Relevant 
    books 
    available at Amazon 
    Texts 
       
    Henry Chadwick 
    Contra Celsum 
    (Translation) ---------- 
         
    Rowan Greer (Editor)  
    Exhortation to Martyrdom, Prayer (Classics of Western Spirituality) 
    ---------- 
    General Works 
       
    
    John A. McGuckin, 
    The Westminister Handbook to Origen 
    ---------- 
       
    Joseph W. Trigg 
    Origen ---------- 
       
    E. A. D. Lauro  
    The Soul and Spirit of Scripture within Origen's Exegesis 
    ---------- 
       
    R. P. C. Hanson 
    Allegory and Event: A Study of the Sources and Significance of Origen's 
    Interpretation of Scripture ---------- 
       
    Hans Urs von Balthasar 
    Origen: Spirit and Fire - A Thematic Anthology of His Writings 
    ----------    | 
 FORMALITIES OF PRAYER: CONCLUSION 
 
I think it not out of place to add, by way of completing my task in reference to 
prayer, a somewhat elementary discussion of such matters as the disposition and 
the posture that is right for one who prays, the place where one ought to pray, 
the direction towards which one ought except in any special circumstances to 
look, and the time suitable and marked out for prayer. The seat of disposition 
is to be found in the soul, that of the posture in the body. Thus Paul, as we 
observed above, suggests the disposition in speaking of the duty of praying 
without anger and disputation and the posture in the words lifting up holy 
hands, which he seems to me to have taken from the Psalms where it stands 
thus—the lifting up of my hands as evening sacrifice; as to the place I desire 
therefore that men pray in every place, and as to the direction in the Wisdom of 
Solomon: that it might be known that it is right to go before the sun to give 
thanks to you and to intercede with you towards the dawn of light. 
 
Accordingly it seems to me that one who is about to enter upon prayer ought 
first to have paused awhile and prepared himself to engage in prayer throughout 
more earnestly and intently, to have cast aside every distraction and confusion 
of thought, to have bethought him to the best of his ability of the greatness of 
Him whom he is approaching and of the impiety of approaching Him frivolously and 
carelessly and, as it were, in contempt, and to have put away everything alien. 
He ought thus to enter upon prayer with his soul, as it were, extended before 
his hands, and his mind intent on God before his eyes, and his intellect raised 
from earth and set toward the Lord of All before his body stands. Let him put 
away all resentment against any real or imagined injurer in proportion to his 
desire for God not to bear resentment against himself in turn for his injuries 
and sins against many of his neighbors or any wrong deeds whatsoever upon his 
conscience. Of all the innumerable dispositions of the body that, accompanied by 
outstretching of the hands and upraising of the eyes, standing is 
preferred—inasmuch as one thereby wears in the body also the image of the 
devotional characteristics that become the soul. I say that these things ought 
to be observed by preference except in any special circumstances, for in special 
circumstances, by reason of some serious foot disease one may upon occasion 
quite properly pray sitting, or by reason of fevers or similar illnesses, lying, 
and indeed owing to circumstances, if, let us say, we are on a voyage or if our 
business does not permit us to retire to pay our debt of prayer, we may pray 
without any outward sign of doing so. 
 
Moreover, one must know that kneeling is necessary when he is about to arraign 
his personal sins against God with supplication for their healing and 
forgiveness, because it is a symbol of submission and subjection. For Paul says; 
For this cause I bow my knees unto the Father from whom is all fatherhood named 
in heaven and on earth. It may be termed spiritual kneeling, because of the 
submission and self-humiliation of every being to God in the name of Jesus, that 
the apostle appears to indicate in the words: that in the name of Jesus every 
knee should bow in heaven and on earth and under the earth. It should not be 
supposed that beings in heaven have bodies so fashioned as actually to possess 
knees, since their bodies have been described possibly as spherical in form by 
those who have discussed these matters more minutely. He who refuses to admit 
this will also, unless he outrages reason, admit the uses of each of the members 
in order that nothing fashioned for them by God may be in vain. One falls into 
error on either hand, whether he shall assert that bodily members have been 
brought into being by God for them in vain and not for their proper work, or 
shall say that the internal organs, the intestine included, perform their proper 
uses even in heavenly beings. Exceedingly foolish will it be to think that it is 
only their surface, as with statues, that is human in form and nothing further 
underneath. This much discussion will suffice, then, of kneeling and of seeing 
that: in the name of Jesus every knee shall bow in heaven and on earth and under 
the earth. To the same effect, it is written by the prophet: To me every knee 
shall bow.  
 
