Human beings have always spoken into absence.
We speak to the dead. We speak to the night. We speak to the sea, to the sky, to the moon, to the storm, to the mountain, to the fire, to the empty room, to the body in the hospital bed, to the name carved in stone. We speak to God, gods, saints, angels, ancestors, spirits, fate, memory, conscience, silence, and the future. We speak when no answer comes. We speak before we know whether anyone is listening.
That may be where prayer begins.
Not in doctrine.
Not in certainty.
Not even in belief, at least not belief fully formed.
Prayer begins in address.
Something in us turns outward. A fear, a grief, a gratitude, a longing, a confession, a need, a hope. Something too large to remain sealed inside the self presses toward speech. We may not know where the words are going, but we know they cannot stay where they are. They must be given direction. They must be spoken, whispered, chanted, written, sung, or carried in silence.
Prayer is the grammar of that address.
That is why prayer is so difficult for me now. I no longer believe in a personal God who hears me from beyond the world. I do not believe there is a divine listener weighing my requests, arranging outcomes, correcting my path, or opening doors according to hidden wisdom. The conversational model of prayer no longer works for me. I cannot honestly say that I talk to God and God talks back.
But the need to address remains.
That is the strange thing.
Belief can fall away before the gesture does. The theology can collapse while the body still remembers what to do. Someone dies, and I want to speak. Someone suffers, and I want to hold their name somewhere. I feel gratitude, and silence feels incomplete. I fail, and I need language for contrition. I sit with fear, and the fear asks to be named. I stand before beauty, and something in me wants to bow.
If prayer were only belief expressed in words, then disbelief should end it.
It has not.
Instead, disbelief has made prayer more complicated and in some ways more honest. I can no longer hide behind inherited certainties. I can no longer pretend that every prayer has a clear recipient or that every silence is secretly an answer. I can no longer call my conveniences blessings while ignoring the suffering of others. I can no longer use prayer as a way to avoid action. If prayer remains, it must remain without those protections.
It must become truer.
The title of this essay, “To Whom It May Concern,” names that uncertainty. It sounds like the beginning of a formal letter, something sent into an institution without knowing who will open it. It is polite, distant, almost bureaucratic. But it also sounds like prayer after belief. The concern is real. The addressee is uncertain.
To whom it may concern.
That phrase lets me begin without pretending more confidence than I have. It allows prayer to remain addressed without requiring me to define the recipient too quickly. The words may be addressed to God, if God is there. They may be addressed to the dead, who live now only in memory and influence. They may be addressed to humanity, past, present, and future. They may be addressed to conscience, to silence, to the self beneath performance, to the community that must act, or to whatever remains worthy of reverence.
The uncertainty does not make the concern false.
In fact, the uncertainty may protect the concern from becoming too easy.
Much of the prayer I inherited was certain about its direction. We prayed to God the Father through Jesus Christ in the power of the Holy Spirit. We prayed in Jesus’ name. We believed God heard, cared, answered, delayed, corrected, blessed, protected, and provided. Prayer had a destination. It had a theology. It had a path upward and, if we were attentive enough, a response downward.
There is comfort in that.
There is also danger.
Certainty about prayer can make people careless with mystery. It can make them overconfident about God’s will, God’s answers, God’s silence, and God’s relationship to suffering. It can make them explain too quickly. It can make them call good fortune providence and tragedy lesson. It can make them believe that prayer is meaningful only if a supernatural being receives it and acts.
I do not want that kind of certainty anymore.
But I also do not want a world without prayer.
A world without prayer would be a world in which grief has fewer forms, gratitude has fewer rituals, failure has fewer confessions, and concern has fewer ways to become care. It would be a world in which the living speak less often to the dead, the lonely carry more silence alone, and the ordinary thresholds of life pass without attention. It would be a world in which everything must be either explained or dismissed, useful or useless, proven or abandoned.
Human life is too deep for that.
We need forms for what cannot be solved.
That is what prayer has always offered. It gives human beings a way to stand before the unsolved and remain present. Death is not solved by prayer. Grief is not solved by prayer. Injustice is not solved by prayer. Fear, guilt, longing, gratitude, and beauty are not solved by prayer. But prayer gives them shape. It keeps them from dissolving into noise or hardening into silence.
This may be the first claim I can make honestly: prayer gives form to concern.
