Posts Tagged ‘prayer’

My Prayers Are Stale (Part 3)

Monday, January 9th, 2012

prayers-are-stale-3I decided to write down what it is that I’m saying in my prayers, just so that I can look at them. Maybe God will show me what’s wrong with them.

As I started writing my prayer, I looked at how beautiful it was. Once upon a time I had opened my heart to God and asked Him what to pray for each person. I waited, and God showed me what to pray. I felt so much joy to be praying right in the center of the will of God, and I saw God move. I saw God answer prayer left and right. I am certain of the power of prayer, which is why I’ve made a lifetime commitment to do it, so help me God.

“May I not be ruled by anger but by Your Spirit. Please grant me a servant’s heart, graciousness, maturity, and wisdom.” Stop. This normally takes me less than ten seconds to pray, and I rush over it because I’m tired of it. But has God actually answered? Has my life been transformed – do I see spiritual growth in these areas of my life? And the answer is yes. I wept because God was paying attention even when I wasn’t. I hardly ever get angry any more, not like I used to. I have a deep servant’s heart. I remember one church camp when I said to my mentor, “I don’t want a servant’s heart!” and she just laughed at me. “Of course you want a servant’s heart,” she said.

I suppose I should explain this scenario. I was at a church camp for our family-integrated church, (which means that there is no Sunday School, and that our children sit with us through all the services). No matter how tired the children are, what time of day it is, or even if they can’t possibly understand anything in the sermon, they have to sit there, quiet and still.

I arrived at church camp, and I wasn’t allowed to look forward to the sessions, or it would be sin. Because when my children are tired and cranky (which they always are when sleeping away from home), it’s a full-time job to keep them under control during the services. So I learn nothing, and because of my deep love for God and WANTING so desperately to know Him in a deeper way, I resented my children. I resented them because they kept me from God.

Yet that was sin. You see, I knew in my soul that each service, I was going to clock in work and learn nothing. So when my mentor said how much she looked forward to the sessions at the beginning of church camp, I said, “Please stop it, or you’re going to make me cry. I’m not allowed to love God and look forward to learning about Him. Otherwise I become furious with my children, and that for sure is sin.”

She paused and realized that I was right. She said, “You can get the CD’s.”

“Why am I here? If I’m just going to get the CD’s, why don’t I just walk away and get the CD’s later?”

“Susan, your job right now is to train your children. God wants you to have a servant’s heart.”

“I don’t want a servant’s heart,” I said.

And now we’ve come full circle, because she knew me well enough to know that I want holiness above all else in life, so of course I wanted a servant’s heart, so I threw that phrase into my prayers for myself.

And now, years later, I see that I have a servant’s heart with more than my own children, with everyone around me. So you see, God is answering my prayers, because I meant them once upon a time, and I still mean them, because I want holiness, and I will keep asking forever until I get it.

I can’t list what I pray for other people, because it would be a breach of trust, but I was amazed at how God has answered the vast majority of the prayers that I’ve been praying. My eyes are opened. I feel joy. And I can finally open myself up to God and ask for new prayer requests, because He’s been such a sweetheart, He already answered those others without me noticing. That’s why my prayers were stale. They had expired.

My Prayers Are Stale (Part 2)

Sunday, January 8th, 2012

prayers-are-stale-2Now let me pause for a second to Scripturally defend praying the same thing over and over. Remember the widow who kept knocking on the door of the judge until he finally granted her request? She kept asking the same thing. And Jesus told us to pray that way. No kidding. Out of the mouth of Jesus.

For example, I knew of a man who wasn’t saved, and I prayed for his salvation every day for years until the day that God saved his soul. And on that day I felt so much joy that tears streamed down my face, even though I had never met him. You see, a woman I loved asked me to pray for this man, and I loved that man through her.

And yes, the prayer sounded identical every day. But I was being faithful. And God was pleased. It wasn’t a sin for me to keep saying the same thing over and over. God says to do that.

And yet when your entire prayer structure has become this way, any creative person wants to grab it and smash it against the wall, shattering the prayer structure into a million pieces.

Where are the people that I loved from my previous church, that I handed over to someone else during the summer? I miss those people so much. The burden wasn’t so bad. I LOVED that burden, even though it depleted me. I got updates every week at church, so my prayers were always fresh. And the continuing prayer requests didn’t seem trite and hollow. Not like now, when I’m sick of praying the same things. But it’s not like I can stop. I am a woman of my word.

I miss feeling connected to a church body. “Susan, it took you ten years to get that close to people. Give it time,” my husband said gently when I wanted to scream over the fact that I haven’t connected to my new church.

It’s just too much work, and I don’t really care, so I’m probably not even trying. And if you get close, they will only stab you in the back and twist it, and it will take you at least a year to recuperate from the damage.

Maybe that’s it. I’m not praying for the ones I’m supposed to be praying for, because I don’t want to get close to them.

