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The Difference Between Faith and Trust in God

Recently, I wrote about my mother’s heart valve replacement and her fear around scheduling the necessary procedure. My mother’s faith in God is strong and always has been, but worried that something would go wrong, she couldn’t face having the surgery until she consciously put all of her trust in the Lord’s hands. Her situation left me wondering…is there a difference between faith and trust? This question has been on my mind for a while now.

It is one thing to believe in God, but another entirely to trust blindly in Him. And it is human nature to fear the unknown. The struggle with placing our trust entirely in God is something we must all face at one time or another.

It boils down to this: faith is a belief system; trust is action. Faith is believing that God is who God says He is and that what God can do, only God can do. But trust takes things a step further. It is making the willful choice to trust that God will do what He promises. The head versus heart.

Here’s an example. In the Gospel, there is a story of a sick child whose father told Jesus, “I believe, help my unbelief.” Just like the father in the story, my mother had faith in God. But she needed to trust that God was in control of her situation before moving forward with the procedure.

Most of us believe in the power of God thanks to our personal experiences and through reading the Bible. But putting these beliefs into action can be a true challenge for most. Placing our trust in God is our choice and one that we must make wholeheartedly. But no matter what, God is with us.

Lord, help us put our faith into action so that we can trust You wholeheartedly with our lives.

Split-Second Prayers Straight to God’s Heart

Many of us allocate quiet time for prayer several times a week, if not every day, yet long for more in our spirit. How do we pray continuously as the apostle Paul encouraged us, while our jobs, household tasks and family life consume most of our days? Split-second prayers!

These are quick, unceremonious conversations and impromptu thoughts we express directly from our heart to the heart of God throughout the day, often times without audible words.

I find myself saying brief prayers from the moment that my eyes open, “Thank you, Lord, for a new day.” On my drive to the office, “Lord, direct my steps and help me to achieve my goals for the day.” While walking into a staff meeting, “God, give me wisdom to direct your people.” I meet a colleague who shares about their sick parent, “Lord, heal the parent and strengthen my co-worker.” I am amazed how many prayers flow continuously throughout the day.

It doesn’t require elaborate, lengthy sentences to reach the heart of God. Brother Lawrence, author of Practice the Presence of God, reminds us,” A little lifting of the heart suffices; a little remembrance of God, one act of inward worship are prayers which, however short, are nevertheless acceptable to God.”

The spilt-second prayer connects us with God when we or others need it most. The blind man by the Jericho road cried out, “Jesus, Son of David, have mercy upon me.” The father with a sick child prayed, “I believe, help my unbelief.”

Maintaining a prayerful mindset helps us to stay in tune with God. As we make instant supplication for His will in our life or in the lives of others, we invite His intervention into the moment, thus releasing His blessing.

Have you ever felt a nudge to pray for someone you didn’t know while waiting in a doctor’s office, sitting in traffic or shopping at the mall? These are great opportunities to invade their life with the power of prayer. They may be strangers to us, but God knows them intimately and sees their needs. Their circumstance can take a turn for the better, just because we obeyed the prompting of the Holy Spirit to lift them in prayer.

I believe that there are thousands upon thousands of people saying short prayers for others every day with huge impact, but most will never know their lives were touched by the intercession of split-second prayers.

Lord, help me to remember that my prayer, however short, is acceptable to You. It’s not about how long it is; it’s about how big You are!

Speak Life

“Stick and stones can break my bones, but words can never hurt me.” Not true! Words have power–they can lift you up or tear you down. Words can speak life or death into a person’s soul.

In the creation account, we are witness of this, “Let there be light, and there was light.” Through God’s spoken word, the world was created.

Words matter.

History continually teaches us that the spoken word has a resounding effect on us and on our society. Leaders have a unique power to inspire and lift up the masses.

This quote from President Franklin D. Roosevelt, delivered during a time of deep despair at the height of the Great Depression, gave a nation hope, “This great nation will endure as it has endured, will revive and will prosper….the only thing we have to fear is fear itself.”

