Who Me, Pray?…With Her?
by Jim & Susan Vogt, MA, CFLE
Down to earth questions and answers about praying as a couple:
Q. Why bother?
A. As you probably know, 46-48% of marriages end in divorce.
But did you also know that:
- For couples who worship together each Sunday only about 20% divorce.
- For couples who also regularly pray together at home marital stability is even greater.
Praying together can be divorce insurance, but it sounds kind of awkward. Sure it’s fine for priests and nuns or really holy people, but what about normal married couples?
Q. But we go to church on Sunday and say grace before meals. Isn’t that enough?
A. That’s great! Of course these prayer times are important and valuable, but they are different from couple prayer. There is a certain intimacy and vulnerability that comes from opening your heart to God in the presence of your spouse.
Q. OK, we might give it a try, but where do we start?
A. There is no wrong way to pray and the desire to try is prayer in itself. First, some preliminary decisions:
- Decide a time. Presumably both of you are very busy. Isn’t everyone these days? So finding an agreeable, semi-reliable time is essential. After experimenting with several times of day my husband and I agreed on first thing in the morning (about 15 minutes before the first child is expected to awake). Since Jim is a morning person and I’m not, his job is to wake me and say it’s time.
- Decide a place. Anywhere will do, but it’s nice to have a bible or whatever reading you plan to use handy. If clutter is endemic to your home at least find a place where you can cover it or turn your back on it. Personally, I like to have a window that I can look out of and see the sky. If it’s dark, lighting a candle can be inspiring.
- Decide how often. Ideally, daily is the way to go since there is a rhythm and regularity to it. In our own marriage, however, we have made peace with a less than ideal but workable goal. We commit to weekdays since that’s more predictable than the weekends. We figure Mass takes care of Sunday. We also make exceptions for illness, being out of town, pregnancy (when almost any time felt nauseous), or unexpected interruptions like crying babies. It’s not perfect, but we feel we’re doing OK if we meet our bottom line of doing it more often than not. God wants our attention not our guilt.
Q. So what do we do once we’re sitting together?
A. There are many ways to pray depending on your style and preferences.
Here are a few:
___Memorized prayers
___Reflection on today or tomorrow
___Reading scripture
___Guided meditation (from a book)
___Writing in a journal
___Reading an inspirational book
___Rosary or devotions
___Meditation on a spiritual theme
___Liturgy of the Hours
___Your own creation
Rank the above styles from 1 to 10 and find the ways that appeal to both of you.
Q. Hey, we’re not theologians. What do we do with the information above?
A. Keep it simple. After trying to be creative and experimenting with a variety of styles my husband and I found that for regular couple prayer to work for us it had to be very simple. Eventually we settled on the following format:
One Model – 5 Easy Steps
- One spouse finds the scripture reading of the day
- One opens the prayer with a phrase like “Lord, we come before you at the start of our day.”
- Read the scripture out loud.
- Sit in silence for awhile. (We may think about the scripture, the upcoming day and how we will live it out, or perhaps put some thoughts in a journal). Inevitably for me, some time is spent daydreaming. I’m not proud of this, but I would do you no favor to suggest that you fail when not fully concentrating. Sometimes I just offer up the distraction and figure I’m honoring God by the effort I made just to show up.
- At the appointed ending time, each spouse makes a petition flowing from the silent prayer.
Q. Can you simplify “simple”?
A. How about after the alarm goes off (before you get out of bed) hold hands and offer a prayer for a good day, help with a particular problem, or thanksgiving. Likewise, at night, after turning off the light, hold hands and offer a prayer of thanks for anything that day.
Q. What if my spouse just isn’t into couple prayer? (S)he is a good person and we pray individually but we just aren’t going to be able to do it together.
A. Don’t beat yourself up over this. Sure couple prayer is good and can bring you closer together, but God’s love is bigger than any prayer form. Pray for each other in your own way.
Q. How do we find the Scripture of the day or other books of the Bible?
A. To find the daily readings, go to www.usccb.org/bible/readings
About the author
Susan Vogt is an author and speaker on marriage, parenting, and spirituality. Her website is SusanVogt.net.