P994:1, 91:0.1
Prayer, as an agency of religion, evolved from previous nonreligious monologue
and dialogue expressions. With the attainment of self-consciousness by primitive
man there occurred the inevitable corollary of other-consciousness, the dual
potential of social response and God recognition.
P994:2, 91:0.2
The earliest prayer forms were not addressed to Deity. These expressions were
much like what you would say to a friend as you entered upon some important
undertaking, "Wish me luck." Primitive man was enslaved to magic;
luck, good and bad, entered into all the affairs of life. At first, these
luck petitions were
monologues -- just a kind of thinking out loud by the
magic server. Next, these believers in luck would enlist the support of their
friends and families, and presently some form of ceremony would be performed
which included the whole clan or tribe.
P994:3, 91:0.3
When the concepts of ghosts and spirits evolved, these petitions became superhuman
in address, and with the consciousness of gods, such expressions attained
to the levels of genuine prayer. As an illustration of this, among certain
Australian tribes primitive religious prayers antedated their belief in spirits
and superhuman personalities.
P994:4, 91:0.4
The Toda tribe of India now observes this practice of praying to no one in
particular, just as did the early peoples before the times of religious consciousness.
Only, among the Todas, this represents a
regression of their degenerating
religion to this primitive level. The present-day rituals of the
dairymen
priests of the Todas do not represent a religious ceremony since these impersonal
prayers do not contribute anything to the conservation or enhancement of any
social, moral, or spiritual values.
P994:5, 91:0.5
Prereligious praying was part of the mana practices of the
Melanesians, the
oudah beliefs of the African Pygmies, and the
manitou superstitions of the
North American Indians. The
Baganda tribes of Africa have only recently emerged
from the mana level of prayer. In this early evolutionary confusion men pray
to gods -- local and national -- to fetishes, amulets, ghosts, rulers, and
to ordinary people.