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How to pray the Stations
The Context:
The first point to note is that this is prayer. It isn't an
intellectual exercise. It is in the context of my
relationship with God. I could read through the text of each
of the stations, and look at the pictures, but that wouldn't
necessarily be prayer. This is an invitation to enter into a
gifted faith experience of who Jesus is for me. It becomes
prayer when I open my heart to be touched, and it leads me
to express my response in prayer.
The second thing to remember is that this is an imaginative
exercise. Its purpose is not a historical examination of
"what really happened" on that day in history. It's about
something far more profound. This is an opportunity to use
this long standing Christian prayer to let Jesus touch my
heart deeply by showing me the depth of his love for me. The
context is the historical fact that he was made to carry the
instrument of his death, from the place where he was
condemned to die, to Calvary where he died, and that he was
taken down and laid in a tomb. The religious context is that
today Jesus wants to use any means available to move my
heart to know his love for me. These exercises can allow me
to imaginatively visualize the "meaning" of his passion and
death.
The point of this exercise is to lead us to gratitude. It
will also lead us into a sense of solidarity with all our
brothers and sisters. In our busy, high tech lives we can
easily get out of touch with the terrible suffering of real
people in our world. Journeying with Jesus in the Stations,
allows us to imagine his entry into the experience of those
who are tortured, unjustly accused or victimized, sitting on
death row, carrying impossible burdens, facing terminal
illnesses, or simply fatigued with life.
How to:
Just go from one station to another. When "arriving" at a
station, begin by looking carefully at the image itself. See
who is in the scene. Look at how they are arranged and what
the artist who created this image is trying to tell us about
the drama there.
When to do them:
The beauty of the online version is that I can do the
stations whenever I like. The only guide we'd offer is to
not rush through them. Just reading through them is not
making them, any more than walking around a church to look
at them is making them. It could be a wonderful prayer
experience to do them as only one or two stations a day for
one or two weeks. It can also be powerful to do all 14, very
prayerfully, over the course of 40 minutes to an hour, in a
single evening, or to do seven one night and seven the
following night. Finally, it can be wonderful to return to
the experience several weeks or months later, and discover
that because of some struggle or difficulty I am
experiencing, the stations become a different experience and
a fresh experience of consolation. |