In the Academy Award
winning movie, Gravity, astronaut Ryan Stone, played by Sandra
Bullock, has found her way aboard the Soyuz space craft. The sole
survivor of her mission, she is marooned in space without hope of
survival. Having lost radio contact with her command center, she scans
the frequencies seeking someone with whom she might make contact.
The only person she is
able to reach is an Eskimo in the remote tundra who speaks no English.
But the sound of his dogs and the crying of his baby touch her emotions.
She cries. And she cries out in desperation to him, “Say a prayer for me. Maybe
I should say a prayer for myself. But I have never prayed. No one
ever taught me.”
How much does the
character Ryan Stone represent the present generation? The world seems to
be spinning out of control. Evil is rampant. Death is certain. Will
no one pray for us? Will no one teach us to pray? Centuries ago, another generation felt the
same way. Jesus’ disciples approached him with desperation in their voice
and asked, “Lord, teach us to pray.” And He did.
Jesus taught us that prayer
does not need to be a memorized formula. There are no words that are
better than any others to address God. Prayer is a matter of the heart.
Jesus told of two men who once prayed. One was very religious and knew all the
right words. The other had made a wreck of his life. He was irreligious and broken-hearted
about his sin. The first prayed long and eloquent prayers that everyone could
hear. The second, feeling unworthy to lift his eyes to Heaven prayed,
“Lord, be merciful to me, a sinner.” Jesus said the prayer of the second
man was the prayer God heard.
When we pray with a
broken and contrite heart, God hears.
Chuck Colson, special
counsel to President Richard Nixon from 1969-1973, earned the reputation as
Nixon’s “hatchet man.” If there was anything cruel and dirty that needed
doing, Colson could do it. At the pinnacle of power, Colson was convicted
for his Watergate crimes and sent to prison. His world crumbling around him, he
sat alone in his parked car and cried out to God. He didn’t know how to
pray. He just knew he needed God to save him.
God answered Colson’s
prayers. When he emerged from prison, he was a changed man. God
used him to launch Prison Fellowship and later, Prison
Fellowship International. He spent the rest of his life
proclaiming the saving grace of God through Jesus Christ.
It is never too late to
pray. It is never too late to believe. Our problems are never too
many or too big for God. When we pray our Father who is in Heaven will hear our
prayer and will reward us openly. (Matthew 6:5-8).
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