The famous words of Dr. Martin Luther King, “I have a dream… a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character,” cast a vision that lifted society to a higher level.

Although the majority of us will not find our words in a history book, what we say to others will live on in the hearts of others. They hold the power to inspire with hope, or tear down with negativity. The choice is ours.

Where do you turn for guidance? Jesus is our example; he spoke words of compassion, forgiveness, healing and love. Ultimately he spoke with his own life so that we might have life.

Do you believe that our words have power? I am interested in your experience. Share with me how you inspire and encourage others with your words.

My prayer is, Lord, teach us to speak life to others through our words and actions.

Seeking Guidance in Prayer

I will instruct you and teach you in the way that you should go; I will guide you with my eye. (Psalm 32:9)

How do you know what God wants you to do? How do you find his guidance? Probably the same way you follow the signals from your loved ones.

Here’s the scene: I’ll be sitting across the table from my wife, Carol, at a dinner party and I’m about to launch into a story that I think is outrageously funny, but I stop for a minute. Just a glance at her face says everything. Either “No, not here” or “Don’t include me when you tell that story” or “Yes, you can try it.” The people we love look out for us and guide us with their eye.

I can remember when our boys were young and looking up questioningly at me. Their faces said everything: “Daddy, can we? Daddy, can I?” Or even when I was a child and I searched my parents’ eyes. Was I on their wavelength? Was now the right time to ask for something I really wanted—that extra cookie, the TV show I really wanted to see, a trip to the toy store to spend my allowance?

All of this is in one of my favorite Bible verses about prayer, Psalm 32:9 (see above). Does God yell and shout? Does he hit us over the head or twist our arm, giving us misery until we figure out what he’s saying? Not according to this verse. What he’s got to say we can get from looking to his face. The eyes say it all.

So when I close my eyes in prayer, I begin searching for that face, like the face of a loved one who wants me to do my best, who wants to give me the most, who believes in me, who loves me. Look into someone’s eyes and you know what they’re thinking. Look to the eye of God for guidance.

P.S.: As a dad, when my kids were looking at me, I was a pushover.

Satisfying Our Spiritual Thirst for God

Just like the body must stay hydrated during physical activities, we must also “be hydrated in our spirits,” as author Max Lucado says, to keep our passion for God alive. Psalm 42:1 states, “As the deer pants for streams of water, so my soul pants for you, O God. My soul thirsts for God, for the living God.” We are all spiritual beings in physical bodies. When we’re passionate about God, in each of us there is a unique spiritual thirst to be closer to Him.

How do we quench our thirst for the spiritual and divine? Here are eight ways for you to try:

1. Praying in solitude or with others
2. Reading sacred text…for some it’s the Bible
3. Journaling about life’s struggles and unanswered questions
4. Reflecting on spiritual content
5. Helping others within and outside of your community
6. Taking a spiritual pilgrimage to the Holy Land or other place<
7. Attending weekly worship services
8. Taking daily walks and talks with God

The closer we get to God, the more we yearn for Him, as the deer pants for streams of water. God satisfies our thirst so we can stay spiritually healthy and faithful to Him. How do you satisfy your spiritual thirst? Share with us.

Lord, I come to you to quench my spiritual thirst; draw me closer to Your love.

Safe and Secure in God’s Arms

The phone rang at 2:30 in the morning. “Maybe that’s him,” my husband, Lonny, said. Our 20-year-old son, Logan, had gone caving with four friends from college in nearby Maquoketa Caves State Park, and he had promised that he would call. Logan always checked in.

Lonny pushed back the covers and I followed him to the kitchen. He grabbed the phone and I listened in at his side. It was one of Logan’s friends. I could hear every word: “Logan’s trapped in the cave. Rescue workers are here. But you need to come. He’s been in there for a while.”

An image exploded in my mind: Logan trapped in the dark, maybe unable to move, maybe worse. I put my hands over my ears—I couldn’t bear it—and bolted out the back door. The bricks in the patio were cold on my bare feet, but I had to get away from that phone.

