Simple Thoughts On Prayer - Part 1
There are those who believe in God but are unsure about how what to say in prayer. These few thoughts in this blog and the next are for you. This is simply a description of how I pray in the hope that sharing my practice will help you get started.
These are things I ask for every day, knowing I need God’s help with them every day.
I am sharply aware of my limitations, imperfections, and inadequacies so there is a sense of urgency to all of them.
You’ll see that in much of this I’m doing the alliteration thing. I didn’t set out to do that it. It just developed that way. I like it because it helps me remember what I need/want to ask for.
I am sharply aware of my limitations, imperfections, and inadequacies so there is a sense of urgency to all of them.
You’ll see that in much of this I’m doing the alliteration thing. I didn’t set out to do that it. It just developed that way. I like it because it helps me remember what I need/want to ask for.
First - God, I’m Yours.
It seems right to start the day with a prayer affirming my complete availability and submission to God as well as asking for His power for kindness, love, and strength for service. It helps me be in the right place as I recognize the rightful place of God. If you want an "e" to keep the theme going, you might declare that you want to "Empty" yourself of you.
Second - Engineer The Day.
I ask God to engineer my day. He is the Master Designer of all things I trust He knows what is ahead. I trust He is wiser than me on the use of each minute. I trust that He can arrange the events, provide the guidance, and steer me through each task. As a teenager, I encountered Proverbs 3:5-6, this prayer for God to divinely engineer my day comes from these words, “Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding. In all your ways acknowledge Him and He will make your path straight.”
Third - Empower Me
I pray daily for God to empower me. The New Testament (John 15:5, Galatians 5:22) makes it clear that for there to be any of the character of Jesus in me, it will require a work of God’s Spirit. And, it’s not automatic. So I ask, “Holy Spirit empower me,” acknowledging what I know to be true, that there’s nothing in me that can produce the fruit of virtues such as love, kindness, and so on. My worldview starts with a belief that there is a God, who really does interact with people, and who can supernaturally work in them.
I would caution you against thinking that asking for God-empowered character eliminates the need to make efforts in that direction. That would be, in my view, unbiblical. I ask for a kind heart AND I strive to be kind. God works in me AND I engage in every effort in the same direction.
I would caution you against thinking that asking for God-empowered character eliminates the need to make efforts in that direction. That would be, in my view, unbiblical. I ask for a kind heart AND I strive to be kind. God works in me AND I engage in every effort in the same direction.
(To Be Continued.)