Lord, Teach Me To Pray
I think sometimes that I don't understand anything about
prayer. I pray a lot, mind you. It's just that I don't understand a great deal
about it. I sometimes pray for good things, and they don't come. At other
times, I pray for myself or others to be spared bad things, yet they still
happen. How does prayer work? How do I know what to pray for? Do questions such
as these ever bother you?
Maybe at least part of our problem is in praying for wrong
things. If that is the case, then I can certainly begin to see how praying
could be confusing. When we are wrong-headed in what we ask, we can hardly
blame God for failing to answer. Let me try to make sense of what I am
struggling to say.
Back in the earliest days of the church, Peter and John were
called before the religious authorities of Jerusalem. They were ordered to stop
preaching about Jesus in the city. They were, in fact, threatened that bad
things would come down on them if they didn't stop. Duly warned, they were
released.
When the two men got back with their friends, they reported
everything that had happened. Then they prayed:
O Lord, hear their threats, and give us, your servants,
great boldness in preaching your word (Acts 4:29 NLT).
My fear is that I would have prayed for something different!
For the officials to back off? Sure. For divine protection from them?
Absolutely. For a "new call" for my ministry? Perhaps. But they
prayed neither for protection nor a new assignment. They prayed for boldness to
say what Jesus had told them to say.
Maybe you and I shouldn't pray for more money and things;
let's pray instead for an ability to appreciate what we have, manage it wisely,
and use it unselfishly.
Maybe we should pray less to have our life-annoyances taken
away; instead, let's pray for patience and to know that God's grace is
sufficient, no matter what.
Maybe we even should pray less about good health and
success; we might pray rather to be content, dignified, and courageous in
coping with our challenges.
It's certainly within God's will that we pray for daily
bread and deliverance from trials. The Lord's Prayer models as much for us (Matthew
6:9-13). But even Jesus prayed for things in Gethsemane that he qualified it
with the following statement:
Yet I want your will to be done, not mine (Mark 14:36 NLT).
Sometimes God's will is better done when one of his people
bears a cross with courage rather than have her problem eliminated. That's why
we surrender to his will over our own. That's why we accept the mystery
inherent in his will.
When all is said and done, I should probably worry less
about understanding the nature of prayer and simply pray.
Thank you for forwarding Ryan Gallente
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