A new me

When Jesus said that I should repent (Mark 1:15),  He used a word that means “to think again”, “to change the way I think and what I think about”.  The most powerful tool for this deep transformation is prayer.   When I say “Father”, I take a new focus into my mind and receive a new sense of belonging.   When I say “forgive me”, I shift from making excuses to asking for help.  When I say “daily bread”, I stop thinking about “more” and start thinking about “enough”.  Every sentence of His prayer is a door to a new way of thinking.  It is also a warning.  Unless I embrace this new life with my mind, I will forever be trapped in the old life.  “If any man be in Christ, he is a new creation” (2 Corinthians 5:17).  When Christ teaches me to pray, He teaches me to think.  When He teaches me to think, a new life is the result.

To God be the glory

At the end of His prayer, Jesus taught us to say (and think), “for thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory”.  None of us have any real power.  In a universe as vast as ours, we are small!!  We can’t claim (or shouldn’t) any glory or credit or significance (other than the fact that we have been loved by God).  The world and it’s history are divinely conceived, divinely created, divinely managed.  Something “healthy” happens in the human heart when it stops competing with God for control and credit, stops demanding or needing the attention and approval of others, starts pointing, instead, to the One who truly deserves such attention and praise.  How wise and kind of the Lord to teach us this life-renewing thought.  It is not about me! The glory and the story belong to God!

I will lift up my eyes

I went for a walk last night.  Cold.  Clear.  Bright stars.  Didn’t say much to the Lord.  Mostly looked up.  Up past the stars.  Thought about God.  Wondered how I can go days, sometimes, and not really look up,  why I get so  locked up in my duties and deadlines that I forget Him.  The Bible says that “two are better than one”, which was certainly true for me last night.  Somehow, I felt reconnected and strenghtened by just looking up for a while and being quiet.  Is it possible to pray with your eyes and not your lips?   I think so.  Sometimes it may be the most important kind of all. What I say is only as important as Who I see.  “I will lift up my eyes unto the hills from whence cometh my help”. (Psalm 121:1) 

Prayer and Forgiveness

“But I have prayed for you. . .and when you have turned back, strengthen your brothers.”  (Luke 22:32)  When Jesus teaches us to forgive , it includes prayer for recovery.  Knowing that Peter would fall away was motivation for Jesus.  Despite His disappointment, He desired God’s best for His friend, and expressed it in prayer.  Full forgiveness (what I need from God and what others need from me)  requires that I move from resentment all the way to love, from distance to honest advocacy.  “Pray for those who despitefully use you” said Jesus in Matthew 5:44.  Perhaps we would all forgive others more completely if we followed His command and example to pray for them as well.

Please and Thank you

“Does it bother you that the Lord doesn’t say please or thank you in His prayer?”  The question came last week from a friend.  Honestly, I had never thought about it.  The answer is that the Lord’s Prayer is not all that the Lord believed about prayer.  In John 6 Jesus says thank you.  Before feeding the 5000, he took the bread and the fish and gave thanks.  Did He thank God that he had 5 loaves?  Did He thank God that the people were gathered and that He had the opportunity to help them?  Was He thankful for the goodness of God that answers such prayers and provides what we need?  Probably all of the above.  This morning(the Sesquicentennial Celebration of First Baptist Church), I will step outside the words of the Lord’s prayer and “thank my God in every remembrance of you”.  I will thank Him for the people and the moments in the past when He has met our needs. I will thank Him for the privilege to be your pastor.  This, too, will be a prayer I learned from Him.

Renewed day by day

Prayer for Christians is a means and moment of daily renewal.  It is a kind of spiritual “recharging” that in the long run is more important than any of the other things that insist on our immediate attention.  Paul describes the experience, “though outwardly we are wasting away, inwardly we are being renewed day by day“. (2 Corinthians 4:16)  When we pray, we remember the subjects that ought to be foremost in our minds.  ( Our Father, His kingdom, His help, His forgiveness etc).  When we pray we regain an eternal perspective on life and, as a consequence of this renewed mind, the inflowing power of God that is necessary for living.  My prayer for you today is that you will seek the Lord in prayer.  Do not rush this time!  If we need daily bread, we also need daily renewal.

Why Pray?

“He offered up prayers and petitions with loud cries and tears to the One who could save him from death” (Hebrews 5:7).  The most convincing answer to the question “Why pray?” is Jesus did.  Despite my unresolved questions (If God already knows my needs, why do I need to express them? If God is wise, why should I ask Him to change His plan?) the example of the Lord at prayer convinces me that I am to follow Him into this conversation with the Father.  It isn’t magic.  It is mercy.  It is a friendship that offers to let me stand with Him and look at people and problems from God’s point of view.  Jesus knew that there is power in prayer.   When I ask myself, “Why pray?”, the best answer is “because Jesus did”.

Prayer and the Spirit

The most compelling answers to the question, “Why should we pray?” are: 1) Jesus did and 2) The Holy Spirit does.  So familiar we almost miss the point, the words of Romans 8 declare that, “the Holy Spirit prays for us with groanings too deep for words”.  I don’t know whether this means that He prays for me ( in my place, when I cannot because I am so confused or discouraged), or that he prays for me (for God’s will and my benefit).  Either way the fact that the Holy Spirit prays is significant.  With an infinite number of things that He could do, it is amazing to me  that His ministry is prayer.  He cries out!  No wonder that we who are “filled” with His life learn to do the same.

Thine is the Power

One of the things that I cannot do is to generate LIFE.  I woke yesterday to find that the nagging and negative parts of my soul were “already up”.  These parts of me are not strangers, but not friends, either.  As I prayed, I remembered that God has power.  He has LIFE.  Infinite.  Clean.  Flowing from His heart into mine.  Ezekiel pictures a river that gets wider and deeper as it goes.  Jesus promised the woman at the well  “a fountain springing up” within her.  When Jesus taught us to pray “Thine is the power”, He was insisting that I look at God rather than self, think about His plan rather than my circumstances.  How grateful I am that prayer is part of His new path for me.   “Those who wait upon the Lord will renew their strength”.

Take heed

“Let him who thinks he stands, take heed lest he fall” (1 Corinthians 10:12).  Part of God’s wisdom in having me pray daily about sin and temptation is to remind me of my weakness.    The Israelites at Ai thought that the victory at Jericho would make the next battle easier, that somehow they would get stronger and stronger as they went along.  Christians, sometime, think that years of faithfulness to God will  take away the danger of real failure toward God.   The truth is that all of us are still vulnerable and always will be.  The longer I follow, the more I realize that “no good thing dwells in me” and that I can never grow overconfident about my desperate weakness and daily need for his guidance and protection.  Lord, lead me not into temptation!