Photo illustration by Jessamyn Rubio
January 29, 2009 | Nearly every night, the Rev. Jim Wallis tucks his sons, Luke and Jack, into bed. It is a routine so important to him that he arranges his considerable appearance schedule around it. There, amid scattered storybooks, toys, tangled sheets and homework, Wallis engages in one of the most important acts of his day -- perhaps of his entire spiritual life. He listens to his sons’ prayers.
Wallis, the founder of Sojourners, a Christian magazine and related ministries dedicated to social justice, says making a habit of hearing his children’s bedtime prayers is chief among his spiritual practices “because it distills the essence of Christ’s love back to me. Their prayers and my conversations with them -- well, they are just formative for me.”
Wallis is not alone in his dedication to spiritual practices -- daily acts of Scripture reading, devotion, Christian meditation and, of course, prayer. Christian leaders from a variety of backgrounds revitalize their relationships with God by employing these ancient techniques of tapping into the Holy Spirit. Through such daily engagement, these men and women say they come away not only with their hearts, minds and souls refreshed in God, but also with a renewed strength and passion for living the gospel in their roles as leaders, mentors and examples to others.
“You can’t just preach it,” Wallis said. “You have to have a set of personal spiritual disciplines that deepen your personal faith.”
For many years, spiritual practices were rarely engaged in many mainline Protestant traditions. Reformed Christianity, for example, emphasized an intellectual approach to God. Even many evangelicals have frowned on spiritual practices as “works,” counter to the belief that salvation comes by grace alone.
But today centuries-old Christian exercises are growing more popular among mainline Protestants. Some credit the change to charismatic renewal that spread through the Catholic community in the 1960s and was adopted by some Episcopalians. Richard Foster’s “Celebration of Discipline” was very influential in popularizing contemplative prayer. Others point to Trappist monks Thomas Keating, Basil Pennington, Thomas Merton and William Meninger, who advocated Christian centering prayer and meditation.
Regardless of the exact spark, mainline Protestants soon began to reach back to the spiritual practices of the pre-Reformation church in search of a more personal and intimate experience of God. They turned for inspiration to church mothers and fathers, many of them mystics like John of the Cross and Teresa of Avila, who engaged in contemplative and counted prayer, Christian meditation and spiritual communion with the Holy Spirit.
The Rev. Tony Campolo, a professor emeritus of sociology at Eastern University who has written about spiritual practices, was inspired by the emotional connection to the Holy Spirit he witnessed in the Pentecostal community. But as a Baptist, he found the Pentecostal expression ultimately unsatisfactory. So he turned to the mystical writings and life of St. Ignatius of Loyola, and practices such as the prayer of examen.
Campolo sees the mainline Protestant community moving away from the head-based faith of Calvin and toward the more heart-based faith of John Wesley. “As we move into the postmodern era, I think it is the era for the triumph of Wesley and his sense of subjective surrender to the indwelling of the Spirit and the ecstasies that can bring,” Campolo said.
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