In regard to place, it should be known that every place is rendered fit for 
prayer by one who prays rightly, for in every place sacrifice is offered to me . 
. . says the Lord, and I desire therefore that men pray in every place. But to 
secure the performance of one’s prayers in peace without distraction, the rule 
is for every man to make choice, if possible, of what I may term the most solemn 
spot in his house before he prays, considering in addition to his general 
examination of it, whether any violation of law or right has not been done in 
the place in which he is praying, so as to have made not only himself but also 
the place of his personal prayer of such a nature that the regard of God has 
fled from it. And in reference to this matter of place, lengthy consideration 
leads me to say what may seem to be harsh, but what, if one inquires into it 
carefully, may possibly not invite contempt, namely that it is a question 
whether it is reverent and pure to intercede with God in the place of that union 
which is not unlawful but is conceded by the Apostle’s word by way of indulgence 
not injunction. For if it is not possible to give oneself to prayer as one ought 
without devoting oneself to it by agreement for a season, the matter of the 
place also may possibly deserve to be considered if possible. 
 
Yet there is a certain helpful charm in a place of prayer being the spot in 
which believers meet together. Also it may well be that the assemblies of 
believers also are attended by angelic powers, by the powers of our Lord and 
Savior himself, and indeed by the spirits of saints, including those already 
fallen asleep, certainly of those still in life, though just how is not easy to 
say. In reference to angels we may reason thus: If an angel of the Lord shall 
encamp round about those that fear Him and shall deliver them, and if Jacob’s 
words are true, not only of himself but to all who have devoted themselves to 
God, when we understand him to say the angel who delivers me from all evil . . . 
it is natural to infer that, when a number of men are genuinely met for Christ’s 
glory, that angel of each man—who is round about each of those that fear—will 
encamp with the man with whose guardianship and stewardship he has been 
entrusted, so that when saints assemble together there is a twofold church, the 
one of men the other of angels. And although it is only the prayer of Tobit, and 
after him of Sarah who later became his daughter-in-law owing to her marriage to 
Tobias, that Raphael says he has offered up as a memorial, what happens when 
several are linked in one mind and conviction and are formed into one body in 
Christ? In reference to the presence of the power of the Lord with the church 
Paul says: you being gathered together with my spirit and with the power of the 
Lord Jesus, implying that the Lord Jesus’ power is not only with the Ephesians 
but also with the Corinthians. And if Paul, while still wearing the body, 
believed that he assisted in Corinth with his spirit, we need not abandon the 
belief that the blessed departed in spirit also, perhaps more than one who is in 
the body, make their way likewise into the churches. For that reason we ought 
not to despise prayer in churches, recognizing that it possesses a special 
virtue for him who genuinely joins in. 
 
And just as Jesus’ power and the spirit of Paul and similar men, and the angels 
of the Lord who encamp round about each of the saints, are associated and join 
with those who genuinely assemble themselves together, so we may conjecture that 
if any man be unworthy of a holy angel and give himself up through sin and 
transgressions in contempt of God to a devil’s angel, he will perhaps, in the 
event of those like him being few, not long escape that providence of those 
angels which oversee the church by the authority of the divine will and will 
bring the misdeeds of such persons to general knowledge; whereas if such persons 
become numerous and meet as mere human societies with business of the more 
material sort, they will not be overseen. That is shown in Isaiah when the Lord 
says: neither if you shall come to appear before me; for I will turn away my 
eyes from you, and even if you multiply your supplication I will not pay 
attention. For in place of the already mentioned twofold company of saintly men 
and blessed angels there may, on the other hand, be a twofold association of 
impious men and evil angels. Of such a congregation it might be said alike by 
holy angels and by pious men: I sat not down with the council of vanity, and 
with transgressors I will not enter in; I hated the church of evildoers and with 
the impious I will not sit down.  
 
I think that it was also for such a reason that the people in Jerusalem and the 
whole of Judea, having come to be in a state of great sinfulness, became subject 
to their enemies through the abandonment by God and the overshielding angels and 
the saving work of saintly men—having become people who have abandoned the Law. 
For whole gatherings are at times thus abandoned to fall into temptation in 
order that even that which they seem to have may be taken away from them. Like 
the fig tree that was cursed and taken away from the roots because it had not 
given fruit to the hungering Jesus, they wither and lose any little amount they 
once had of lively power according to faith. So much for what seem to me to have 
been necessary observations in considering the place of prayer and in setting 
forth its special virtue in respect to place in the case of the meetings of 
saintly men who come together reverently in churches.  
 
