| April
5,
2007
"All
I
Can
Do
Now
Is
Pray"
How
many
times
have
we
heard
this
from
others
and
also
said
it
ourselves?
It
is
true:
ALL
we
can
do
is
pray...but
that
is
not
how
this
is
usually
said.
Usually,
there
is
a
sigh,
a
shrug
of
the
shoulders
and
then,
“Well,
all
I
can
do
now
is
pray”
after
we
have
turned
to
every
worldly
solution
which
man
has
to
offer
for
whatever
problem
may
be
facing
us:
troubled
marriage,
illness,
rebellious
children,
trouble
at
work
or
school,
misunderstandings
between
friends
or
family,
etc.
Although
it
is
not
the
intention
of
the
one
who
uses
this
expression,
it
comes
across
as,
“Well,
I,
in
my
great
knowledge,
vast
abilities
and
wisdom,
have
done
everything
possible
to
solve
this
and
nothing
has
worked;
so,
Lord,
maybe,
just
maybe,
You
can
do
something.
I
have
exhausted
all
my
resources
and
now
have
no
where
else
to
turn.”
The
truth
is
that
ALL
we
can
do
is
pray.
It
is
the
most
powerful
thing
that
we
can
do
for
ourselves,
for
our
loved
ones,
and
for
the
world.
If
we
keep
God
before
ourselves
at
all
times
and
turn
to
Him
immediately
in
all
situations,
we
are
truly
keeping
the
right
order.
It,
however,
does
not
mean
that
we
just
sit
back
and
do
nothing.
No.
We
have
to
enter
into
that
synergy
with
God
—
man
reaching
up
from
earth
and
God
leaning
down
from
heaven.
We
definitely
have
to
do
our
part,
but
we
need
to
turn
our
“check
list”
of
how
to
handle
situations
around:
first
turn
to
God,
then,
with
Him
ever
in
our
hearts
and
on
our
lips,
seek
help
from
the
means
that
He
has
given
us.
The
hard
part
is
to
put
it
all
in
God’s
hands
first
and
then
work
with
Him.
One
example
of
this
is
something
that
is
seen
in
Orthodox
countries,
particularly
in
churches
that
have
the
full
relics
of
one
of
the
saints.
Students
come
into
the
church
very
early
in
the
morning
before
classes
to
venerate
the
relics
and
pray
before
them,
especially
on
the
day
of
a
difficult
exam.
Surely,
the
student
has
studied
hard
for
the
exam,
but
he/she
knows
that
without
the
Lord’s
help,
it
is
in
vain.
Except
the
Lord
build
the
house,
they
labor
in
vain
that
build
it:
except
the
Lord
keep
the
city,
the
watchman
wakes
but
in
vain
(Ps.
128:1).
Elder
Cleopa
always
counseled
people,
“When
your
mother,
your
child,
your
husband,
anyone,
is
sick,
first
call
the
priest,
not
the
doctor!”
The
Church
has
prayers
for
everything
imaginable,
and
those
prayers
are
very
effectual.
Turn
to
those
prayers
first,
then
proceed.
If
you
are
building
a
house
there
is
a
prayer
for
beginning
this
project;
traveling—there
are
prayers;
studying
—
there
are
prayers...
One
way
in
which
we
witness
the
benefit
of
those
prayers
right
here
at
the
Monastery
involves
our
flock
of
free-range
chickens:
many
of
the
people
who
live
nearby
ask
us
why
the
chickens
have
not
fallen
prey
to
these
the
many
predators
that
roam
the
surrounding
forest.
The
answer:
every
year,
on
the
feast
of
St.
Blaise,
protector
of
domestic
animals,
we
process
to
the
henhouse
with
the
priest,
singing
the
troparion
of
the
hieromartyr,
and
the
flock
is
blessed.
If,
at
some
point
a
hen
or
two
“disappear”
(which
has
happened
about
three
times
in
six
years),
we
keep
the
rest
of
the
flock
locked
in
their
pen
for
a
few
weeks,
while
we
continue
to
pray
to
St.
Blaise
to
again
protect
them.
Pray
first,
then
employ
other
means,
but
while
keeping
your
main
focus
on
God.
Actual
prayer
is
one
part
of
a
“little
holy
trinity”;
it
is
not
isolated
into
only
asking
(often
telling)
God
to
fulfill
our
request.
The
other
two
members
of
this
small
trinity
are
fasting
and
giving
alms.
In
traditionally
Orthodox
countries,
it
is
very
common
to
encounter
someone
who
either
makes
an
offering
to
a
church
or
to
a
person
in
need,
even
someone
unknown
on
the
street,
saying
“Please
accept
this;
my
husband/mother/sister/son,
is
ill/in
need
of
God’s
mercy.”
