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Physical Senses and Prayer

images of the 5 senses

Prayer is a spiritual activity—isn’t it? It happens in mind, heart, soul, spirit . . .

And yet, I’m in my body when I’m praying. My mind, heart, soul, and spirit are embodied. I cannot compartmentalize my experience into categories of spiritual as opposed to physical. God did not create me as one or the other but as all together.

I do not pray apart from my body or without my body, and neither do you. The body nurtures and carries my prayer. Prayer simmers within, sometimes for a long time, before it ever becomes conscious words I say or think. I like to think that prayer gestates while I’m going about a typical day. The Holy Spirit partners with me in gathering information and in assessing my emotional response to what is happening around me. The Holy Spirit partners with me in discerning what help I or others need or what decision should be made. My continuous interaction with the Holy Spirit, who dwells in me, is itself prayer. And it’s happening within my embodied self.

All my experience is housed in my body. All your experience is housed in your body. In fact, our bodies have memories we don’t even access easily, if at all. Anyone who plays piano or throws a baseball knows that muscles have memory. Our bodies remember bliss, stress, excitement, and trauma; our muscles and organs often remember better than our minds do.

How appropriate, then, that we enlist our bodies—that we deliberately engage our physical senses—when we pray. How can we do this?

The apostle Paul declared that our bodies are temples of the Holy Spirit; even centuries ago, without the benefit of scientific studies linking the physical with the emotional and spiritual, Paul understood that we are embodied beings, that our bodies participate in our communion with God and one another.

May we all become more aware of our physical senses and our physical movements, and may we become more open to the information we receive through our bodies. May we pay attention to “body wisdom” and delight in our embodied selves as the lovely temples we are.


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