A few words may now be added in reference to the direction in which one ought to 
look in prayer. Of the four directions, the North, South, East, and West, who 
would not at once admit that the East clearly indicates the duty of praying with 
the face turned towards it with the symbolic suggestion that the soul is looking 
upon the dawn of the true light? Should anyone, however, prefer to direct his 
intercessions according to the aperture of the house, whichever way the doors of 
the house may face, saying that the sight of heaven appeals to one with a 
certain attraction greater than the view of the wall, and the eastward part of 
the house having no opening, we may say to him that since it is by human 
arrangement that houses are open in this or that direction but by nature that 
the East is preferred to all the other directions, the natural is to be set 
before the artificial. Besides, on that view why should one who wished to pray 
when in the open country pray to the East in preference to the West? If, in the 
one case it is reasonable to prefer the East, why should the same not be done in 
every case? Enough on that subject. 
 
I have still to treat the topics of prayer, and therewith I purpose to bring 
this treatise to an end. Four topics which I have found scattered throughout the 
Scriptures appear to me to deserve mention, and according to these everyone 
should organize their prayer. The topics are as follows: In the beginning and 
opening of prayer, glory is to be ascribed according to one’s ability to God, 
through Christ who is to be glorified with Him, and in the Holy Spirit who is to 
be proclaimed with Him. Thereafter, one should put thanksgivings: common 
thanksgivings—into which he introduces benefits conferred upon men in 
general—and thanksgivings for things which he has personally received from God. 
After thanksgiving it appears to me that one ought to become a powerful accuser 
of one’s own sins before God and ask first for healing with a view to being 
released from the habit which brings on sin, and secondly for forgiveness for 
past actions. After confession it appears to me that one ought to append as a 
fourth element the asking for the great and heavenly things, both personal and 
general, on behalf of one’s nearest and dearest. And last of all, one should 
bring prayer to an end ascribing glory to God through Jesus Christ in the Holy 
Spirit.  
 
As I already said, I have found these points scattered throughout the 
scriptures. The element of glorious ascription occurs in these words in the one 
hundred and third psalm:—O Lord, my God, how exceedingly you are magnified. You 
have put on praise and majesty, who are He that wraps himself in light as in a 
mantel, who stretches out the heaven like a curtain, who roofs His upper 
chambers with waters, who makes clouds His chariot, who walks on wings of winds, 
who makes winds His angels and flaming fire His ministers, who lays the 
foundations of the earth for its safety—it shall not swerve for ever and ever; 
the deep is a mantle of His vestment; on the mountains shall waters stand; from 
your rebuke shall they flee; from the sound of your thunder shall they shrink in 
fear. Indeed most of the psalm contains ascription of glory to the Father. But 
anyone may select numerous passages for himself and see how broadly the element 
of glorious ascription is scattered.  
 
Of thanksgiving, this may be set forth as an example. It is found in the second 
book of Kings, and is uttered by David, after promises made through Nathan to 
David, in astonishment at the bounties of God and in thanksgiving for them. It 
runs: Who am I, O Lord my Lord, and what is my house, that you have loved me to 
this extent? I am exceeding small in your sight, my Lord, and yet you have 
spoken on behalf of the house of your servant for a long time to come. Such is 
the way of man, O Lord my Lord, and what shall David go on to say more to you? 
Even now you know your servant, O Lord. For your servant have you wrought and 
according to your heart have you wrought all this greatness to make it known to 
your servant that he should magnify you, O Lord my Lord. 
 
Of confessions we have an example in: From all my transgressions deliver me. And 
elsewhere: My wounds have stunk and been corrupt because of my folly. I have 
been wretched and bowed down utterly; all the day have I gone with sullen face.
 
 Of petitions we have an example in the twenty-seventh psalm: Draw me not away 
with sinners, and destroy me not with workers of unrighteousness, and the like. 
 
And it is right as one began with ascription of glory, to bring one’s prayers to 
an end in ascription of glory, singing and glorifying the Father of all through 
Jesus Christ in the Holy Spirit—to whom be glory unto eternity. 
 
Thus, Ambrosius and Tatiana, studious and genuine brethren in piety, according 
to my ability I have struggled through my treatment of the subject of prayer and 
of the prayer in the Gospels together with its preface in Matthew. But if you 
press on to the things in front and forget those behind and pray for me in my 
undertaking, I do not despair of being enabled to receive from God the Giver a 
fuller and more divine capacity for all these matters, and with it to discuss 
the same subject again in a nobler, loftier, and clearer way. Meanwhile, 
however, you will peruse this with indulgence. 
 
 
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