Exploring caves is popular around here. Lonny first took Logan spelunking when he was just a boy. My son knew the caves, knew the narrow tunnels, the tight turns, the deepest caverns. Every year he went back with his friends to explore them.

Lonny came outside and put his arms around me. “I’ve got to go. Best you stay here with the kids until we know more,” he said. Our four younger boys were still sleeping. “I’ll keep you posted.” He handed me the phone and led me inside to the room where I’d homeschooled the kids.

Books were stacked on the table, The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, A Wrinkle in Time. Gifts Logan had bought for his brothers years ago at the library’s used book sale.

There on the shelf was the pencil holder he’d made me when he was six, a tin can sponged with orange paint. And the antique Seth Thomas clock he wound every morning.

I looked at it and started to count the hours. How long had Logan been trapped? Six, seven hours already?

The news spread. Friends arrived. They sat with me, comforted me, prayed with me. Then came my dad. I fell into his arms. “Logan’s a good kid,” he said. “He’s got brains and faith. That’ll see him through.”

My Bible was on the table, open to the psalm I’d been studying the day before, Psalm 139.

If I go up to the heavens, you are there; if I make my bed in the depths, you are there. If I rise on the wings of dawn, if I settle on the far side of the sea, even there your hand will guide me. Your right hand will hold me fast.

If only I could hold on to that thought, if I could hold on to it for Logan and for me.

The teapot whistled, birds sang outside, morning broke. A serene blue sky promising a beautiful May day. The other children woke up and wandered in. I told them about their brother, doing all I could to hide my fears.

“I’m going to go there now,” I said. “I want to be there when Logan gets out.” But how soon would that be? And what kind of shape would he be in then? If I make my bed in the depths, you are there.

Dad drove me to the park. We parked and walked to the cave. A command center had been set up, dozens of emergency vehicles. Ambulances, fire trucks, police cars, EMT trucks from all over the area. A steady stream of men and women came and went from the mouth of the cave.

I spotted Lonny at the top of a hill on a path that cut through the trees. I knew his gait, his baseball cap, but not the way he clenched his jaw.

I ran to him and he held me close for the second time in hours. “It’s going to be a while,” he said. “They’re using air chisels, but they can only go in one at a time. Twenty minutes a shift. There’s not enough oxygen for more.”

I stared down. Where was my son? Was he right beneath my feet? I was so close and yet I could do nothing.

“I can’t stand this, Lonny,” I said. “I feel like clawing the ground.”

“They caved all afternoon,” he explained. “At dinner a couple of the kids went to make a fire, but Logan and his friend Emma wanted to go to one more cave.”

He pulled off the baseball cap and ran his fingers through his hair. “Logan was in front. Emma was behind. She got stuck so Logan was trapped too.”

It had taken five hours for Emma to be rescued, Logan holding her hand and encouraging her all that time. He even gave her his shirt. But when he tried to follow the rescue workers out, he became stuck maneuvering over a crevice. He slipped down and got wedged in the crevice.

Now he was tired, hungry, oxygen-deprived. Facedown, his arms pinned. There was a solid rock ledge over him.

“Can they give him oxygen?”

“We got oxygen near him, but he’s too hard to reach.”

We found a shelter with picnic benches by the trees on the hill and waited there. Friends brought food. We talked about Logan’s growing-up years, what a smart, gentle, thoughtful kid he was, the perfect older brother.

Was this all it was for? Was this where it all ended? In a dark space between rocks in a cave?

God, I know you’re there with Logan. But why didn’t I feel God close by with me? Terrible things happened sometimes. Sons died and mothers stood by fresh graves even when they prayed. As sure as Logan was trapped, I was too.

A rescue worker rushed up to us with good news. “Your son has an arm free. He was actually close enough to touch my collar.” I wanted to reach out and touch the man’s collar myself. “We can get him a little oxygen now.”

Then I overheard Lonny say to another rescue worker in a low tone, “If he goes into shock or you think he’s not coming out, let me go down. I want to hold my boy’s hand.”

