A daily prayer life does not begin with a perfect plan. It begins with five minutes, today, before anything else fills the space. Most of us have started before, faltered, started again. That is not failure. That is the rhythm of the Christian life, the same rhythm Bishop Davies keeps reminding us of in this 175th anniversary year of our diocese.
It is by striving to live our own conversion that we can best support a new generation of converts. For Lent calls us to recognise that every member of the Church must always be a convert.
Pastoral Letter for Lent 2026.
If every member of the Church must always be a convert, then every Catholic needs a daily prayer life. Not as a hobby. As the way we keep saying yes to the One who keeps calling us.
Two decisions make the difference between a wish and a habit. Choose a time. Choose a place. The two together form the small architecture inside which God can teach you to pray.
If you work in central Shrewsbury, the Cathedral midday Mass is a gift hiding in plain sight. Monday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday at twelve o'clock. Half an hour of the Eucharist at the heart of the day, in the Cathedral consecrated by Cardinal Wiseman in 1856. The whole town has been given an anchor.
The Church gives us short prayers for every hinge of the day. Use them. They were made for working people.
Three small prayers, dropped into the morning, the noon and the night. The day starts to look like a Christian day.
Daily prayer is not a private project. It belongs inside the prayer of the Church. Sunday Mass is the centre of gravity. Confession is the regular reset. Adoration is the silence where we let the Lord look at us.
Let us return to the Altar and the Tabernacle of our parishes in the joyful recognition of faith and prayer, and wherever possible in prolonged Eucharistic Adoration. This is surely the best place for us to start anew.
Bishop Davies, on Re-awakening Eucharistic Faith.
The Catechism puts it plainly: Prayer is the life of the new heart (CCC 2697). The new heart is given at Baptism. Daily prayer is how we live in it.
You will miss days. Most of the saints did. The mark of a serious pray-er is not that he never stops. It is that he always starts again, today, without making a drama of it. As Saint Paul writes, pray without ceasing (1 Thessalonians 5:17). That is a destination, not a starting line.
Bishop Davies points to the 12 men currently in formation for the priesthood in our diocese, and to the prayer that has carried them. Behind every vocation in Shrewsbury is somebody else's quiet daily prayer. Yours could be the prayer that carries someone you have not yet met.
Pick one of these three and do it tomorrow.
Five minutes a day, in one chair, will change you in a year. Begin tomorrow morning.