Forget it. I don’t want to do it. Wow, that’s sin. Here I’ve been sinning and didn’t even know it. Not connecting to the body of Christ is sin, no matter how much I want to protect my heart from pain.

My Prayers Are Stale (Part 1)

Saturday, January 7th, 2012

prayers-are-staleDo you feel like your prayers are stale, that you say the same thing over and over again until it almost rings hollow? That’s how my prayers have been recently. What started off as fresh prayer requests that God burdened my heart with, in saying the prayer so many times, my heart is almost absent. Can I say I am almost bored? And how can a true prayer warrior come to this place when she has been faithful for years, hacking a path with a machete and being delighted in the presence of God?

I grieve to think that I’m bored with my prayers. I gasp in horror at the implications of saying that communicating with my sweet Lord and Savior means nothing to me, that I want to go away, this prayer thing is too hard. I’m tired. Please understand, Lord, I just don’t want to be in Your presence.

I stop to weep. Tears are splashing on my keyboard as I write this because of course I don’t feel this way. Not really. At least I don’t mean to feel this way. Imagine your spouse saying, “Communicating with you is so boring; I can’t stand to be with you.”

You would crumple to the floor and sob. I would.

And yet that’s what I’m doing to God, by going through the motions of something that has become disconnected with my heart. I have failed.

Oh, I’ve technically remained faithful. Remember the day I promised Michael Farris I would pray for him every day till the day I died? I’ve been faithful. And I will do it, too, because I’m a woman of my word. But I always say the same words, “May all demons be gone from Michael Farris, his wife, and children in the name of Jesus. May they read Your Word and walk by Your Spirit. May he think clearly and win all his cases. Please heal Vickie’s body completely. May peace descend upon their home. Hedge it in from demonic activity.”

This may sound fine and dandy, but I’ve been saying it so many times that it’s hard to engage my heart.

It’s like that with everybody. I’m tired of praying.

So I said to my husband, “My prayers are stale. I’ve prayed the same things for so long that it’s possible that they’re no longer valid. I need to ask God for new, fresh ways to pray for these people.”

Revamping my Prayer Life

Saturday, September 10th, 2011

my-prayer-lifeMajor changes have happened in my prayer life within the past few months. I must have been praying for over 200 people daily, because when I dropped 100 people, I still had over 100 people left. My prayer life constantly changes and expands. So how did I have the audacity to unplug 100 people from my prayers without sinning? I knew that without God’s permission I would be negatively affecting many people’s lives, since I am certain that prayer is powerful. My heart is fully engaged when I pray, making my prayers emotionally depleting at times. But I see God at work in people’s lives, and I deeply care and rejoice in their spiritual growth. It matters more to me than I ever dreamed would be possible.

As I met with a couple who were elders at our previous church, I felt God giving me permission to transfer the huge prayer burden I had for the church over to the elder’s wife, since God was moving us to a new church. I let her know that I was praying for 100 people at that church daily, and that I would no longer be doing so. I said to her, “You always said I put you to shame in the area of prayer, and that you needed to be a better prayer warrior. You are now responsible before God to pray for these people, because God is releasing me from it. I have wept as I have prayed for the members of our church, and I know intricately what their struggles are. I can’t tell you because it would be a breach of trust, but please ask God how to pray for these people. God will show you how.”

At first I felt disoriented as I prayed my daily prayers. The anvil that I felt was gone. I had margin. Yes, margin is free space, and when it applies to prayer, it enables me to hear God better. I was able to open my heart to God and be silent for longer stretches of time. It was so peaceful and refreshing. I had forgotten how wonderful it was to just be silent in the presence of God.

God restructured my prayers. I pray visually, and I used to pray for people in a certain order so as not to forget them. I felt that God was shaking out my prayers like a dusty rug. The people from church were interconnected with other people I prayed for. There was no way I could pray in the same order. My prayers were an abrupt staccato. I finally dropped the entire structure and asked God who to pray for from scratch. You see, there had been some people that I had prayed for daily for over five years, and I had never even met them. For example, a woman had called me five years ago to buy something I was selling on Craig’s List. Suddenly she was telling me about her marriage being on the rocks, and I was counseling her. I must have been on the phone with her for an hour. She was going through a very painful time that was similar to something God had just brought me through. The Holy Spirit was all over that phone call, and when I hung up the phone, I committed to praying for her.

I told my husband that I have never met this woman and have prayed faithfully for her for five years. How was I supposed to know if she and her husband were praising God for their handicapped child, or if their marriage was healed? What if God had answered me a couple of years ago, and I’m just praying words that have already been accomplished? There was no way for me to fine tune my prayers for this woman. I finally asked God if I could drop her, and the answer was yes.

I’m still learning and growing in the area of prayer, as I hope I always will. It is something organic, almost with a life of its own. And as I open my heart to people from my new church, I know that God will be laying them on my heart to fold into my prayers. Until then, my prayers are more free-form, and I will enjoy the margin.