Making Prayer Personal

by Fr. Jeremiah Shryock CFR

Perhaps the greatest fruit of a deepening prayer life is not the accumulation of insights about God, but the gradual realization that the living God is not something to be comprehended at all. God is not an object we can master by thought, nor is He a mystery that can be comprehended through strenuous intellectual effort. He is unlike anyone and anything that we know, whether in experience or theory. What is most necessary in our relationship with God- and what this means concretely in the life of prayer- is not a mind that penetrates His innermost secrets, but a heart that remains open and vulnerable, even when it cannot fully comprehend the Mystery before it.   

 This does not imply, of course, that reason and intellect are irrelevant in the life of prayer. On the contrary, they are gifts from God that must be used appropriately. Yet, like everything in this world, they have their limits. Therefore, every serious person of prayer must eventually reach a point where thinking about God must give way to being with God. Thus, an essential question for every person of prayer arises: during prayer, am I merely reflecting on God, or am I opening my heart to His presence? In other words, is God primarily an idea I contemplate, or is He Someone to whom I entrust myself?

If God is not a personal and loving presence for me, then prayer becomes merely an intellectual exercise or a retreat into one’s imagination. But when we open our hearts to God in all His mystery, a quiet and intimate relationship begins to unfold. Gradually, we come to experience God and acquire a knowledge of Him that our thinking and reasoning could never attain. God is no longer a concept or a conclusion drawn from reason, but a loving presence who stands quietly at the door of the heart, waiting to be welcomed. Without such vulnerability, one’s knowledge of God will always remain immature, regardless of education or theological depth. The reason is simple: without vulnerability, there can be no real intimacy, and without intimacy there can be no true knowledge of another. If we desire to truly know God, we must dare to open our hearts to Him, trusting that the moment we do, our knowledge of God will reach a depth that thought alone could never achieve.

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Image: Unsplash

Fr. Jeremiah Shryock CFR

Fr. Jeremiah Myriam Shryock CFR, is from Barto, PA. He graduated from Kutztown University in Kutztown, PA in 2002 where he studied Philosophy and professional writing. In September of 2002 he entered the Community of Franciscan Friars of the Renewal (CFR) and was ordained a priest in 2011 by Cardinal Timothy Dolan in St. Patricks’ Cathedral in New York City. In 2014 he completed studies in spiritual direction at Our Lady of Divine Providence School of spiritual direction in Clearwater, FL. Throughout his time as a Franciscan, he has participated in his community’s charism of hands-on work with the poor and preaching. He lived for three years as a hermit at the Monastery of Bethlehem in Livingston Manor, NY and now currently lives in San Juan Diego Friary in Albuquerque, New Mexico where he preaches retreats, is a spiritual director and conducts parish missions on either the spiritual life or Mary.
He is author of Amid Passing Things: Life, Prayer, and Relationship with God, Mary and the Interior Life, and Let Him Lead: An Invitation to Let Jesus Guide Your Heart and Your Life (2025). For more information, visit his website at: fatherjeremiah.com and follow him on Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/father_jeremiah/</a.

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