How
would you like to be a secret agent for God, involved in a clandestine
operation to fill the world with his blessing?
Here’s your opportunity to begin sending the Lord’s grace into people’s
lives without them ever knowing about it.
It’s easier than you may think, but it sends more of the Lord’s power than
we can understand into the lives of people who need it more than they realize.
During
my recent sabbatical, I was introduced to the practice of “Guerilla
Blessing.” All that it requires is a
belief in the power of prayer, and the ability to care about other people. Imagine that you find yourself among a group
of strangers: other shoppers in the store, other drivers in traffic, other fans
at a sporting event. Randomly choose
someone to look at, preferably without them even knowing it. As you do, silently pray, “May you know
joy. May you know peace.” Then shift your gaze to another person. “May you know joy. May you know peace.” And then another. And another.
“May you know joy. May you know peace.”
As
you spend those few seconds holding someone before the Lord, something will
happen within you. Suddenly that
stranger will become a real person to you.
They are no longer “that white truck in front of me,” but a man whom you
can imagine is tired after a long day’s work.
You may begin to wonder what kind of job he has and what sort of family
he is going home to. She is no longer
that person with a shopping cart full of groceries in front of you in the
check-out line, but somebody’s mother or daughter or sister or wife. Is her heart full of happiness, or is she
going through the drudgery of a monotonous routine? Has she just had an argument with a friend,
or will she get unexpected good news the next time she checks her email?
Your
prayers of blessing, “May you know joy.
May you know peace” are effective, because they do not depend upon that
person accepting them, or even knowing about them. They make a difference because their potency
depends not upon their awareness, or upon your knowledge of that person. They depend upon the grace of the Father, who
sent his redemption into the world through the death and resurrection of his
Son. He sent his redemption to us when
we were not only unaware of it, but actively resisting his love. Your “guerilla blessings” are a way for that
redeeming grace to touch another person in a new way.
I
learned about “guerilla blessings” while I spent a week in Chicago with a
community of Roman Catholic sisters who spend their days praying for a city,
nation, and world in need of God’s mercy and grace. Each Friday they pray for a safe weekend in
Chicago, painfully aware of the gun violence that takes so many lives. On Monday they grieve when they hear the
number of shootings have taken place.
But I am convinced that without their own form of “guerilla blessing,”
that number would be so much greater.
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