Friday, September 27, 2019

Just for You: Welcome
 A Call to Prayer 
9/26/19
From Carolyn

God is always calling us to come closer. His is an open invitation, issued from an open heart. James tells us to “Draw near to God and He will draw near to you.”

Well, how and when do we do this? We draw near to God as we pray.

Often in a church service or fellowship there is a special time set apart to pray: A Call to Prayer.  However, there are also other times when there is a call to prayer if we are alert and attentive.

This week two friends each told me something. Each communicated in her own words her own experience. Though different, each was a call to prayer for me.

One friend, thinking about a difficult situation she was called to respond to, told me her heart was resisting a bit. She said her life felt like a Rubik’s-Cube that she couldn’t complete because there was always one piece that wouldn’t fit.  I loved that analogy and as I considered it realized that at times it could apply to me! I asked her how I could pray for her. Without a moment’s hesitation she said, “Pray I will trust God.”

My other friend told me of some significant changes and health concerns she is walking through. She also mentioned some anxiety that accompanies these concerns. I said I would pray. She responded, “Thank you! I'm obviously a control freak and I really don't want to trust God.      Well——I do want to trust God, I'm just not very good at it!”
I laughed out loud at the response of my second friend and told her, “Well, you and I make good company because I’m not very good at trusting God either!”

One of the things I value about these friends is their honesty. I also value these friends because they know both their need, and where their help comes from. Their desire is to trust God more with their challenging but different circumstances.

Both the challenges and the need to increase in trust, trust in the living God, are calls to prayer.

Jesus knows about our trust deficit. And we know how He responds to such. There was a man whose son had serious challenges. The father had tried everything for his son, to no avail. He brought the boy to Jesus, asking for help. Jesus said to the man, “If you only believe, I can help.” In this desperate situation, in which the father might have been losing hope, the man was brave and honest enough to cry out, “I believe. Help my unbelief!” There was a piece in his life that wouldn’t fit. He wanted to trust, but like my friend and me, this man was just not very good at it. But he came to Jesus and then cried out to Jesus, openly and honestly. That’s called prayer. The man prayed. (Mark 9:24) “I believe, help my unbelief!”

Ahh, but that trust deficit did not stop Jesus. The trust necessary was accomplished in drawing near to God. Drawing near in itself is a fledging faith accepted by Jesus. In another place Jesus said all one needs is a tiny bit of faith, like a small seed. And yet another word from Jesus is “all you who are weary and heavy laden come. I will give you rest.”

My difficult circumstances and my lack of great trust are a call to prayer. My tiny scrap of trust is pleasing to Him. I show my trust and actually increase it as I draw near to Him—repeatedly. My acknowledgement that He is the One who can increase my trust fund is pleasing to Him. He has spoken. Can you hear Him speaking? His heart is open. Come! Draw near!

I find the trust process begins with the small areas I encounter daily. You know, things like “when the dog bits, when the bee stings when I’m feeling sad.” Today those areas of trust might be:
when my plans are interrupted,
when I have to wait,
when that car cuts me off in traffic,
when the invitation doesn’t come,
or when I need to say “no.”

As I learn to depend on Him, to lean on Him in the small areas this becomes a pattern for depending on Him, trusting Him with the so-called bigger challenges of life. Any challenge and/or lack of trust in Jesus is a call to prayer.

This all starts with recognizing my need to trust (Trust is the path to His shalom.) and recognizing my own attempts to control. Trust comes as I draw near to Him, asking for trust-help, with a readiness to do the next thing He asks me to do. And in the way He asks me to do it. Always counting on Him to work a life-bringing miracle in me. Jesus is pleased with our child-like dependence.

My insufficient trust is a call to prayer that is often revealed in challenging circumstances.

Lord, I believe. Help my unbelief. Please turn my trust deficit into ruthless trust in You.

Lets’ pray for one another as we each seek to have our trust in God increase.

In anticipation and hope because God is both merciful and mighty,

Carolyn Roper

1 comment:

Free said...

Thank you from a deficient disciple.

I was recently recollecting a quote from an author I can't recall, who stated something to the effect that "events are up to us, and outcomes are up to God."

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