January 03 2020
January 03 2020
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Since God is God and not our peer, and since God has spoken (i.e., revealed himself and his purposes in human language through his holy, inspired Word, the Bible), it would follow that we’d want to pray to God about matters he has already brought up.  How foolish it would be for us to sit down in God’s presence and talk (i.e., pray), prattling on and on about our agenda without regard for what he has to say.  What kind of conversation is that?  We need to “pray the Word,” taking what God says and turning it around in the form of prayers to him.  We can do this in various ways.  Here are two:

First, by echoing prayers recorded in the Bible.  Jesus gave us “The Lord’s Prayer” (Matt 6:9-13) as a model, but there are hundreds of other biblical examples too.  Psalms consists mostly of prayers—praise, thanks, confes­sion, lament, longing…  Let these heart-cries become your own.  A few other biblical prayers are:  Gen 32:9-12; Josh 7:6-9; 2 Sam 7:18-29; 1 Kgs 8:22-61; 1 Chr 17:16-27; 29:10-19; 2 Chr 20:5-12 (desperation); Ezra 9:6-15; Neh 1:4-11; 9:6-38; Job 42:1-6; Ps 51 (confession); Ps 67 (mission praise); Isa 37:16-20; Jer 32:16-25; Dan 9:3-19; John 17; Acts 4:24-31 (a knock-out praise); Eph 1:15-23; 3:14-21 (a lofty vision!).  If you pray these texts, watch out!

Second, by turning every kind of Bible passage into prayer.  Take promises for example:  thank God for what’s promised; confess past failures to trust the promise; ask for help to rest in what’s promised.  Or commands:  confess failure to obey; plead for power to obey; ask for discernment how to obey (e.g., when to love your neighbor by saying yes or saying no).  Or warnings:  ask God to humble us so we’d gladly heed his warning (rather than being resistant); thank God for guarding us against some danger by giving the warning.  Or stories:  ask for wisdom to identify the main thrust of the story; then pray for power to obey what’s taught; give praise to our Great God for how he acts within the biblical narratives (e.g., his prison rescues in Acts 5, 12, and 16!).  Whatever the genre, let it catapult you to God in praise, confession, thanks, and petitions related to his message!

What happens when we “pray the Word”?  Our prayers are enlarged, our faith is built up, our fellowship is enriched, and God is honored!


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