Category: Prayer (Page 23 of 29)

Let's Get Specific Now

What can the church do?Thank you so much for your kind and thoughtful comments the past couple of days regarding this discussion of a church’s vision — or the vision a church may project — and its relation to how the members of that church act on a day-to-day basis. If Stanley Hauerwas is right in that the moral life is as much a matter of vision as a matter of doing; if one acts in the world according to how one sees the world; if our actions are informed and shaped by our attitudes and outlooks; then what can the church do about tweaking — or in some cases, maybe, completely overhauling — the vision?

What specifically can the Church, or a local congregation, do to help Christians see their faith and their citizenship in the Kingdom as a completely different world, a totally different time and space, that determines how we act in this world, in this time and space? Our actions need to be determined beforehand by what God has done for us, what he’s doing for us currently, and has promised to do for us tomorrow. It all has to be connected.

What can the Church do?

I’ll start this part of the discussion by suggesting a return to the spiritual disciplines. To me, it seems like the logical first step.

Corporate fasting would remind us that our devotion to God informs not only where we eat, but what we eat, and when. I’m in control of my growling appetites, not the world and not the culture and not my co-workers or neighbors. Fasting sharpens our spiritual focus. And it teaches us that we don’t have to conform to what’s happening around us. Nobody’s making us do anything.

Daily reading of the Scriptures fills our hearts and minds with faith language, faith images, and faith ideas. It’s a constant reminder that we live according to the big picture of what God is doing for us through Christ and that our work and play and activities of living on this temporary planet are small in comparison. It reminds us that Christ is Lord, not Caeser; that we’re citizens of heaven, not the Empire. It will shape our vision to pay more attention to heavenly things than earthly things.

Constant prayer keeps us in continual communication with the Father, which also fosters these same ways of looking at things.

I would recommend the church teaching the spiritual disciplines from the pulpit and in Bible classes. Frank discussions and direction regarding prayer and fasting, study and service, and confession and submission will energize a group of Christians. The reality that all of life is informed by our status as children of Almighty God will quickly set in. I would suggest the church develop curiculum for use in the home; fasting with a small group, praying with the family, studying with the kids, meditating with the spouse. Maybe just ten or fifteen minutes a day within each family, with small group discussions about the previous week on Sunday nights, is all it would take. A church family then sees itself as doing things the rest of the world doesn’t do. They experience being separate from the world and bound to each other in Jesus. And they’re much more able, even more willing, to let go of the society which has such a hold on us and embrace the eternal realities of God in Christ.

What else?

Peace,

Allan

According To God's Will

According to God’s willWhen we pray, we do so in faith that God is always going to give us what we need. We get that. We understand that. But what do we do with the words of our Lord in John 14:13-14?

“I will do whatever you ask in my name…You may ask me for anything in my name, and I will do it.”

But God doesn’t give me whatever I ask. He’s said “no” to many of my prayers. His words don’t mean the same thing to us that they meant to the apostles.

What if — play along with me here — everytime you asked for something in prayer, God gave you a gift. He blessed you. What if — are you still with me? — sometimes he gives you something different than what you asked, but that something is so much bigger and better? What if God makes substitutions, but those “audibles” are always to your advantage?

He created me. He knows me. He knows every single thing about me. He certainly knows what’s best for me.

“If you then, though you are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father in heaven give good gifts to those who ask him!” ~Matthew 7:11

God may not always give you exactly what you ask for. But your faith assures you that God is giving — he’s always giving. And if it’s different, you can trust that it’s better for you than what you think you want. His divine sovereignty will prove out because he knows. He knows much better than you what will best meet your needs and fit into his heavenly plans.

If my kids beg me for Little Debbies and Dr Pepper floats for every meal, three times a day, but I answer those requests by giving them salads and steaks and vegetables and rice and milk and water, does that show that I love them less? Or does it prove I love them more? Giving them what they want all the time would actually be much easier. But wouldn’t it prove that I don’t really have their long term interests at heart?

Jesus says, if you (insert your name), in all your shortcomings and sins and failures; if you (insert your name), in all your inadequacies, in all your evil; if you (insert your name) know how to give good gifts to your children…

How much more!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

24 Hours of PrayerYes, I’ve got prayer on the mind. It’s 6:30 Friday evening and there are seven men in two different rooms upstairs in The Rock here at Legacy, praying for over 130 prayer requests from our church family and the community. We started praying in one-hour shifts up there at 8:00 this morning. And nearly a hundred men are coming and going throughout the night through 8:00 tomorrow morning in our big annual prayer event, Legacy’s 24 Hours of Prayer.