“What should we pray for?” I asked. “What do you need?”

The rescue worker paused. “Pray that Logan has the strength to help lift himself out,” he said. “That’s the only way.” Then he was gone.

I turned to my friend Teresa. “I can’t take it anymore. I feel like I’m going mad.” I couldn’t stop the dark thoughts, the terrible haunting notion that I would never see my son again.

“We should sing,” she said.

“Sing?”

She nodded. All at once the tune of “Amazing Grace” sprang up around me, first a few voices, then more. I didn’t have the strength to sing myself, but I closed my eyes and listened to the words.

“Through many dangers, toils and snares I have already come. ’Tis grace that brought me safe thus far and grace will lead me home.”

Something in me broke, the fear that had coiled around me loosened. I could feel God’s love at work around me, the friends singing, the family members praying, the rescue workers coming and going from the cave.

It might have been dark down there, but God wasn’t any less present than he was up here, above ground on a bright May day. He was in the very depths of the cave and the depths of my heart. God would find me wherever I was, even at my most hopeless. I would be held no matter what.

Suddenly I felt strong enough to lift my voice in song. “The Lord has promised good to me, his word my hope secures. He will my shield and portion be as long as life endures.”

The site began to buzz with activity. More rescuers moving to the mouth of the cave, EMTs rushing forward. I heard some shouts. A woman came running up to us on the hill. “He’s free of the crevice,” she said. Soon a man pulled us together and told us, “He’s coming out. He’s safe.”

He’s free! Never were there more welcome words. Never had I felt such a strong sense of God’s mercy or his hand at work. Logan had survived underground for 20 hours. I rode to the hospital with him in an ambulance. He was covered in dirt and bruises, nothing a mother’s love couldn’t treat.

“Mom, Dad,” he told us the next day, “you know what I did when I didn’t think I was going to last? I did just what you would have.”

What was that? “Sing, Mom. I sang and knew God was there with all of us.” He was. He held us fast in the depths.

Read Logan's account of his miraculous survival!

Download your FREE ebook, A Prayer for Every Need, by Dr. Norman Vincent Peale

Rediscover Your Childhood Prayers

A few years ago, my wife and I were part of a team helping to support an orphanage in Mexico. Though our limited (poquito, we said repeatedly) Spanish was an impediment, my wife enjoyed a precious bedtime ritual in the girls dorm, teaching them a verse in English from her own childhood:

Now run along home and jump into bed

Go to sleep, don’t cover your head

The very same thing I say unto you

“You dream of me, and I’ll dream of you.”

It’s not a prayer, exactly, but the girls took to it (even in translation), and it bonded them and my wife together in a way that I hope outlasted our sojourn there.

I think something similar can happen as we rediscover some of the prayers of our childhoods. Sure, we’ve grown and matured, and most of our prayers today are much more sophisticated than when we were children. But many of the things we prayed in childhood remain close to our hearts today—so why not rediscover those childhood prayers and pray them again? Here are seven that may be familiar and rewarding:

1) A Child’s Grace

God is great, God is Good,

And we thank Him for our food;

By His hand we all are fed,

Give us, Lord, our daily bread.

2) A Musical Grace

Be present at our table, Lord,

Be here and everywhere adored.

Thy mercies bless and grant that we

May feast in paradise with Thee.

3) Small Thanks

Thank you for the world so sweet;

Thank you for the food we eat;

Thank you for the birds that sing;

Thank you, God, for everything.

4) A Musical Petition

Teach me how to love Thee,

Teach me how to pray,

Teach me how to serve Thee,

Better day by day.

5) The “Guardian Angel” Prayer

Angel of God, my guardian dear,

to whom God’s love commits me here;

Watch over me throughout the night,

and keep me safe within your sight.

6) Angels Bless and Angels Keep

Angels bless and angels keep;

Angels guard me while I sleep.

Bless my heart and bless my home;

Bless my spirit as I roam.

Guide and guard me through the night

and wake me with the morning light.

