Balancing prayer and work

Sant Rajinder Singh Ji

A beautiful German proverb says, “Pray as though no work would help, and work as if no prayer would help.” This saying is referring to two different types of people. One group prays for help from God, but in a half-hearted manner. Another group feels that when things go wrong or they want something, they should merely pray to God and do nothing else. This proverb is trying to bring about a balance between these two groups of people.
The first part of the proverb says that we should pray as if no work would help. In this kind of prayer, we are focusing all our attention on God. All our being is immersed in the prayer. It is as if we became the prayer itself. When we pray with such intensity and single-mindedness, God cannot ignore us. There is the story of a mother who was cooking food in the kitchen. Suddenly, her child let out a tremendous scream from another room. She dropped what she was doing and ran to pick up the child to comfort him. A few days later while the mother was cooking, the child, again in another room, began to whimper, but the mother ignored him. Realizing the mother was ignoring him, he tried whimpering again, but she ignored him.
He sheepishly crept into the kitchen and said, “Mommy, how is it that the other day you came running when I cried, but today you did not come?”
She replied, “The other day I could hear the pain in your voice, but today I knew from the tone that you were just faking it for my attention.” Similarly, God knows when our prayers are sincere and we are truly crying for God. God knows when we are in pain and truly want help. However, if we are merely half-hearted in our prayer, then God may or may not respond. That is why it is said that when a seeker is truly yearning for God, God hears it and will help that seeker find a way back to God. Similarly, there is a saying, “God hears the sincere cry of an ant sooner than the trumpeting of an elephant.” This is instructing us that if we have a deep prayer for something, we should pray with our whole heart, soul, and mind as if no work would help us achieve what we want. Then, our prayer will bear fruit.
The second part of the proverb is that we should work as if no prayer would help. This is addressed to those who would sit back and pray but not make any effort to attain what they want. Many people take prayer as an excuse not to put in any effort.
The first group of people who are praying with all their heart and soul are doing so only after they have put in an effort and tried their best. They are following the dictum that where all else fails, there prayer succeeds. They have reached the point of desperation because they have tried everything else. However, this second group of people do not even try to do anything to attain what they want. Many people use God as a crutch to avoid work. They say, “God will take care of everything. Why do I have to
do anything?” This attitude is erroneous. If we felt that we could sit back and pray and that God would do everything, then we would find a society of apathy and laziness. People would always be relying on God and others to take care of them. True spirituality involves doing our part to take our share of responsibility and then use our time to help others.
We should work as hard as we can to fulfil our duties as if no prayer would help. In this way, we would be fulfilling our responsibilities to ourselves, our family, our communities, and our world. We would be of use and of service to others. Then, after putting in our best effort, if we find we still do not succeed, we can pray with all our heart, soul, and mind for help.
Spirituality is the path of positive mysticism. We come into this world with certain karmas that must be paid off. As part of our karmic debt we may have to support our family, we may have a certain role or job that we have to fulfill in this lifetime, and we have a collective responsibility to our society. We cannot shirk that duty to sit on a mountaintop meditating all day and hoping that God will provide for us. We need to spend time in meditation while also doing our duties allotted to us in life. Thus, when God sees we have put in our best efforts, and then when all else fails we turn to the Lord, God will take notice. However, if we merely sit back, relax, and expect God to do everything for us, that will not happen.
The same is true of our meditations. We should not think that we can do nothing, and then sit down to meditate for a few minutes once every few months, expecting God will reward us. Rather, we should put in the required time with accuracy and full devotion. We should sit regularly daily, accurately, and with full concentration. In this way, we are working as if no prayer would help. Then, if we have done our part, and we have still not achieved what we wanted, then we should pray to God with all our heart, soul, and mind for help. If our yearning is sincere, God will listen.
We should look at these two aspects of ourselves. Are we putting in full effort as if no prayer would help? After doing so, are we praying for God as if no work would help? If we can do these two things, we will find that our progress will move forward steadily, and God will bless us.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here