P1618:5, 144:2.1
"John indeed taught you a simple form of prayer: `O Father, cleanse us from
sin, show us your glory, reveal your love, and let your spirit sanctify our
hearts forevermore, Amen!' He taught this prayer that you might have something
to teach the multitude. He did not intend that you should use such a set and
formal petition as the expression of your own souls in prayer.
P1618:6, 144:2.2
"Prayer is entirely a personal and spontaneous expression of the attitude
of the soul toward the spirit; prayer should be the communion of sonship and
the expression of fellowship. Prayer, when indited by the spirit, leads to
co-operative spiritual progress. The ideal prayer is a form of spiritual communion
which leads to intelligent worship. True praying is the sincere attitude of
reaching heavenward for the attainment of your ideals.
P1619:1, 144:2.3
"Prayer is the breath of the soul and should lead you to be persistent in
your attempt to ascertain the Father's will. If any one of you has a neighbor,
and you go to him at midnight and say: `Friend, lend me three loaves, for
a friend of mine on a journey has come to see me, and I have nothing to set
before him'; and if your neighbor answers, `Trouble me not, for the door is
now shut and the children and I are in bed; therefore I cannot rise and give
you bread,' you will persist, explaining that your friend hungers, and that
you have no food to offer him. I say to you, though your neighbor will not
rise and give you bread because he is your friend, yet because of your
importunity
he will get up and give you as many loaves as you need. If, then, persistence
will win favors even from mortal man, how much more will your persistence
in the spirit win the bread of life for you from the willing hands of the
Father in heaven. Again I say to you: Ask and it shall be given you; seek
and you shall find; knock and it shall be opened to you. For every one who
asks receives; he who seeks finds; and to him who knocks the door of salvation
will be opened.
P1619:2, 144:2.4
"Which of you who is a father, if his son asks unwisely, would hesitate to
give in accordance with parental wisdom rather than in the terms of the son's
faulty petition? If the child needs a
loaf, will you give him a stone just
because he unwisely asks for it? If your son needs a fish, will you give him
a
watersnake just because it may chance to come up in the net with the fish
and the child foolishly asks for the serpent? If you, then, being mortal and
finite, know how to answer prayer and give good and appropriate gifts to your
children, how much more shall your heavenly Father give the spirit and many
additional blessings to those who ask him? Men ought always to pray and not
become discouraged.
P1619:3, 144:2.5
"Let me tell you the story of a certain judge who lived in a wicked city.
This judge feared not God nor had respect for man. Now there was a needy widow
in that city who came repeatedly to this unjust judge, saying, `Protect me
from my adversary.' For some time he would not give ear to her, but presently
he said to himself: `Though I fear not God nor have regard for man, yet because
this widow ceases not to trouble me, I will vindicate her lest she wear me
out by her continual coming.' These stories I tell you to encourage you to
persist in praying and not to intimate that your petitions will change the
just and righteous Father above. Your persistence, however, is not to win
favor with God but to change your earth attitude and to enlarge your soul's
capacity for spirit receptivity.
P1619:4, 144:2.6
"But when you pray, you exercise so little faith. Genuine faith will remove
mountains of material difficulty which may chance to lie in the path of soul
expansion and spiritual progress."