The story...
I was trained to be an industrial engineer (IE). One of my IE tasks was to plan for the capacity to produce products. People learn new processes and systems at predictable rates. Their speed of learning may be modeled by a constant percentage every time they double the total number of parts they've produced to date. The multiplier will be at about 80% for simple assembly work and up to 95% for more complex work. For an 80% manual-job learning curve, this rule-of-thumb would project that a 10 min. time for the 50th part would be reduced to 8 min. for the 100th part. The idea is right even if my facts are a tad off.
So, what's the learning curve look like for my prayer life? My capacity to pray and time I spent praying doesn't fit the learning curve model. First, I don't remember being taught to pray. My family recited a version of the prayer Jesus taught His disciples before meals - I remember it as follows:
"Father, who art in heaven, Hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread. And forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors. And lead us not into temptation; but deliver us from evil. For thine is the kingdom, the power, and the glory forever, AMEN." Luke 11:1-13
I've listened to other people pray aloud - their prayers were addressed to themselves, the prayer group, God, Jesus, and sometimes to no one in particular. My prayer history had ebbs and flows, desert and rainy seasons, anxiety and peace, new truth and despair, full acceptance and lost, long and short, revelation and no sense of change, quiet and loud, on my knees or speeding, one-way and two-way, natural and foreign, loving and left outside, trusting and questioning...
I wish I'd prayed more. I'm going to pray right down and tell you what happened when I am done. Here it goes...
I prayed for 8 min. 5 sec. My heart was right, I praised and thanked God. I made my requests known for others. I was quiet for about a third of the time and felt emotions and physical feeling within my body too. It felt good and right - a place where I want to be. Yet, as I'm typing I've returned to my life journey. My prayer respite is but a memory. I wonder how that prayer might've affected lives and God's intervention. We may never know the answer to questions like these. Yet, God revealed that prayer's critical towards our relationship and receipt of His loving kindness.
Yes, the only church in town would be a place of prayer. People would work out increasingly reliant relationships with our God and seek Him and His will in prayer. If we were prayerful sorts, might we enjoy each other more? He's faithful.
Just for today...
"Am I too busy too pray? Have I no time for meditation? Then let me ask myself whether I have been able to solve my problems without help." One Day at a Time (p. 177)