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02/12/2010

PATHS TO PRAYER (1)

Whitney Hopler

There are many ways to pray -
many paths of communication that
can lead you closer to God.

Here are some different paths you
can take to prayer:

"Guttural groaning": 
When you feel pain or doubt so deeply
that you can't express verbally, you can
simply groan in your spirit and God will hear. 
The Holy Spirit within you will intercede to
God the Father for you to express what
you can't put into words.  Guttural groaning
will open your heart to God's comfort,
hope, and compassion.

"Skin, trees, blood, bread, and wine": 
When you pray using your physical senses
(such as seeing, hearing, smelling, touching,
or tasting), you can deepen your connection
to God.  Start by celebrating Communion for
a powerful encounter with God.  Then try other
sacramental approaches to prayer, like praying
with other people whose faces you can see,
touching someone you're praying for, praying
outside in nature, moving your body when you
pray (kneeling, raising your hands, dancing, walking,
making the sign of the cross, or anything else
God may lead you to do).

"Desperation":  When you cry out to God
from the depths of your helplessness, God
hears you.  Don't let either pride or insecurity
keep you from praying when you feel desperate. 
Remember that Jesus has given you the freedom
and confidence you need to turn to God in the midst
of desperate situations.  Open yourself up fully to
receive His help.  Expect God to reach out to you. 
Let the desperation you experience motivate you to
pursue God more and develop deeper compassion
for other people in need.

"Mystery":  When your prayers go unanswered
and you don't know why, don't hesitate to ask God
questions and express your agony to Him.  Choose
to trust God's promise that He will do what's best
when you pray.  Realize that He may be using
unanswered prayers to change you for the better
as you go through difficult circumstances. 
Understand that sometimes God will choose to
give you something more valuable than answers to
your prayers: Himself.  Get to know the Giver rather
than just the gifts.  Make your ultimate goal in prayer
to spend time with God instead of trying to get
something from Him.  Ask God to help you surrender
your will to His will and trust that He will work out every
situation according to what's best when you invite Him
to do so.

Adapted from The Folly of Prayer: Practicing the
Presence and Absence of God, copyright 2009 by
Matt Woodley. Published by IVP Books, a division
of InterVarsity Press, Downers Grove, Ill.,
www.ivpress.com.

(Will Continue)

01:29 Posted in Blog | Permalink | Comments (0)

02/09/2010

AM I A TALKER OR A DOER?


Scripture:

22Do not merely listen to the word,
and so deceive yourselves. Do what it says.

23Anyone who listens to the word but does
not do what it says is like a man who looks
at his face in a mirror 24and, after looking at
himself, goes away and immediately forgets
what he looks like. 25But the man who looks
intently into the perfect law that gives freedom,
and continues to do this, not forgetting what
he has heard, but doing it—he will be blessed
in what he does.
James 1:21-25 (New International Version)

Reflection:

These versus from the Book of James have
always hit home to me.  When I was active
in the ministry, I considered myself a
somewhat Biblical scholar.  I would always
look at the Scriptures and read the words
and decide how I was going to present the
words to my congregation. I very rarely
applied Gods words to my life.  I quickly
became a man of a lot of words and not
a man that lived by those words.  I was
not a man of action. 
I began to see that this was true of my
congregation.  We all talked the game
but we didn't participate.  We would read
the word, and hear the word, but we
would not live by the word.
It is so very true what David C.
McCasland said,
When I study God’s Word, my first
question should not be, “What am I
going to say about this?” but “What
am I going to do about this?”
Remember what it says in James
2: 14-17: "4What good is it, my brothers,
if a man claims to have faith but has no
deeds? Can such faith save him?
15Suppose a brother or sister is without
clothes and daily food. 16If one of you says
to him, "Go, I wish you well; keep warm and
well fed," but does nothing about his physical
needs, what good is it? 17In the same way,
faith by itself, if it is not accompanied by action,
is dead.
ASK YOURSELF, "ARE YOU ALIVE OR DEAD".

Prayer:

Oh God as I look at and hear Your Word, I pray
that I apply Your Word to my life.  Oh God
I want to be a doer of Your Word. Let my first
question be "What am I going to do about this?"

22:33 Posted in Blog | Permalink | Comments (0)

02/07/2010

JUST AS I AM

"Just as I am, without one plea,
But that Thy blood was shed for me,
And that Thou bidd'st me come to Thee,
O Lamb of God I come! I come!"
Charlotte Elliot (1789-1871)

A simple invitation

"The simple message of the song
"Just as I Am" was so popular in the
early days of Billy Graham's evangelistic
crusades that it became a regular part
of the response to each appeal to make
a public commitment for Christ.

Charlotte Elliott seemed to have
everything going for her as a young
woman. She was gifted as a portrait
artist and also a writer of humorous
verse. Then in her early thirties she
suffered a serious illness that left her
weak and depressed. During her illness
a noted minister, Dr. Caesar Malan of
Switerland, came to visit her. Noticing
her depression, he asked if she had
peace with God. She resented the
question and said she did not want to
talk about it.

But a few days later she went to
apologize to Dr. Malan. She said that
she wanted to clean up some things
in her life before becoming a Christian.
Malan looked at her and answered,
"Come just as you are." That was enough
for Charlotte Elliot, and she yielded herself
to the Lord that day.

Fourteen years later, remembering those
words spoken to her by Caesar Malan in
Brighton, England, she wrote this simple
hymn that has been used to touch the hearts
of millions who have responded to Christ's i
nvitation to come just as they are."

from The One Year Book of Hymns by Mark
Norton and Robert Brown (Tyndale) entry for
June 22

01:27 Posted in Blog | Permalink | Comments (0)