I can’t adequately describe what it’s like to pray for your brothers and sisters, to lift up their deepest fears and concerns and their richest praise and thanksgivings, with four or five other brothers, for over an hour. I learn so much. I didn’t really know Michael until I listened with him this morning as he prayed for Mary and Gene and Betty. Now I know his heart. I had no idea the pain that Stuart and Hope have endured. But after reading their prayer requests form, now I know. I thought I knew Larry until I prayed with him for his children and mine. I thought I knew Steven until I heard him pour his heart out to God about his own sins and failures.

As Oswald Chambers said nearly a hundred years ago, “Prayer does not equip us for greater works; prayer IS the greater work.”

I love the 24 Hours of Prayer. My last time slot comes up at midnight. I’ll be praying with Tracy and David and Paul D. and Paul B. I feel like I know two of them pretty well right now. I know a little about the other guy. One guy I hardly know at all.

Right now, I consider all four of them friends.

At 1:00 am, I’m guaranteed to know more about them, and them about me, and to be closer to them and bonded to them than we would be after a year of going hunting or fishing or watching football games together.

At 1:00 we will be brothers.

Peace,

Allan

According To God's Will

According to God’s willWhen we pray, we do so in faith that God is always going to give us what we need. We get that. We understand that. But what do we do with the words of our Lord in John 14:13-14?

“I will do whatever you ask in my name…You may ask me for anything in my name, and I will do it.”

But God doesn’t give me whatever I ask. He’s said “no” to many of my prayers. His words don’t mean the same thing to us that they meant to the apostles.

What if — play along with me here — everytime you asked for something in prayer, God gave you a gift. He blessed you. What if — are you still with me? — sometimes he gives you something different than what you asked, but that something is so much bigger and better? What if God makes substitutions, but those “audibles” are always to your advantage?

He created me. He knows me. He knows every single thing about me. He certainly knows what’s best for me.

“If you then, though you are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father in heaven give good gifts to those who ask him!” ~Matthew 7:11

God may not always give you exactly what you ask for. But your faith assures you that God is giving — he’s always giving. And if it’s different, you can trust that it’s better for you than what you think you want. His divine sovereignty will prove out because he knows. He knows much better than you what will best meet your needs and fit into his heavenly plans.

If my kids beg me for Little Debbies and Dr Pepper floats for every meal, three times a day, but I answer those requests by giving them salads and steaks and vegetables and rice and milk and water, does that show that I love them less? Or does it prove I love them more? Giving them what they want all the time would actually be much easier. But wouldn’t it prove that I don’t really have their long term interests at heart?

Jesus says, if you (insert your name), in all your shortcomings and sins and failures; if you (insert your name), in all your inadequacies, in all your evil; if you (insert your name) know how to give good gifts to your children…

How much more!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

24 Hours of PrayerYes, I’ve got prayer on the mind. It’s 6:30 Friday evening and there are seven men in two different rooms upstairs in The Rock here at Legacy, praying for over 130 prayer requests from our church family and the community. We started praying in one-hour shifts up there at 8:00 this morning. And nearly a hundred men are coming and going throughout the night through 8:00 tomorrow morning in our big annual prayer event, Legacy’s 24 Hours of Prayer.

I can’t adequately describe what it’s like to pray for your brothers and sisters, to lift up their deepest fears and concerns and their richest praise and thanksgivings, with four or five other brothers, for over an hour. I learn so much. I didn’t really know Michael until I listened with him this morning as he prayed for Mary and Gene and Betty. Now I know his heart. I had no idea the pain that Stuart and Hope have endured. But after reading their prayer requests form, now I know. I thought I knew Larry until I prayed with him for his children and mine. I thought I knew Steven until I heard him pour his heart out to God about his own sins and failures.

As Oswald Chambers said nearly a hundred years ago, “Prayer does not equip us for greater works; prayer IS the greater work.”

I love the 24 Hours of Prayer. My last time slot comes up at midnight. I’ll be praying with Tracy and David and Paul D. and Paul B. I feel like I know two of them pretty well right now. I know a little about the other guy. One guy I hardly know at all.

Right now, I consider all four of them friends.

At 1:00 am, I’m guaranteed to know more about them, and them about me, and to be closer to them and bonded to them than we would be after a year of going hunting or fishing or watching football games together.

At 1:00 we will be brothers.

Peace,

Allan

In Jesus' Name

 In Jesus’ Name

“I will do whatever you ask in my name, so that the Son may bring glory to the Father. You may ask me for anything in my name, and I will do it.” ~John 14:13-14.

“In Jesus’ Name” is not the fine print at the bottom of the rule sheet on how you pray. It’s not the idea that you have to end every prayer with those three words. It’s not a little formula. It’s not a little nod to doctrine. In fact, it’s not a little anything. I think “In Jesus’ Name” is the biggest part of understanding prayer.

