Newly revealed Pompeii bath house
Bath house change room
And whenever you pray, do not be like the hypocrites, for they love to stand and pray in the synagogues and at the street corners, so that they may be seen by others. Truly I tell you, they have received their reward.
But whenever you pray, go into your room and shut the door and pray to your Father who is in secret, and your Father who sees in secret will reward you.
Matthew 6:5-6 NRSVue
Not long ago new tourist regulations were announced for Pompeii, a World Heritage Site in Italy that attracts 2.5 million visitors a year. It is a Roman town captured in time after the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79AD entombed the community in an pyroclastic flow, a fast-moving current of hot gas and volcanic matter.
Pompeii has been a place of somewhat morbid fascination for centuries and excavations going house by house, street by street have revealed astonishing aspects of Roman architecture and daily live. When an exhibit of the figures of those caught in this natural disaster visited Toronto and Montreal in 2015/16 it drew more than 600,000 visitors (we went to Montreal). While these were plaster casts of the people who died, essentially the negative images of their figures, it was a solemn experience.
Pompeii is in the news again as another recently excavated area is the subject of a documentary about a complex of buildings likely a villa owned by one wealthy person. Two skeletons were found in a room, one of a woman in her 30s who was well to do (well nourished, with jewellry) and that of someone who might have been a slave. They may have been seeking refuge from the cataclysm.
A pair of gold and natural pearl earrings found close to the female skeleton
It all sounds amazing but I am really intrigued that one small area, a room painted blue, has been identified as a prayer room. There is no explanation of how the archeologists decided that this was the purpose -- were there indications on the walls?
Lots of us have particular places inside and outdoors we find conducive for prayer and I tend to do so in my upstairs study, a quiet spot with a view out to two birch trees. When I was still in pastoral ministry I came in to the office fairly early to have some contemplative time and occasionally I actually put a "Prayer in Progress" sign on my door, although that didn't deter some people.
According to the gospels Jesus took time apart for prayer, and if he needed to do so, why wouldn't we? In the Sermon on the Mount he gives some pointed instruction on personal prayer and contemplation and has harsh words for those who like to strut their prayer stuff, calling them hypocrites.
While the residents of the villa in Pompeii likely worshipped Roman gods we can appreciate their devotion and take it to heart. two thousand years later.