We are sojourners in this life. Each day, we travel an unfamiliar path toward a sure destination. God is our ever-present companion — guiding and protecting, comforting and convicting us, but we are often unaware of Him…
Prayer is our means of acknowledging God’s presence and seeking His help on our daily journey. It is God’s way of giving us access to Him.
Prayer is our means of acknowledging God’s presence and seeking His help on our daily journey. It is God’s way of giving us access to Him.
He commands us to pray because He knows that we need Him.
We need His redemption, His guidance, His courage, His forgiveness, His sustenance, His peace. He knows that we need what He has — that we have no where else to turn!…
In heeding God’s command to pray, we become part of a humbling and powerful collaboration:
We, sojourners, have Jesus as our light and the Holy Spirit as our guide…We are not traveling alone. The presence and the power of the Triune God are ours.
We’ve all had the experience of carefully relying on a map or GPS to navigate a complicated route to a new place. Then, gradually, with repeated trips on the same road, we don’t need to rely on navigational tools. We have internalized the map. It has become part of us. We know the way.
The same thing happens with prayer.
Prayer should not be a formula but a pattern - not a chain but a path—to help you as you make your way. God uses well-established spiritual disciplines to guide us when our emotions run thin and our motivations are weak. Every Christian is prayerless in some, perhaps many, seasons of life. Like any frequently traveled path, a path of prayer allows our faltering steps to progress, even if our hearts are not fully engaged. Often, the heart is sparked by the comforting routine of prayer, courage is restored, joy eventually returns.
We are all, gradually, moving toward hard times in life, if we haven’t gone through them already. You won’t learn to pray in the emergency room — that’s where you’ll speechlessly lean into Jesus. You won’t learn to pray in your overturned car — that’s where you’ll just cry out His name. You won’t learn to pray in your living room while reeling from a loved one’s bad decisions—that’s when you’ll just weep to God. Learning the way when life is somewhat stable makes us familiar with the path so that we can run straight to Him in the dark, like a nightmare-scared child instinctively making his way to his parents’ bed.
We are with God all the way; He is the route, and He is the destination.
[written by Kathi Lambrides Westlund]
In heeding God’s command to pray, we become part of a humbling and powerful collaboration:
- God hears us and answers us. (Jeremiah 33:3)
- Jesus prays for us. (Romans 8:34)
- The Holy Spirit helps us pray. (Romans 8:26)
We, sojourners, have Jesus as our light and the Holy Spirit as our guide…We are not traveling alone. The presence and the power of the Triune God are ours.
We’ve all had the experience of carefully relying on a map or GPS to navigate a complicated route to a new place. Then, gradually, with repeated trips on the same road, we don’t need to rely on navigational tools. We have internalized the map. It has become part of us. We know the way.
The same thing happens with prayer.
Prayer should not be a formula but a pattern - not a chain but a path—to help you as you make your way. God uses well-established spiritual disciplines to guide us when our emotions run thin and our motivations are weak. Every Christian is prayerless in some, perhaps many, seasons of life. Like any frequently traveled path, a path of prayer allows our faltering steps to progress, even if our hearts are not fully engaged. Often, the heart is sparked by the comforting routine of prayer, courage is restored, joy eventually returns.
We are all, gradually, moving toward hard times in life, if we haven’t gone through them already. You won’t learn to pray in the emergency room — that’s where you’ll speechlessly lean into Jesus. You won’t learn to pray in your overturned car — that’s where you’ll just cry out His name. You won’t learn to pray in your living room while reeling from a loved one’s bad decisions—that’s when you’ll just weep to God. Learning the way when life is somewhat stable makes us familiar with the path so that we can run straight to Him in the dark, like a nightmare-scared child instinctively making his way to his parents’ bed.
We are with God all the way; He is the route, and He is the destination.
[written by Kathi Lambrides Westlund]