Concern by itself can remain vague. I am concerned about the dead. I am concerned about the suffering. I am concerned about the world. I am concerned about my own failures. I am concerned about the future. But concern can become sentimental if it never takes form. It can remain a feeling that flatters the one who feels it.
Prayer asks concern to become more specific.
Say the name.
Light the candle.
Visit the grave.
Confess the failure.
Give thanks for the bread.
Sit in silence.
Return to the breath.
Write the letter.
Do the work.
Prayer begins in address, but it does not end in speech. At least, it should not. The address gathers the self so the self can be returned to the world with greater honesty and responsibility. If prayer does not eventually become some form of attention, presence, memory, repair, or care, then it has stopped too soon.
Still, speech matters.
I am suspicious of any account of prayer that moves too quickly to action and forgets the human need to speak. Words are not enough, but they are not nothing. A person standing at a grave may not be able to fix death, but speaking the name matters. A person praying beside a hospital bed may not be able to heal the body, but the words may tell the sufferer they are not alone. A person confessing failure may not undo harm, but speech may begin the work of repair.
Silence also matters.
There are prayers too deep for language. There are moments when words are premature, intrusive, or false. Sitting beside grief may be more prayerful than explaining it. Breathing quietly may be more honest than speaking confidently. The hand held in silence may carry more truth than the polished phrase.
Prayer includes both speech and silence because human beings need both.
We need words to keep silence from becoming abandonment.
We need silence to keep words from becoming evasion.
This is part of why prayer has taken so many forms across human history. It has been chant and stillness, petition and praise, lament and thanksgiving, confession and blessing, ritual and improvisation, solitude and community, body and word, work and rest. No single form contains it completely because no single form contains human need completely.
The dead need memory.
The grieving need lament.
The grateful need thanksgiving.
The guilty need confession.
The afraid need protection.
The scattered need silence.
The comfortable need interruption.
The concerned need responsibility.
Prayer moves among these needs.
That is why this essay has to be longer than a simple argument for or against prayer. Prayer is too woven into religious life to be handled quickly. It touches death, scripture, Jesus, Islam, monastic rhythm, folk practice, evangelical memory, liturgy, psychology, providence, unanswered longing, ethics, work, and the ongoing human need for connection. To understand what prayer means after belief, I have to follow it through all those rooms.
Each room changes the word slightly.
At the grave, prayer is memory.
In the Psalms, prayer is honest speech.
In Jesus, prayer is inherited desire.
In Islam, prayer is embodied return.
In the monastery, prayer is disciplined time.
In folk practice, prayer is protection close to the skin.
In my evangelical childhood, prayer is both tenderness and combat.
In liturgy, prayer is the relief of given words.
In psychology, prayer is the gathering of attention.
In unanswered longing, prayer is fidelity without guarantee.
In action, prayer is responsibility.
In work, prayer becomes care made material.
Together, these forms reveal prayer as the connective tissue of religious life.
That phrase matters because it avoids reducing prayer to a single function. Prayer is not only petition. It is not only praise. It is not only meditation. It is not only ritual. It is not only self-expression. It is not only moral formation. It is the practice that binds those things together. It joins inner life to outer life, memory to action, solitude to community, the dead to the living, speech to silence, and concern to care.
For me, prayer no longer begins with certainty that God is listening.
It begins with the certainty that human life must be addressed.
Grief must be addressed.
Gratitude must be addressed.
Failure must be addressed.
Fear must be addressed.
Beauty must be addressed.
Need must be addressed.
The dead must be addressed.
The living must be addressed.
The future must be addressed.
This is not the certainty of doctrine. It is the certainty of experience. I know what happens when these things remain unaddressed. Grief becomes numbness. Gratitude becomes entitlement. Failure becomes denial. Fear becomes control. Beauty becomes consumption. Need becomes shame. The dead become forgotten. The living become invisible. The future becomes someone else’s problem.
Prayer interrupts that.
It says: attend.
It says: speak.
It says: listen.
It says: remember.
It says: return.
It says: do not let this pass unnoticed.
That may be enough of a beginning.
Not a full theology. Not a return to the faith I once had. Not a solution to divine silence. Not proof that prayer reaches beyond the world. But a beginning. A way to stand honestly before the human need that prayer has always carried.
To whom it may concern:
I am still speaking.