7) A Bedtime Prayer

Now I lay me down to sleep;

I pray the Lord my soul to keep:

Guide and guard me through the night

And wake me with the morning light.

Such prayers are rich with memory and meaning. But they still work for me, and sometimes take my mind and heart to a place of simplicity and trust that more elaborate prayers might miss.

Are there prayers of your childhood you might want to revisit today?

Recharge Your Faith!

One question asked by individuals striving for more faith is “How can I feel God’s presence in my life?” People yearn to develop the close relationship with God that they have with loved ones here on earth.

The standard answers are 1) read the Bible, 2) go to church and 3) pray. But these do not satisfy everyone because the question comes back, “How do I do these things in such a way that I shall feel his presence?”

One obstacle blocking people from finding communion with God is their inability to picture God in human form. But Jesus is easy to picture and understand. We know he loved poor and rich, holy and unholy, educated and unschooled alike. So one way we can build a satisfying personal relationship with God is through Jesus and his warm personality.

If you have a misunderstanding with a close friend, or an unpleasant situation estranges you temporarily from a relative, the only Christian thing to do is to get together with that person, ask forgiveness, and talk over the situation until your relationship is restored. So if you feel the same separateness from God, wouldn’t it be logical to follow the same procedure—talk things over humbly and sincerely? I’ve known people who have done this. Here is how it happened to one woman I’ll call Sarah.

Sorrowing over the loss of a close friend, beset with money problems and upset over her husband’s drinking, Sarah felt a need for communion with God. She prayed regularly but somehow she felt her prayers weren’t getting through.

One day Sarah went for a walk in the country near her home. Ahead she saw a small church. The front door was open, so she stepped inside and sat in a pew. The sanctuary seemed bleak. The pulpit needed painting, the walls were bare, and the altar was plain. In fact, the only sacred effect in the church was a picture of Christ above the altar.

Sarah’s eyes rested on this picture. She wondered what it would have been like to have lived during Jesus’ time on earth. To have had the opportunity of serving him food, washing his feet—what a privilege! Sarah continued to look at the picture and imagine herself as his helper. Jesus became more and more alive to her. Soon she felt his presence so strongly that she began talking to him.

“Lord, I wish I could have served you then,” Sarah said softly.

My child, you serve me now when I have more need of you….

“But I have so many troubles…. My faith seems so feeble…. I know so little…. I do want to please you.”

You need not know much to please me. Only love me dearly. And never hesitate to tell me your troubles.

“But you have so many who need you.”

None more important than you. But tell me also of your joys and your dreams. I want to share all of your life.

“How can I be a better mother and wife?”

Remember that I love your husband and your children. I will be with you always. Confide in me and you will never have to face anything alone.

Suddenly the church was luminescent with beauty. The bare walls and paint-starved furnishings took on warmth. There was peace and fulfillment inside Sarah.

It made no difference that some of her friends attributed this conversation to her imagination. What happened belonged to Sarah alone. Jesus had been with her in the church—I have no doubt of it.

Most significant, however, is the way Sarah went about finding this relationship sought by so many. She did not sit idly, praying selfishly that God would come to her and make everything right. Literally she could say the words of Psalm 34:4: “I sought the Lord, and he heard me…. ” She hungered enough for God to go out and seek him. She gave herself completely, thinking only of how she could serve. And what happened? The Lord heard her—and answered.

Prepare Our Hearts for Jesus

This is he of whom it is written: "Behold, I send My messenger before Your face, Who will prepare Your way before You." (Luke 7:27)

I can remember when my oldest daughter was pregnant; we went out shopping for clothes and new furniture. We did not want her son to be born and not have a place to sleep of his very own. We did not want to be caught by surprise, especially when we knew the potential due date.

The season of Advent points us all to get ready for the birth of the Lord Jesus. I can imagine what it must have been like to hear the prophets speak about a long-awaited Messiah. The Israelites had been in captivity and looking forward to the day when they would be free from bondage. The prophet Isaiah announced that God would send his servant into the world to suffer for the sins of his people, and to help his people.

