| The Holy Rosary |
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2. Because a lot can happen when you pray for 20 minutes.When you pray a rosary about an intention, it gives God enough time to reveal something to you. Let's say you are worried about whether or not you'll get into a college that you applied to. If you offer up a casual, heartfelt prayer, it will always end up being thirty seconds of this: But when you pray the rosary, you say your intention at the beginning, then you spend five decades praying. That gives God a chance to answer you by broadening your understanding of what you are praying about. So by the time you say "Amen," you might have a totally new understanding of why you want to get into that college so bad. Andthatcould mean more than whether or not you actually get accepted or not. 3. Because it's an interactive Biblical experience. Like it or not, we live in a media-saturated society, and it's all about the things we see. I've heard so many people say that they can't pray the rosary because it's too boring. Actually no--you are the one who is boring. If a rosary is boring, it's nobody's fault but your own. When you commit to praying a rosary, you can choose one of four mysteries to contemplate: the joyful mysteries, the sorrowful mysteries, the glorious, and the luminous mysteries. Each of those mysteries are divided into five different "scenes" from the Bible. Why not make those scenes more real? Put yourself at the foot of the cross. Feel the wind on your shoulders. Hear the hammer crush the nail.
4. Because the rosary can make ordinary situations extraordinary. When we pray while we do normal things, those tasks cease to be normal. How awesome is that? Now mowing the lawn isn't an embarrassing chore, but a chance to pray and gain a deeper understanding of God. The rosary is a common-sense way to pray while you are doing other things. I mean, have you ever tried to drive to school and read the Bible? The rosary is unique because the prayers can become the "background music" to whatever you are doing. So turn off your radio on your drive to school and pray the rosary instead.
The contents of this page was written by Matt Smith and can be found at www.lifeteen.com |
Pope John Paul II loved praying the rosary, and that was a problem for me. I admired the pope's wisdom, but I was an eighteen-year-old college freshman who couldn't stand praying the rosary. Don't get me wrong, I loved being Catholic, but the rosary seemed like the least appealing way to pray. How many of you reading this now feel the same way?