I still feel like a beginner. You would think that after 50+ years of praying, I would be better at it. The questions still hammer me:
·
Is God bored with my conversation?
·
Have I prayed what's most important?
·
What business is left undone?
·
How selfish are my prayers?
·
I wonder how Paul, the apostle, would advise me regarding my
prayer life?
So, I continue to
learn, but also to beware of the pride factor. Feeling like a beginner isn't
all bad. It is the professional pray-ers that God turns a deaf ear to. As Jesus
said, "And when you pray, do not heap up empty phrases as the
Gentiles do, for they think that they will be heard for their many words"
(Matt 6:7 ESV). Or might we say, "for their well-crafted
words"?
I
recently listened to John Owuchekwa's book, Prayer: How Praying
Together Shapes the Church (which I highly recommend.) He has a fine
section called, "Do you know who you're talking to?" and relates the
story of how his Mom would ask that very question when he had a request. Many
of us heard that phrase as a warning from an authority figure. Kind of like,
"Be careful, boy. Watch that attitude." But in his case, it was often
as a plea for faith: "C'mon! Quit asking like that. Don't you remember?
I'm your Mom. I can do something about that."
A
friend of mine makes it a practice to pray regularly with men and women before
appointing them to leadership. It seems like an “of course” thing to do, but he
does it from another standpoint. He says you can learn so much about a person's
theology by how they pray. I agree. When people pray, you find out they either
know or don’t know who they they’re talking to. They may reflect a small
view of God with chatter and hip talk as if they are talking to a radio
personality or a timidity that says, “Why should God listen to me,” ignorant of
the gospel truth that by grace we are God’s chosen and beloved. And I’m prone
to fall into both camps from time to time.
When
I fall into the “just wanna chat with my buddy, Jesus” trap, I need a good dose
of Isaiah,
"To whom then will you compare me,
that I should be like him? says the Holy One.
26 Lift up
your eyes on high and see:
who created these?
He who brings out their host by
number,
calling them all by name;
by the greatness of his might
and because he is strong in power,
not one is missing." (40:25,26)
And when I fall into the “why should God listen to me” camp,
I need to hear Jesus’ words again:
"Or which one of you, if his son asks him for bread, will give
him a stone? Or if he
asks for a fish, will give him a serpent? If you
then, who are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more
will your Father who is in heaven give good things to those who ask him!" (Matthew 7:9-11)
Both are in the Bible. Both are true.
Our God is both immanent and transcendent. Both as close as the breath you
breathe and as far as the proverbial edge of the universe. He is high and holy
and he is meek and lowly. This should be reflected in our prayers.
Worship leaders as well as pastors would
do well to remember this. God’s people learn to pray by listening to its
leaders. They get their theology from the prayers you pray as well as the songs
you sing. Give some preparation to your prayers as well as your songs and your
sermon. Even if you need to jot down a note or two. Where did we get the idea
that prayer is only effective if it’s off the cuff? Does your spouse appreciate
your thoughts less if they are written down? Do they say, “Your words don’t
count because you thought about what you would say”? Spontaneous is often
honest, but isn’t it sometimes pretentious? When you feel the pressure to
perform on the spot haven’t you sometimes said what you didn’t mean to say?
Spontaneous doesn’t necessarily equal honesty.
I went through a period of a year or
more where I prayed the prayers of Paul. I typed them out on a half-page and
put it in my Bible; notably Colossians 1:9-12, Php. 1:9-11; Eph. 1:15-21,
3:14-21. I didn’t just read those verses but they often became a launchpad to
some other more spur-of-the-moment prayers. I found the prayers of Paul shaped
my theology and gave me verbiage for things I often felt but didn’t know how to
articulate. (To my previous point, wise is the lover who takes some tips from
Shakespeare or Ed Sheeran.)
Like me, you may feel like a beginner at
prayer. Stay at it. Have confidence that as Dallas Willard said, “'Now when you
pray, Jesus will walk right up to you and he will listen to you...”