Categories
pray

Prayer Mondays: Marrige (BoCP)

Barring my faulty memory (and if I’m not lazy) I want to post prayers on Monday from all over Church History and then throughout the modern day, and then my own. In celebration of my anniversary at the end of the week, here’s  a prayer on marriage from the book of common prayer.

Most gracious God, we give you thanks for your tender love in sending Jesus Christ to come among us, to be born of a human mother, and to make the way of the cross to be the way of life.

We thank you, also, for consecrating the union of man and woman in his Name. By the power of your Holy Spirit, pour out the abundance of your blessing upon this man and this woman. Defend them from every enemy. Lead them into all peace.

Let their love for each other be a seal upon their hearts, a mantle about their shoulders, and a crown upon their foreheads. Bless them in their work and in their companionship; in their sleeping and in their waking; in their joys and in their sorrows; in their life and in their death.

Categories
pray

Prayer Mondays: St. Francis’s “Make Me an Instrument”

Barring my faulty memory (and if I’m not lazy) I want to post prayers on Monday from all over Church History and then throughout the modern day, and then my own. This one comes from St. Francis of Assisi and is called “Make Me An Instrument of Peace”

Categories
pray

Prayer Mondays: Calvin (2)

Barring my faulty memory (and if I’m not lazy) I want to post prayers on Monday from all over Church History and then throughout the modern day, and then my own. This one comes from Calvin.

Categories
pray

Prayer Mondays: Julia Ward Howe

Barring my faulty memory (and if I’m not lazy) I want to post prayers on Monday from all over Church History and then throughout the modern day, and then my own. This one isn’t so much a prayer as a call to action written in 1862 by then abolitionist and later pacifist and suffragette Julia Ward Howe. But it does make a nice prayer.

Categories
pray

Prayer Mondays: Pseudo-Manasseh

Barring my faulty memory (and if I’m not lazy) I want to post prayers on Monday from all over Church History and then throughout the modern day, and then my own. In 2 Chronicles 33:10-13 Manasseh, captured by the Assyrians, repents before God and prays. Scripture doesn’t record the prayer but someone (likely a Christian) decided to insert a prayer that they thought would be nice to include. As such, it was quickly used in parts of the Church that had access to the Greek text. Here is the prayer of pseudo-Manasseh.