Perhaps you don't know that prayers are your personal relationship with your Lord and Creator. He wants you to personally tell him about your life, what you need and what you are appreciative of. What you are sorry for and who you have forgiven their trespasses. Praise is entirely different, it could be a song, it could be Psalms it could be the shedding of tears. Which are all repetitions and are all fine. But there is no personal relationship in a repetitive prayer.
I do agree that mindless and unfelt repetition is meaningless.
Modernism has reduced prayer to making the almighty the Santa in the sky.
27% of Christians admit to praying for sports outcomes. I have attended numerous modern churches and the lyrics of the praise songs and the sermons and the prayers are filled with me me me and I.
To each their own. But I'll follow the Lord's guidance when he answered that we should pray with "our father who art in heaven"
As a young Protestant, this was one of my favorites to ask Catholics. “Why do Catholics pray ‘repetitious prayer’ like the Rosary when Jesus says not to pray ‘vain repetitions’ in Matthew 6:7?”
I think we should begin here by quoting the actual text of Matt. 6:7:
And in praying do not heap up empty phrases (“vain repetitions” in KJV) as the Gentiles do; for they think that they will be heard for their many words.
Notice the context? Jesus said “do not heap up ‘empty phrases’ (Gr. – battalagesete, which means to stammer, babble, prate, or to repeat the same things over and over mindlessly) as the Gentiles do…” We have to remember that the main idea of prayer and sacrifice among the pagans was to appease the gods so that you could go on with your own life. You had to be careful to “take care of” all of the gods by mentioning them, and saying all the right words, lest you bring a curse upon yourself.
And remember as well, the gods themselves were immoral at times! They were selfish, cruel, vengeful etc. The pagans would say their incantations, offer their sacrifice, but there was no real connection between the moral life and the prayer. Jesus is saying that this will not cut it in the New Covenant Kingdom of God! One must pray from a heart of repentance and submission to God’s will. But does Jesus mean to exclude the possibility of devotions like the Rosary or the Divine Mercy Chaplet which repeat prayers? No, he does not. This becomes evident when, in the very next verses of Matthew 6, Jesus says:
Do not be like them, for your Father knows what you need before you ask him. Pray then like this: Our Father who art in heaven, Hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread; And forgive us our debts, As we also have forgiven our debtors; And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. For if you forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly Father also will forgive you; but if you do not forgive men their trespasses, neither will your Father forgive your trespasses.
Jesus gave us a prayer to recite. But notice the emphasis on living the words of the prayer! This is a prayer to be recited, but they are neither “empty phrases” nor “vain repetitions.”
16 words repeated for eternity sounds repetitive.
Perhaps you don't know that prayers are your personal relationship with your Lord and Creator. He wants you to personally tell him about your life, what you need and what you are appreciative of. What you are sorry for and who you have forgiven their trespasses. Praise is entirely different, it could be a song, it could be Psalms it could be the shedding of tears. Which are all repetitions and are all fine. But there is no personal relationship in a repetitive prayer.
I do agree that mindless and unfelt repetition is meaningless.
Modernism has reduced prayer to making the almighty the Santa in the sky.
27% of Christians admit to praying for sports outcomes. I have attended numerous modern churches and the lyrics of the praise songs and the sermons and the prayers are filled with me me me and I.
To each their own. But I'll follow the Lord's guidance when he answered that we should pray with "our father who art in heaven"
The others, the cross may be a stumbling block.
when you pray, do not use vain repetitions
Yes I see that. I apologize.
https://www.catholic.com/magazine/online-edition/do-catholics-pray-vain-repetitions
The examples of repetitious prayer in the Bible are also outlined on that site.
Praise, not prayers - big difference.