Getting Our ACTS Together: The Meaning of Supplication
“Incline your ear, LORD, and answer me,/for I am poor and oppressed./Preserve my life, for I am devoted;/save your servant who trusts in you./You are my God;/be gracious to me, Lord;/to you I call all the day./Gladden the soul of your servant;/to you, Lord, I lift up my soul./Lord, you are good and forgiving,/most merciful to all who call on you./LORD, hear my prayer;/listen to my cry for help./ On the day of my distress I call to you,/for you will answer me.”—Psalm 86:1-7.
Dear Parishioners:
ACTS. S is for Supplication. This is not a prayer of greeting—that would be, S’up?lication. Supplication prayer is prayer that asks or petitions for something. This kind of prayer is very much misunderstood. I believe many people think prayer of supplication to be a cheap, lazy, selfish, or inferior form of prayer, because we want something and are asking for something to be done for us.
I would counter that we use prayer of supplication at Mass with the Universal Prayers. Even the Our Father contains “give us this day our daily bread,” a prayer of supplication. That’s a pretty good placement for a so-called cheap, lazy, selfish, or inferior form of prayer.
What I believe is most central to prayers of supplication is that faith that God can do what we ask. God can make a difference. God can change things, even when they seem unchangeable and dire. Prayer of supplication has at its core a trust and faith in God as well as an acknowledgement of His power, providence and majesty. Prayer of supplication is anything but!
Prayer of supplication is a perfectly acceptable form of prayer, as long as we are asking for the right things, or better, that our prayer is sincere, that we really mean it, and that what we want will truly benefit ourselves, another, or our greater family, parish, locale, or world. We can ask that we win the lottery or that the Browns win (the lottery might be more probable,) and if the prayer isn’t something that God wants to give to give us—for reasons only He knows—then the prayer will be unanswered, but it is still prayer.
There is no bad way to pray, so it’s time—it always is—to get our ACTS together.
Sincerely,
Rev. Charles F. Strebler
Pastor
