Good Morning All!
One of the more entertaining parts of being
the preacher is teaching junior high age confirmation class. They really keep
you on your toes. I pretty much let almost any question be asked. It used to be any question but a few years
ago, “zombies” were put out of bounds. One of the interesting discussions
usually involves prayer.
It usually starts with the question, “what
is the right way to pray?” That brings
lots of answers but usually they agree that it is with your hands folded and
your head bowed. What if I stand like this? (I have both arms extended upward
with my head looking up) They all shake their head, no. I tell them that this
is how Solomon prayed to God in the Temple. They looked perplexed.
Then I ask, “what about this?” I kneel down on the floor and stretch out on
the floor. (This gets harder to do every year!!) They all shake their
heads again, a little more emphatically. “This is how Joshua and Elijah and
Jesus prayed; are you telling me that Joshua, Elijah and Jesus do not know how
to pray?” (It’s a little mean but they really looked puzzled by now) So the
question is asked again “what is the right way to pray?
This is where we talk about the different
postures of prayer in the Bible. The “right way to pray” is not about how you
stand or hold your hands or even what, exactly, you say. The right way to pray
is to just do it. Just pray. Take time to speak to God, to speak from your
heart, and do it often throughout the day. If you can get yourself to find a
pattern of a short devotion during the day and then praying to God during the
day; you can receive some real comfort from this. It can help make a “crisis”
more like a bump in the road. The truly wonderful thing is that as we continue
in a devotional time and then a prayerful life; the Holy Spirit will remind us
of different verses or passages to help us remember what God truly wants for us.
If we feel fearful or anxious, he can bring
up “cast all your anxieties on him for he cares for you.” If we feel burdened by stress we can remember
“Come to me all who are burdened, and I will give you rest!” If we feel
completely abandoned, we have “Lo, I am with you even to the end of the
age.” If we feel defeated, we have, “God
is for us, who can be against us?” These
can all come to mind if we keep a rhythm of speaking to and listening to God in
our lives. This will provide us with the strength and comfort and hope to live
this life.
Dearest
Lord, you taught us to pray in the manner of being at one with the Father. In
this way we can come close to you and to experience your grace and mercy. We
can live in a life of hope in you and never feel abandoned. In your precious
name we pray, amen.
God’s
Peace,
Pastor
Bret
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