Another century went by and the prophet Jeremiah announced a new covenant that God would make with his created beings. He proclaimed that this new covenant would be extended from the least to the greatest. Forgiveness would be offered not only for the nation of Israel, but also for all nations; their sins would be remembered no more.

The prophets gave hope to those who were without hope through their words. Generations passed without the fulfillment of the prophecies. Despite the long period of silence, more than 400 years, there was still great anticipation. Those who believed in the word of the prophets were hopeful and continued expecting that some day the prophecies would be fulfilled. At the appointed time, from the womb of his mother, John the Baptist recognized that Mary was joyfully preparing for the birth of her son Jesus, just as the prophets announced.

Now, 2013 years later, our hope is still in the babe born in a manger. This is the hope of Advent. We have reason to pray that the God of hope will make room in our hearts for Jesus. There was no room for him in the inn, but we can make room for him in our heart. The point of prayer is to have an encounter with God. Knowing that he has come to dwell with us lets us know that he is near. Let him come alive in you.

God bless you!

Pray When You Don’t Need to Pray

There are times, of course, when you “need” to pray. A loved one is sick, perhaps. Or you’re fearful or even panicked about an upcoming court date. Or you really want the job for which you just interviewed. There are great and obvious advantages to praying at such times.

But many people miss out on great blessings because they pray only when they feel a need (and, sure, some of us are constantly aware of our great need so there is no such thing as a moment when we don’t “need” prayer).

More than 20 years ago, I adopted a twice-daily prayer habit, morning and evening, that has served me well. I seldom miss those daily appointments. Most of the time, in fact, I look forward to them with longing and anticipation. And sometimes I feel a clear and compelling need to pray—often for one of those reasons mentioned above. But most of the time, my prayers are not driven by need. I still pray for myself, my wife, my family, my work, my church and my friends, but the majority of my prayers are fairly routine. And that’s a good thing.

My daily prayers typically include The Lord’s Prayer, the Apostle’s Creed, a psalm or two (chanted, using ancient melodies I’ve learned from the monks of The Abbey of Gethsemani in Kentucky), the Gloria (“Glory to the Father, to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit . . . “), the general intercession (“Watch, dear Lord, with those who wake, or watch, or weep tonight, and give your angels charge over those who sleep. Tend your sick ones, Lord Christ. Rest your weary ones, bless your dying ones, soothe your suffering ones, shield your joyous ones, and all for your love’s sake, amen”), and the Nunc Dimittis (“Lord, you now have set your servant free to go in peace, as you have promised,” etc.), among others.

It may sound boring or routine to some people, but I exult in those prayers and others because through them God teaches, prepares, calms and grows me, regardless of whether I “feel” like praying or “need” to pray.

I think Eugene Peterson is right when he says,

Feelings are the scourge of prayer. To pray by feelings is to be at the mercy of glands and weather and digestion. And there is no mercy in any of them. Feelings lie. Feelings deceive. Feelings seduce. . . . If we insist on . . . praying when we feel like it according to what we feel we need, we take on a psychic burden that is too much for us. (Answering God, p. 88)

Regular prayer, even repetitive prayer, stores up in me a treasury of faith and familiarity that is available when great needs present themselves. Praying when I don’t need to pray makes me a better person, day by day, which makes my prayers better. Such prayer trains me in the language of prayer. And, perhaps most importantly and wonderfully, praying this way keeps me close not only to the God who answers prayer but also to the God who loves me and speaks to me and tells me what to pray, and why He is so much better and bigger than my need.

Praying ‘Repurposed’ Prayers

Growing up, I attended Sunday school every week, and some of my earliest prayers were learned there. For example, there was one prayer I learned to treasure. It was called “the Mizpah Benediction.” Ever heard of it?

My Sunday school class and children’s church would often conclude with words imported from Genesis 31:49: “The Lord watch between me and thee, when we are absent one from another” (KJV). Sweet, right?

