| Prayer
is humbling ourselves before God and acknowledging our utter dependence
on Him for all of our needs. It isn't simply "thinking good thoughts."
It is also not just "positive thinking."
Prayer
is the life-link between us and Jesus Christ. During prayer we fellowship
with Him and receive encouragement and direction for our lives. We bring
the needs of others to Him and receive from Him the things they need.
I am
constantly hearing people, including fellow clergy, refer to the "power
of prayer". Let me shock you by making a statement I firmly believe, but
one with which many of you may disagree: In and of itself prayer
has no power!
It
is precisely because so many of us believe the notion that prayer has 'power',
or that prayer 'moves the hand of God', or other similar cliches, that
we get into trouble. We come to God with this long wish list; like He was
a heavenly Santa Claus or the tooth fairy. Then when we don't get what
we want we get angry and pull away from God and blame Him because we did
not get the things we wanted or the things we wanted to happen, didn't.
I've
heard the story of a little boy who prayed with all his might that his
mother, a very Godly woman, be healed from some disease with which she
suffered terribly. His mother eventually died. When the little boy became
a man he was angry and never wanted anything to do with God or church or
Christians. He boasted that he was an athiest and proud of it! All because
of his anger at God for not healing his mother.
We
lose sight of who we are and who God is! All too often we treat God as
if he were our butler. We ring and He is supposed to say, "You rang, master?"
We give Him our demand and then He is to march off smartly and fulfill
our every desire.
We
lose sight of the fact that we are the creation and God is the creator.
It is God who is all powerful and deserves our respect and worship. Because
of our sinful lives and arrogant pride we don't "deserve" anything from
God but His wrath! And yet, out of His love and mercy He hears our prayers
and responds to them. It is God who is all powerful - not our
prayers.
Coming
to God in prayer is no different than when my daughter, when she was a
little girl, came to me and asked me for something. Her request had no
power by itself. It was only in her love relationship with me that her
request stood any chance of being fulfilled. It was also only in my love
for her and my desire to fulfill her request that her request had any chance
of being granted. It was not in the "power" of her asking.
Did
I always say 'yes' to my daughter? Of course not! Sometimes I couldn't,
but at other times I knew it wouldn't be good for her. I had to make that
determination as her father. In her teen years she would occassionally
come to me with what one would call an 'attitude'. Her request sometimes
was not granted then simply because of the way it was made.
When
we come to God we need to come remembering who we are speaking to (respect)!
We need to make sure our heart attitude is right (humble). Then we can
make our requests known to Him (needs and desires). Finally, we
need to remember, as with earthly fathers, God has three possible answers
for our requests - YES, NO, and WAIT.
I believe
we live in a very self-centered and self-indulgent time. We need to begin
focusing on who God is (sovereign) and remembering who we are in relation
to Him. When we get that perspective right we might see that we are getting
a lot more prayers answered than we thought. That might lead us to say
"Thank you" to our Benefactor a little more often and talk a little less
about our 'power' in prayer! |