Keep Praying

"Jesus, Thank You For My Cancer."

by Father Brian J. Soliven on Saturday July 26, 2025

The world, in all its modern sophistication, has grown far too clever to pray. It invents machines to answer questions and philosophies to avoid them. It has built tall towers of noise and named them progress. And yet, in the still, stubborn soul of the Christian, there remains something wonderfully irrational—a voice that persists in prayer. It is, by all worldly measures, a foolish thing to do. To speak into silence, to plead with the invisible, to wait for what does not arrive on time—this is either the height of madness or the height of faith. And Christianity, to its eternal credit, has always chosen both.

Prayer is not a mere religious exercise; it is a rebellion against despair. It is the protest of the soul against the finality of facts. The atheist accepts the world as it is; the Christian kneels precisely because he does not. He prays for the sick because he believes death is not the final word. He prays for peace because he believes history is not a closed book. He prays for daily bread because he dares to believe that the universe has a Giver.But above all, the Christian perseveres in prayer. That is the madness that frightens the modern mind most of all—not that the believer prays, but that he keeps praying. He does not stop when nothing happens. He does not give up when the heavens are brass and the silence grows thick and terrible. No, he returns, day after day, like a lover to a locked door, not because he is deluded, but because he is in love. He knows that God is not a machine to be activated, nor a tyrant to be appeased, but a Father to be trusted. And fathers sometimes wait, not because they are cruel, but because they know what is best for their children.

The saints knew this. They were not holy because they got what they asked for, but because they asked and kept asking, even when the answer was a long and aching silence. They understood that prayer does not merely move the hand of God—it moves the heart of man. It stretches the soul. It chisels away pride and polishes the hard edges of the will. It is, in the end, less about our words reaching Heaven and more about Heaven reaching into us.

So persevere, dear Christian. Pray when it is easy, and more when it is not. Pray when God seems near, and especially when He seems absent. For in that absurd fidelity—in that unreasonable, unyielding tenacity—you will discover the deepest secret of the saints: that the very act of prayer is itself the answer.