Only much later did I learn that those words were first spoken in a much different context than a gathering of friends and fellow worshipers. In fact, the words were spoken by Laban to Jacob; neither of them trusted the other, so the original context was that of one man saying to another, “God will get you if you betray me.”

That certainly changes things. Or does it?

As Jesus hung on the cross, dying an excruciating death, he called out, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” (Matthew 27:46, NIV). The words are famous today as one of the “seven words” or sayings Jesus uttered on the cross, but they were originally the opening lines of a song (or psalm) written by David, giant-killer who became the shepherd king of Israel. We don’t know in what circumstances David wrote that line, but we can be sure they weren’t his dying utterance. We might say that Jesus “repurposed” David’s prayer, quoting it and applying it to His own agony on the cross.

Jesus did the same with another line from one of David’s songs, Psalm 31:5: “Into your hands I commit my spirit” (NIV). Luke 23:46 records, “Then Jesus called out in a loud voice, ‘Father, into Your hands I commit My Spirit.’ And when He had said this, He breathed His last” (NIV). It was another prayer Jesus repurposed, so to speak, and may even have done so believing that those who heard His words would recognize them and see His sufferings as having been foreshadowed in scripture.

So, when recently I stood at the bedside of my wife’s mother, whose health was failing fast, and recited with her and other family members the familiar “Mizpah Benediction,” I didn’t mind at all that the others probably gave no thought to the original context of those words. They were a comfort, and a blessing from God’s Word.

So I would suggest that we don’t have to feel obligated to carefully duplicate the context of every prayer we pray, even when the prayer comes from the Bible. Jesus didn’t. In fact, I think His life was probably so saturated with the words of scripture that the words arose almost constantly into His mind and heart as prayer. May it be increasingly so with us, even when the prayer is “repurposed.”

Praying a New Way!

One of the first things I do every morning is pray. After I hit the snooze on the alarm, I start my prayer in bed or I roll out, landing on my knees. My goal is to exercise discipline in my prayer life, so I do it first thing. When I pray before doing anything else, it prepares me for the day. If I oversleep and don’t leave myself enough time to pray, my day is not the same. It feels a little disjointed.

My preferred way to talk to the Lord in my morning prayers is on bended knees. When I pray during the day, I’m usually sitting or standing. Just recently I found a new way to pray!

Yesterday, I woke up with a feeling of overwhelming sorrow. When I went to bed the night before, I felt fine. This sorrowful feeling was quite strange for me. I rolled out of bed with tears flowing down my face and before I knew it, I was sobbing with intensity. What was wrong? I was missing my daughter. The previous day my husband and I had taken her to college and we both were emotionally fine. In fact, I told her that it felt like I was taking her to camp. She smiled and said, “Mom I have never gone to overnight camp.” She was right, but that’s how I felt.

I tried to pray my usual way, but I could not get the words out. I knew that if I did not get out what I was feeling, I would not be able to go about the rest of my day. Then I decided to try writing my prayer down on a pad next to my bed. This was new, but it was all I could manage at the time. As I began writing while still sobbing, I started to feel a sense of peace. I wrote the words that came to my mind.

I wrote about the sorrow and loss that I felt not having my daughter at home. I knew that God understood, because Hebrew 5:7 tells us that during the days of Jesus’ life on earth, he offered up prayers and petitions with loud cries and tears. What I needed most was to know that I was loved and that my Heavenly Father understood what I was going through. It was important to him because I am important to him!

While writing, I sensed the Lord’s peace. In my heart I heard his strong words that he was with me and would never leave me. Those powerful yet gentle words dried every tear and brought my heart to a place of calm.

My prayer point is this: When you cannot find words to speak because the pain is more than you can articulate… try writing. I offer this to you because it helped me find a way to cast my cares onto the Lord. If you cannot say it, write it! We are not limited to one way of praying. We connect with God through conversation; it is a dialogue. We were not made to carry our own burdens, but he can. I pray that God will meet you wherever you are and whatever you are going through.

God bless you!