by jimwalton » Mon Dec 26, 2016 3:04 pm
When I really study what the Bible says about prayer, most of the time it is talking about internal things, not external circumstances (like Ephesians 3.14-19, as an awesome example). While the Bible invites me not be anxious about anything, but to pray without ceasing about everything, it helps us to be thinking correctly when we see that in the Bible prayer is so deeply about the soul and our relationship with God far more than it is about asking for things (Psalm 66.18-19).
A lot of times in prayer I talk about my day with God, and tell him what I'm feeling, what I'm struggling with, what I'm thankful for, and what else is on my mind.
Here's more of what I do. As you are waking up in the morning, start to talk to God before you even get out of bed, in the quietness of your mind and the room. While you are washing up, brushing your teeth, or taking a shower, instead of letting your mind be idle, fill your mind with Scriptures, thoughts of God, and talk to him. As you go through your day, there are plenty of times when your mind is not occupied with other concerns, and you can meditate on Scriptures and talk to God: driving your car, walking to work, standing in the elevator or walking up stairs. You can fill your mind with God and talk to Him while you are mowing the lawn, raking leaves, emptying the dishwasher, or cleaning the garage. Let the words of praise songs or hymns flow through and bathe your mind and soul. Invest in the lyrics of those songs, probing both the emotions and the theology there. All day long, whenever opportunity presents, let God be in your thoughts. (A good book to read is Practicing the Presence of God by Brother Lawrence.) At night when you fall to sleep, pray while you drift off, or recite a Bible verse. If you happen to waken in the middle of the night, use that as a time for prayer until you fall back to sleep. And when you wake up in the morning, praise God, it’s another day to live for him. There’s an old hymn that goes, “May the mind of Christ, my Savior, live in me from day to day.”
This is called “abiding,” and we can read about it in John 15. We are organically connected to Christ, our source of life and sustenance. Most of these prayers are not asking for things, but just the joy of connectedness. It is “praying without ceasing”—a life of prayer, rather than just a time of focused prayer (though that is still valuable). Throughout the day I find that I pray prayers more of soul than of circumstance, more of relationship than of request:
God, make your heart my heart, your eyes my eyes, your words my words, your ears my ears, your hands my hands, your feet my feet, your thoughts my thoughts, your ways my ways.
Teach me your ways, O Lord, that I may walk in them.
One thing I desire, O God, and one thing I seek: That I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of my life, to see your face, and to seek you in your house.
As the deer pants for the water, so my soul longs after you.
Your strength is made perfect in my weakness.
The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want.
Sometimes when I pray I rehearse the different names of God, what they mean and what they teach me. Sometimes I go through all the chapters in a book of the Bible—what they’re about, what they teach me, and verses to memorize. At other times I recite a verse of the Bible and emphasize separate words and ponder the new meanings such an emphasis yields:
**I** can do all things through Christ who strengthens me.
I **can do** all things through Christ who strengthens me.
I can do **all things** through Christ who strengthens me.
I can do all things **through Christ** who strengthens me.
I can do all things through Christ **who strengthens** me.
I can do all things through Christ who strengthens **me**.
Prayer is the connecting of hearts. It’s not just asking for things, but is, in the pleasure of God’s company, developing my soul and transforming my mine. I talk to God because I love him. I don’t approach God as if He’s the fairy God-Father. We don’t just go to God to get something. God is not here to serve us; we are here to serve Him. In prayer we shut out the noise of the earth to commune with the song of heaven. And life goes on with its blessings and tragedies. My circumstantial life may seem no different than anyone else’s, but my inner life is a treasure trove of immense difference. I have learned to see the hand of God around me, and it often surprises me in all its forms. God is all around me, actively at work. Do I get what I pray for? Usually only like the poem—not what I ask for, but answers nonetheless, and exactly what I was praying about. I have to be alert enough to see that God is taking care of me. Sure, I get stones some days and fish others; some days I’m Job, and some I’m on the Mount of Transfiguration. I never hear a voice, as I’ve heard that some people do, and I’ve learned not to trust the thoughts that come to me in prayer. Some are trustworthy, and some aren’t. Those thoughts need to be assessed because the thoughts that come to my mind during prayer are too often my own thoughts rather than God’s. I have learned that God talks to me primarily through His Word, and that’s where I find reliable revelation.
One of the most profound things I notice is that prayer is almost more heart-spoken than lip-spoken. I find that as I seek God with all my heart, soul, and mind, and when I am just living by the Spirit of God, God takes care of me in ways that I wasn’t even praying about, and I can see his hand at work around me when I wasn’t even astute enough to ask about those things. In other words, when I seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness, all these things are added unto me. God acts proactively with me rather than reactively. His answers deal with the desires of my heart even though they never crossed my lips. Romans 8.26 teaches me that the Spirit himself intercedes with the prayers that should be prayed. God is not the “judge” who grudgingly gives what I choose to nag him for, but the Father who sees my heart and graciously gives me what it is he wills me to have. Deep and meaningful prayer is more based in the relationship than on the requests.
Last bumped by Anonymous on Mon Dec 26, 2016 3:04 pm.