Interestingly,
the
answer
from
the
recipient
is
not
“thank
you”,
but
rather,
“May
God
receive.”
This
is
very
definitely
a
part
of
prayer
to
God
to
have
mercy
on
the
loved
one.
That
offering
is
a
sacrifice
and
is
the
second
part
of
the
“ALL
I
can
do
is
pray.”
Offering
a
sacrifice,
both
in
thanksgiving,
as
well
as
in
petition
in
prayer
is
most
certainly
Biblical.
In
the
Old
Testament,
the
sacrifice
was
always
a
young
animal
which
was
purely
spotless.
What
more
precious
sacrifice
has
there
ever
been
in
all
the
history
of
man
than
the
Lord
Himself
sacrificing
Himself
upon
the
Cross
for
our
salvation?
When
we
pray
from
our
hearts
to
God,
asking
Him
to
help
either
ourselves
or
a
loved
one,
we
must
also
offer
whatever
sacrifice
we
can.
This
is
a
pouring
out
of
oneself,
which
the
Lord
certainly
accepts.
Whatever
that
sacrifice
of
alms
consists
of
(financial,
material,
labor,
etc),
it
must
be
something
that
is
truly
a
sacrifice,
and
not
simply
from
our
surplus.
The
third
part
of
that
“small
trinity”
is
fasting.
When
we
or
a
loved
one
are
in
great
need
of
God’s
mercy,
we
pray,
sacrifice,
and
in
addition
to
the
regularly
prescribed
fasting
days
and
season,
we
add
an
additional
fast.
Many
monastic
elders
counsel
people
who
are
in
such
need
to
add
Mondays
as
a
fasting
day,
or
to
fast
totally
each
day
until
noon.
This
fasting
and
almsgiving,
together
with
prayer,
also
helps
us
to
be
more
aware
of
our
own
sins.
The
holy
fathers
tell
us
that
misfortune,
trials,
illness,
etc.
befall
us
for
one
of
three
reasons:
either
from
the
devil
to
lead
us
away
from
God;
from
God
Himself
to
wake
us
up
and
redirect
us
where
we
belong;
or
from
our
own
sins.
We
have
lost
the
notion
in
our
modem
society
to
ever
believe
that
something
has
happened
to
us
because
of
our
own
doing
or
fault;
it
is
always
someone
else’s
fault,
never
our
own.
The
truth
is
that
not
only
do
our
sins
bring
trials
upon
ourselves,
but
they
also
can
cause
others
to
suffer.
All
of
creation
fell
and
suffered,
and
continues
to
suffer,
because
of
our
sins.
Our
sins
have
eternal
and
temporal
consequences,
but
we
also
know
that
through
true
repentance
and
confession,
these
consequences
are
lessened
and
often
eliminated.
So,
in
the
midst
of
trials,
need,
tribulations,
let
us
first
pray,
give
alms
of
sacrifice,
and
fast,
looking
at
our
own
sins,
as
we
beseech
God
to
grant
what
is
good
and
needful
for
our
own
souls,
for
our
loved
ones,
for
the
world.
God
does
indeed
answer
these
prayers...
but
not
always
the
way
that
we
want.
His
ways
are
certainly
not
our
ways,
and
our
understanding
cannot
begin
to
fathom
or
comprehend
God’s
judgments.
When
His
answer
to
our
petitions
is
not
what
we
want
it
to
be,
we
must
still
trust
in
His
mercy
and
judgment,
giving
thanks
always.
If
we
but
look
back
in
our
own
lives
and
see
those
times
when
it
seemed
that
God
did
not
answer
our
prayer
as
we
wanted,
we
can
almost
always
see
that
He
did
indeed
answer
it
as
we
needed
for
our
salvation.
A
broken
and
contrite
heart,
God
will
not
despise.
When
we
turn
to
God
first
and
keep
Him
before
ourselves
throughout
our
lives,
especially
in
times
of
trial,
in
humility
acknowledging
that
without
Him
we
can
do
nothing,
then
He
truly
does
not
abandon
us.
Indeed,
let
us
remember
that
ALL
we
can
do
is
pray:
before,
during
and
after
a
task;
before,
during
and
after
a
trial;
all
our
life
long,
putting
our
full
trust
in
God.
So
let
us
continue
in
that
synergy
reaching
up
toward
God,
beseeching
His
mercy,
help
and
guidance,
as
He
leans
down
to
take
our
outstretched
hand
and
lead
us
along
the
path
of
peace.
*
from
The
Veil
(Vol.13
No.1),
published
by
The
Protection
of
the
Holy
Virgin
Monastery,
Lake
George
CO |