Prayer is often our last resort, the final step in a
hopeless situation. We refer to it with
such phrases as “he doesn’t have a prayer,” or “there is nothing left to do but
pray.” But it is perhaps the most
important aspect of our human condition.
We share many attributes with the animal kingdom including
instincts for hunger, reproduction and survival. Other animals provide care and
nurture for their young. Some construct elaborate shelters whether nests,
caves, or tunnels. Many have complex social systems. But no other creature has the capacity to
communicate with the Creator and to pray. Only man is endowed with that gift.
I have never met anyone who complained that they prayed too
much. But I have known many who wish they had prayed more. In our most desperate circumstances and in our
finest moments, we cry out to God in prayer.
The greatest gift we can bestow upon another human being is to pray
earnestly for them.
Some understand prayer as a psychological exercise merely benefiting
the one who prays. But Scripture affirms that there is more at work when we
pray than we imagine.
Jesus prayed. In
fact, He rose early in the morning before sunrise and sought solitary places
where He could spend time alone in prayer. Occasionally he prayed all night. He taught us to pray, not as a public display
to impress others, but in secret where “your father who sees in secret will
reward you openly.” (Matthew 6:6). He
taught us to pray constantly with discipline and determination. His prayer life
was so powerful that his disciples asked him to teach them to pray.
Prayer is not a matter of reciting particular words or repeating
religious rituals. God looks on the heart.
He hears the person who is convicted of guilt and feels unworthy to lift
his eyes to heaven. And God hears those who humbly seek to do His will, “The
effective prayer of a righteous man,” the Bible says, “can accomplish
much.” (James 5:16)
The mystery and the miracle of prayer resides not in us, but
in the One who created us and founded the vast universe that we have only begun
to explore. We are not cogs in an
accidental machine that grinds its way toward extinction. We are created in the
image of God and our very nature hungers for His presence. He has endowed us with personality,
intelligence and freedom. He desires our
company. He listens and He invites us to pray.
“Ask,” Jesus said, “and it will be given to
you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you. For
everyone who asks receives, and he who seeks finds, and to him who knocks it
will be opened. Or what man is there among you [who,
when his son asks for a loaf, will give him a stone? Or
if he asks for a fish, he will not give him a snake, will he? If you then, being evil, know how to give good gifts to your
children, how much more will your Father who is in heaven give what is good to
those who ask Him!” (Matthew 7:7-11).
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