Subject: VISnews 110511   
   Organization: VIS - Ufficio Stampa della Santa Sede   
   From: Vatican Information Service - Eng - txt    
      
   VATICAN INFORMATION SERVICE   
      
   TWENTY FIRST YEAR - N. 88   
   ENGLISH   
   WEDNESDAY, 11 MAY 2011   
      
   SUMMARY:   
      
   - Prayer Responds to Human Beings' Desire for God   
      
   ___________________________________________________________   
      
   PRAYER RESPONDS TO HUMAN BEINGS' DESIRE FOR GOD   
      
   VATICAN CITY, 11 MAY 2011 (VIS) - In this Wednesday's general audience   
   celebrated in St. Peter's Square, the Pope continued with the reflection on   
   "how prayer and religious feeling are a part of humans throughout their   
   lives".   
      
    The Holy Father said that our age is "marked by ... an apparent eclipse of   
   God" but that, at the same time, there are "signs of a renewed religious   
   sense".   
      
    !Looking at recent history, the predictions of those who, from the age of   
   Enlightenment, foretold the disappearance of religions and exalted absolute   
   reason, separated from faith, have failed".   
      
    While highlighting that "there has never been a great civilization, from   
   time immemorial to our age, that has not been religious", Benedict XVI   
   emphasized that "the human being is religious by nature. ... The image of   
   the Creator is engraved on human beings, who feel the need to find a light   
   to answer the questions regarding the profound meaning of reality; an answer   
   that we cannot find in ourselves, in progress, or in empirical science".   
      
    "We know that we cannot respond alone to our basic need to understand. For   
   however much we think we are self-sufficient, we experience that we do not   
   suffice. We need to open ourselves to something else, something or someone,   
   that can give us what is missing. We must go out of ourselves and go toward   
   the One who is capable of satisfying the width and breadth of our desire".   
      
    The Pope explained that "humanity bears within it a thirst for the   
   infinite, a yearning for eternity, a search for beauty, a desire for love, a   
   need for light and truth, which impel us toward the Absolute. We carry   
   within us the desire for God. In some way, we know that we can turn to God,   
   that we can pray to Him. St. Thomas Aquinas, one of the greatest theologians   
   of history, defined prayer as 'the expression of humanity's desire for   
   God'".   
      
    Referring to prayer, the Holy Father noted that "it is an inner attitude   
   before being a series of practices or formulas; it is a manner of being in   
   God's presence before the carrying out of acts of worship or speaking words.   
   Prayer has its center and sinks it roots in the depth of the person. That is   
   why it is not easily decipherable and, for the same reason, why it can be   
   the object of misunderstanding and manipulation. ... The experience of   
   prayer is a challenge for all, a 'grace' that must be invoked, a gift of the   
   One to whom we address ourselves".   
      
    "In prayer, ... human beings experience themselves as creatures in need of   
   help, incapable of attaining the fulfillment of their existence or their   
   hopes alone. ... In the experience of prayer we orient our very souls to   
   that Mystery from which we look for the fulfillment of our deepest desires   
   and help to overcome the poverty of our lives. In looking to the Other, in   
   directing ourselves 'beyond', is found the essence of prayer, the experience   
   of a reality that goes beyond the apparent and the contingent".   
      
    Benedict XVI affirmed that "even though human beings are forgetful of   
   their Creator, the true and living God never stops calling humanity first to   
   the mysterious encounter of prayer".   
      
    "We must learn to spend more time in front of God, before the God who has   
   revealed himself in Jesus Christ; we must learn to recognize in silence,   
   within our very selves, his voice that calls us and leads us to the depth of   
   our existence, to the fount of life and the source of salvation, so that we   
   might overcome the limit of our lives and open ourselves to the measure of   
   God, the relationship with He who is Infinite Love".   
   AG/ VIS   
   20110511 (610)   
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