by I found my coping skills were lacking and I lost the Joy of being a mother. Out of desperation, I knelt as you described and opened my heart and mind to the will of God and how to be the best mom I could be. I found an amazing pathway opened to a little program that came with a built-in consistency factor that gave me the ability to manage my skills as a mother and the children started blossoming. Within a few weeks this happy face token system was what brought that joy back. I will ever be grateful for that prayer and answer.

  7. Pingback: Matthew 16 and the papal conclave for kids | Contemplative Homeschool

  8. Nancy H C Ward says:

    I place myself into God’s presence, verbalizing my dependence on him for everything and repenting of any known sin. Then I open my heart to receive his love for me by listening to his words of love to me spoken in my heart. Often I use the breathing technique of breathing in God’s love and breathing out my “self” or my sins or distractions. In conversing with him I journal a lot either during the prayer conversation or at the end of it so as to capture those moments with him. I often receive amazing insight and guidance during this time. I always end my praising him in gratitude for all he is.

    • Nancy, isn’t it great that we can all have our own individual way of praying? It’s like our spiritual idiolect :)–no two are identical. There’s so much room for individuality within orthodoxy. Thanks for commenting.

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s