You Don't Need Permission to Pray
The veil was torn for a reason. Every believer was given direct access to God. So why do so many of us only practice it on Sundays?
In the Old Testament, the Veil existed for a reason. God's presence was restricted to the Holy of Holies, accessible only by the High Priest, and only once a year. The average person did not have direct access.
Then Jesus died — and the Veil was torn in two.
That wasn't a minor liturgical update. Every believer gained direct access to the Father — the truth the Church has celebrated every Easter since. You are a royal priesthood (1 Peter 2:9). You already have the standing to walk in.
And yet.
For most of us, that access stays a Sunday idea. We hear it preached, we believe it — and then Monday comes, and the prayer life goes quiet until the next gathering. Not because anyone is keeping us out, but because no one ever showed us what daily, personal prayer actually looks like when it's just us and God.
That's the gap Prayora was built for. Not to replace your church — to help you live out, the other six days, what your church proclaims on the seventh.
What does that look like practically?
It looks like praying in your own words, not borrowed phrases. It looks like bringing God your actual feelings — not a sanitized version that sounds right. It looks like trusting that the Spirit within you knows how to pray even when you don't know what to say (Romans 8:26).
You don't need permission to pray.
You never did.