I Am Dude wrote on Jun 4th, 2017 at 1:24pm:Don, you mentioned listening. I'm curious what would be, in your opinion, an appropriate ratio of speaking vs listening during prayer in a normal situation.
Vince, a simple but excellent question that I will provisionally answer, but must contemplate further to determine whether I can improve on my reply. When God spoke to me in that epic experience described in my first post, I only realized that fact upon further reflection the next day. So develop the discipline of "entering the holy silence" with the intent of hearing God speak to you. Then accept by faith that God is impinging on your thought patterns and pay reverent attention to the subsequent flow of thought. It would be helpful to record your intuitions and reflections at the end of the day in a journal. Only as you mature spiritually will you gain confidence by trial and error in discerning the difference between your wishful thinking and unexpected helpful divine impulses.
I believe the most productive prayer experiment is to set aside an hour or two, if not weekly, at least sometimes and just rest like a young son on your heavenly Father's lap until you "hit the wall." What I mean by that is that your initial efforts are likely to be uncomfortable and labored because you will find yourself repeating themes and phrases and praying as if God actually needs the information. Breakthroughs can be achieved when you linger (1) in the frustration that you don't know what to say next and (2) in a mild sense of shame that your words now feel cheap, mechanical, and contrived. Then when, like a child, you confess that frustration and shame to your Father and just remain silent, that's when the magic can begin in 2 ways: (1) You will feel a deepening intimacy with your Father that allows you to bask in His presence without concern for what you should say. (2) At that point, a restful spontaneous flow of thought can gush from your heart that takes your mind in unexpected directions. For example, you might now feel like babbling on about how much you, God's child, adore Him, and then might feel like thanking or praising Him for His divine overture towards you. Then as you bask in the new conviction that God accepts you just the way you are, you might feel emboldened to pour out the desires and burdens of your heart and ask for His intervention. When you feel satiated by that entreating phase of prayer, you might simply meditate for several minutes on the thought (1) that He wants to use you to promote his Kingdom, (2) that He has certain spiritual gifts in mind that He wants to develop in you, and (3) that He might now guide your steps through synchronicities in a pattern that only gradually becomes obvious to you.
I will caution you about one pitfall that can inhibit this holy process and I will use the example of praying in the Spirit that I've been discussing in this thread--speaking in tongues. It's OK to ask God for this gift, but then you must forget about the gift and seek the face of the Giver. Otherwise, the gift becomes an unhealthy fetish and you feel like you're trying to manipulate God to give you a certain spiritual high. But as you seek the Giver, the aforementioned frustration and shame (discussed above) will begin to take over, and your words will now seem cheap and woefully inadequate to express the ever deepening longing that is building up in you.
At that point, many seekers make a serious mistake that prevents them from experiencing the real thing. They try to help the gift along by stepping out in faith and beginning to babble in the hope that God will meet them halfway and control their tongue. Like so much of spirituality, you can't try to make it happen; the real thing takes you by surprise as an unexpected divine invasion of your eager spirit. Yes, tension seeks resolution, but the key is to relish the agony of your pure longing until God takes over on His timetable, and not yours. If you master this restraint, then, when the gift of tongues is actually imparted, your experience will be powerful, life-changing, and unforgettable!
But forget about the gift of tongues for a moment. Standard praying in the Spirit is sabotaged when you try to achieve a specific prayer goal. Instead, you must learn to linger in a state of pure surrender to however God wants to have His way with you.
You might also research about spiritual retreats in Brazil led by a well-trained Spiritual Director for a guided group process of prayer and meditation, coupled with private interviews about your inner life during these processes and group sessions for all the pilgrims.
In a future planned post, I'll try to ground some of this biblically for you.