I believe in praying for things. I believe it is right and pleasing to God
when we ask him to heal, to provide, to redeem.
During Jesus’ life, he healed every person who asked. The only need he didn’t meet was the one that
was not requested. He even brought money
out of a fish’s mouth when Peter was concerned about the temple tax. Of course, he talked it out with him first.
I believe in praying when the need arises, when the trouble
comes, when the sickness overtakes us. I
believe that God is honored when we ask and receive. I think he is glorified whether or not we are
grateful, though he does require a grateful heart in return. That is valuable topic in its own right, but
not today’s topic.
I have often asked God the hard questions when I prayed and
did not receive the expected end. I try
to do so with a willing and respectful heart.
And so I have asked of late.
Prayers that my mind said “This should be given,’ have resulted is agony
while others have been answered speedily.
There is always the question “Why?” scattered among the tears. Last week was one of those as our world
said “Farewell” to a sweet young mother
of 20 years with an adorable baby girl.
Yet today, I heard the answer in my spirit and my mind raced
for a bit along side the One who gives wisdom and comfort. I was reminded that there were 2 thieves at
the crucifixion of Jesus. One angrily
yelled “Get me out of this!” I realized
that 90% of my prayer life consists of my insistence that God do something with
my situation. I want him to get me or
someone I care about out of some difficulty often created through rebellion or
foolish behavior. Sometimes this is not
the case, but more often it is. Jesus
had no reply to that thief's prayer.
The other thief cried out “Take me with you.” He had faith that the moment was not the end. And he wanted to follow and be with this
messiah who was dying in humble triumph.
Jesus answered “Today.”
I was already aware that there are prayers that do not
coincide with truth. Jesus did have the
power to refuse death. But he chose it
for our redemption. That was the truth
of his mission, his destiny. He could
not choose otherwise and be true. And so
when truth will not agree to get us out
of the situation we are in, do we have the faith to ask Him to keep us close,
to take us with him even through death?
Can we believe He really knows?
Can we accept the love that says “No” when our heart is breaking and our
world is being undermined? Can we lay
aside the clichés and admit we do not know but we must trust? A good cliché sounds so much better than a
gut wrenching cry.
I recall a prayer I prayed, or rather yelled, in pain for my
daughter. I cried; I begged; I
insisted. I did feel that God was near,
but the heavens might as well have been bronze.
In retrospect, I can see the beautiful, confident woman I know today was
a result of that unanswered prayer. My
prayer had no knowledge though it was full of passion. I am still praying for a resolution of that
issue. But I am confident that my God
had this in his heart all along and at the right time in the right way, he will
bring the right answer. His ear was not
deaf; His hand was not weak; His arm was not short. But truth had to be truth.
So, why does a young mother, having resolved the
eternal questions, have to die when so many were praying for a different
result? I will offer no excuse. I will use no cliché. I will simply say “I don’t understand but I
trust that He ‘took her with Him’ on His glorious plan.” I will believe that He will work all things
for her and her family’s good whether or not I see it. I will show love when I have the chance and
pray for grace if any words are needed.
When I cannot see, I must trust.
And when another need is evident, I shall pray with passion believing.
It is a larger tragedy when it is a young mother that passes on, leaving young children behind. Children should not be orphaned, according to the Gospel of Rusty. Perhaps that is why I am not one of the Gospel authors.
ReplyDeleteSometimes when reality hits our fairytale notions it is devastating. I will never stop believing that God answers prayer and heals and that we should pray that direction, but Hannah died leaving a grieving church, friends, family and a infant daughter to be raised without her. All the proclamations lay silent before the truth of God. Yet we have seen it go the other way. These are hard questions to ask even in faith.
ReplyDeleteSo many times I have cried out...and see evidence of His favor. Other times I have to just have faith that in my need his timing is perfect...sometimes that is so hard but so easy. Lately, my life is upside down but I imagine it is my own doing in some way, shape or form. Do I have the right to cry out? I fear that I don't. He sees though. I know He does.
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