Sorry about the delay in posting the fifth part of this series. This was due to a health issue (or which I may say more in a future blog). So, Hopko’s Fifth Maxim:
Repeat a Short Prayer When Your Mind Is Not Occupied
Repeating the Jesus Prayer or a short invocation like ‘Lord have mercy’ is a simple discipline that anyone can adopt. However, for an autistic Christian, this maxim offers something profoundly helpful: a way to transform those ‘in-between’ moments – waiting, driving, washing dishes – into a channel for God’s presence without demanding the kind of real-time social attention or environmental adaptation that other spiritual practices might require. Rather than fighting your mind’s tendency to wander into rumination or intrusive thoughts, the short prayer becomes a gentle anchor, something to say when you have ‘spare’ cognitive bandwidth. Importantly, this practice aligns beautifully with how many autistic brains naturally work: through repetition, verbal stimming, and ritualized language. What neurotypical spirituality might call ‘discipline’, your neurology may experience as something closer to a calming rhythm – the verbal equivalent of the rocking or repetitive movements that help restore equilibrium when overwhelmed.
Executive dysfunction in autism often means that your attention does not naturally organize itself according to neurotypical priorities; instead, you may find your mind either hyperfocused on one interest or scattered across competing thoughts with no clear hierarchy. A short prayer – whether ‘Jesus’, ‘Lord Jesus Christ have mercy’, or ‘Lord have mercy’ – bypasses the need to consciously generate novel language or hold complex theological concepts in mind. The repetition becomes a structure that organizes your scattered attention, much like a prayer rope or a rhythm organizes body movement. For some autistic people, the Jesus Prayer can approach the quality of a verbal stim – something you repeat 50, 100, or more times in a single stretch. This is not laziness or vain repetition, but rather the prayer becoming ‘almost like breathing’, as monks have practised for centuries. At that threshold of pure repetition, you may notice something remarkable: the barrier between your thoughts and God dissolves; the prayer ceases to be something you perform and becomes something you are breathing.
A short prayer works best when you establish it with deliberate simplicity and then trust that regularity will do the work. Choose one short form – not five variations that must be mentally rotated – and let that singularity become your anchor. The goal is not to achieve some rarefied state of contemplation during these moments, but rather to keep a thread of remembrance tethered to God while your hands and your rational mind attend to ordinary tasks. When your thoughts wander – and they will – rather than fighting yourself or feeling shame, simply notice where your mind has gone and gently return it to the prayer, as you would redirect a child’s attention without anger. Over time, this practice becomes less a struggle against your natural restlessness and more a sanctuary your mind returns to on its own, especially during moments of anxiety or sensory overload, when the repetition stabilizes your nervous system as surely as any formal liturgy.