My kids know that when I question their behavior, all they have to do is say, “Mom said we could” or “Mom said it’s OK” and I’ll go on my way.

“You’re going to start a movie at 10:45 at night?”

“Mom said we could.”

And I think, yeah, it’s Friday night, she probably did.

“You’re eating and drinking Dr Pepper floats in the living room on the nice furniture on top of the nice carpet? At 10:45 at night?”

“Mom said it’s OK.”

And I think, there’s no way your mom said it was OK. I know your mom. And you do, too. There’s no way. This goes totally against everything I know about your mom. Don’t pull that “Mom said” stuff on me.

Prayers filled with a whole bunch of selfish ‘gimmees’ can hardly be brought to God in the name of Jesus. Asking for wealth or possessions or comfort is totally inconsistent with the nature of God’s Son. I imagine God listening to some of my old prayers and saying, “Don’t pull that ‘Jesus’ said’ stuff on me. I know better.”In Jesus’ Name

Only a relationship with Christ can allow us to pray like Christ and to pray in his name. When we know Jesus, when we follow Jesus, when we’ve given everything we have to Jesus, we’ll more and more start to sound like Jesus. The things we ask for will be God’s will for God’s glory. Our prayers will declare a total surrender of my will and my glory for his. That’s praying in the manner of Jesus. In the way of Jesus. In Jesus’ name.

Peace,

Allan

Pray Big!

When Christ gives us the gift — the privilege — of praying to our Father in his name, he tells us to ask for anything.

ANYTHING!!!

 He wants us to pray big. And in order to pray big, we’ve got to think big. We have to dream big. Most of us, though, think small. We pray small. You hear it when we pray together on Sunday mornings, in our homes on Sunday nights, in our Bible classes, and in our own family settings. Most of us pray little.

Help me to have a good day.
Keep us safe on this trip.
Help us to get a good night’s rest.
Forgive us our sins.
Help the elders make good decisions.
Bless our Give Away Day.

These prayers just sound so anemic, so puny, when compared to the language Jesus uses when he talks about asking God for help. Whatever you ask! Anything, he says. Everything in heaven and earth belongs to him. Ask for it. Anything!

Pray Big!“This is the confidence we have in approaching God: that if we ask anything according to his will, he hears us. And if we know that he hears us — whatever we ask — we know that we have what we have asked for.” ~1 John 5:14-15

This willingness for God to be so over-the-top generous and gracious as to give us anything we ask challenges our logic and tests our faith. But Jesus says it three times around the table at the end of John. And the apostle repeats it several times in his letters. Whatever you ask. Anything you ask.

The truth is that God has much more to give than we’re normally willing to ask.

What is your wildest possible dream for your family? Pray for it!

What’s the most outrageous huge thing you could possibly imagine for your congregation? Ask God for it!

What’s the biggest mind-blowing, earth-altering thing you could ever hope for your neighborhood or your community or the whole world?

Are you asking for it?

Peace,

Allan

Pray Big!

When Christ gives us the gift — the privilege — of praying to our Father in his name, he tells us to ask for anything.

ANYTHING!!!

 He wants us to pray big. And in order to pray big, we’ve got to think big. We have to dream big. Most of us, though, think small. We pray small. You hear it when we pray together on Sunday mornings, in our homes on Sunday nights, in our Bible classes, and in our own family settings. Most of us pray little.

Help me to have a good day.
Keep us safe on this trip.
Help us to get a good night’s rest.
Forgive us our sins.
Help the elders make good decisions.
Bless our Give Away Day.

These prayers just sound so anemic, so puny, when compared to the language Jesus uses when he talks about asking God for help. Whatever you ask! Anything, he says. Everything in heaven and earth belongs to him. Ask for it. Anything!

Pray Big!“This is the confidence we have in approaching God: that if we ask anything according to his will, he hears us. And if we know that he hears us — whatever we ask — we know that we have what we have asked for.” ~1 John 5:14-15

This willingness for God to be so over-the-top generous and gracious as to give us anything we ask challenges our logic and tests our faith. But Jesus says it three times around the table at the end of John. And the apostle repeats it several times in his letters. Whatever you ask. Anything you ask.

The truth is that God has much more to give than we’re normally willing to ask.

What is your wildest possible dream for your family? Pray for it!

What’s the most outrageous huge thing you could possibly imagine for your congregation? Ask God for it!

What’s the biggest mind-blowing, earth-altering thing you could ever hope for your neighborhood or your community or the whole world?

Are you asking for it?

Peace,

Allan

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