The Catholic Register’s associate editor Michael Swan has taken one of his daily
routines — praying — and turned it into a book, Written on My Heart. In it, he
examines his experience with 10 memorized, traditional prayers and how they can
deepen our relationship to the divine. In this excerpt from the book, he looks
at how saying grace has played a role in his life.
I did not grow up saying grace at meals. At Christmas my father would jokingly
recite some Latin grace he had learned while at university.
When I was an extremely bad Latin student in high school, I remember thinking
not all of those sounds coming out of his mouth were words. I associated saying
grace with a kind of lifeless, dour religion that serves as cover for a life
filled with resentments and suspicion. It spoke to me of a sort of fearful
narrowness and a brittle facade of outward propriety. If you are really grateful
for food, you would eat it without hesitation and enjoy it. Solemnly pronouncing
your gratitude is strictly a show — if not for others, then a desperate attempt
to convince yourself.
Once you start down the road of grace before meals, where do you stop? Do you
cross yourself before taking a sip of coffee at Tim Hortons? Do you recite a
prayer before tearing open a bag of Doritos?
Food is integrally a part of our lives. To stand apart from your food while you
pronounce upon it is to stand apart from life. Just as life is meant to be
lived, food is meant to be eaten. Wouldn’t it make more sense after the meal?
You don’t say thank you before you receive a birthday present. You open the
present, react with surprise, delight, bemusement (pick one), then you say,
“Thank you.” What if the meal is horrible? What if you get food poisoning? Are
you going to thank God for that?
At various times, I have had to keep these thoughts to myself. I can remember
one evening during the year I spent studying theology at Regis College, when the
college choir finished off a rehearsal with an order of pizza. I hadn’t eaten
all day. I was famished. The pizza appeared on a coffee table in the middle of
the room with everyone standing around it in a circle. I stepped forward, opened
the first box, tore a slice from its cheesy moorings then disappeared a third of
it into my mouth.
One or two others swiftly followed my example. The Scottish Jesuit who played
guitar for the choir was thunderstruck. He could not have been more shocked if
an orgy had broken out in the theology students’ lounge.
“Aren’t we going to say any sort of grace?” he said in a panicked Scottish
whine.
They all bowed their heads over their pizza while I guiltily chewed like a
raccoon who had just dumped the best garbage in the neighbourhood.
The next year, when I joined the Jesuit novitiate, there could be no more
displays like that one. I dutifully prayed before meals.
We novices were rotated through a schedule of daily prayer leaders. The prayer
leader was to select morning prayers, serve at the daily Mass, lead evening
prayers from the correct page in our breviaries and say grace before meals. We
were strictly enjoined that this person was not to be called the prayer monkey.
Prayer monkey duties quickly became competitive. For morning prayer, world
literature was scoured for deeper and higher and weirder petitions. Newspapers
yielded more pathetic or outrageous tragedies to be prayed over. Background
music was chosen, or we were led in song.
Art was displayed on an easel before the altar to focus our prayer. At meals, we
went from brief preambles to “Bless us, O Lord,” to speeches that segued into
“Bless us, O Lord,” to freestyle prayers that replaced “Bless us, O Lord.”
One day, one of the more sensible novices saddled with prayer monkey duties
stood at his table before lunch, looked up, sighed and just blurted out, “Bless
us, O Lord….”
When we finished the prayer, he said he knew a priest who, when asked to say
grace before meals, would give the standard five-second “Bless us, O Lord” and
then tell everyone he had a photocopy of the prayer if anyone wanted it.
In my second year at the novitiate, I was assigned to volunteer at an
organization that helped Hmong refugees to either find jobs or qualify for
welfare. I helped with teaching English to Hmong elders in their 60s and 70s who
were never going to learn much English, but needed to go to the classes to
qualify for continued welfare under President Bill Clinton’s welfare reforms.
At one point the job-search aspect of the program was looking for help. They had
in the past been able to arrange tours of local factories and warehouses so that
refugees would at least become familiar with the sorts of work they could
expect. When these tours worked out well, the refugees were often invited to
apply for jobs at the end of the tour. But the guy who had arranged these tours
had moved on to some new career opportunity and the old regular tours were
drying up.
I volunteered to cold call area businesses to see whether any of them would
welcome a gaggle of middle-aged tribal hill people with limited English
wandering across their factory floor to learn about work in America. I was
pretty confident I could do this, because after coming home from New York with
my lofty Master of Arts in Journalism from New York University, I had spent two
years in various phone sales jobs.
I sold classified ads for The Globe and Mail, cable TV subscriptions for Rogers,
home repair encyclopedias and romance novel subscriptions for a book marketing
enterprise.
I also kept people on the phone for 20 or 30 minutes through their dinner hours
answering survey questions about their consumption of unleaded gasoline and
their feelings about immigration policy. I was a cold-calling telephone
professional.
At that point, when I was a Jesuit novice volunteering with the Hmong-American
Association in Minneapolis, I hadn’t done that sort of work in 10 years. Sitting
down at the desk with a phone at my right hand and a list of business phone
numbers to my left, I had a moment of doubt. I wasn’t sure I could deliver. I
had told them what a great phone sales professional I was. Now I didn’t know
what I was going to say to even get past the receptionist.
I can’t remember thinking about it at all. I simply gave into an urge, let out a
deep sigh and started praying, “Bless us, O Lord….”
I was able that afternoon to sign up a couple of tours, including one at a place
that made customized duotang binders for the school market. I later heard that
while on the tour, several Hmong landed jobs.
I don’t think the prayer contributed all that much to the success of my two
hours of cold calling. Nor would the prayer have been to blame if I had failed.
But I remember a feeling of peace and acceptance come over me as I finished the
prayer and picked up the phone.
I have since then thought it foolish to restrict this prayer to meals. I think,
in fact, it is more appropriate in the face of the unknown, since we do not
really know what gifts God will give.
It would certainly be very small of us to restrict our definition of God’s
bounty to mashed potatoes and gravy.
So I wind up my morning prayer with this brief sentence of gratitude before I
open the back gate and come back into our house to make breakfast and wake Yone,
my beautiful wife.
Of course the prayer expresses gratitude for the cereal, toast and tea. But I
know I have much more to be grateful for and I am constantly amazed at how well
that one sentence reminds me that I am surrounded by gifts.
(Excerpted from Written on my Heart: Classic Prayers in the Modern World, by
Michael Swan. Published by Novalis. To meet with Michael Swan, and purchase a
signed copy of the book, come to the official book launch at the Mary Ward
Centre, 70 St. Mary St., Tuesday, March 10 at 6 p.m. We can all say this prayer
before enjoying the wine and cheese.)