A Prayer about Being Drawn to Jesus

A Prayer about Being Drawn to Jesus

Father God,

As we confess the truth about the “unknown gods”

 we often worship (see yesterday’s prayer), 

turn our faces to see Jesus, 

to see you in Jesus. 

Unlike most human beings 

who are only made in your image, 

our Lord is the “exact imprint of your nature,” 

the one who radiates your glory 

and “upholds the universe 

by the word of his power” (Hebrews 1:3). 

Having died to purify us 

from our worship of unknown gods, 

he rose from the dead and ascended to heaven, 

where he continues 

to reveal your beauty 

and grace and holiness to us (Hebrews 1:4). 

Draw us to our ascended Jesus 

as a moth to a flame, 

as a bee to a sunflower, 

that we may reflect your light 

and share your goodness 

with all who do not know you. 

In Jesus’ glorious name. Amen.

Read Hebrews 1:1-14.

How to Wait Well in Crisis

How to Wait Well in Crisis

Win books! This month, as we celebrate the one-year-birthday of From Recovery to Restoration: 60 Meditations for Finding Peace & Hope in Crisis, I’m giving away four books each week. See above for this week’s books. Enter for a chance to win. To have more chances to win, share about the book more often or share the excerpts on the blog and let me know how many times you shared. 

Today’s blog is an excerpt from the devotional. I’ll be sharing excerpts every week. You can continue to share and have chances to win different books each week. 

Waiting or Whining?

I wait for the Lord, my soul waits,

And in his word I hope… Psalm 130:5, ESV

“Why does she get to graduate from PT when she’s only been here for two months, and I’ve been here for six?” My physical therapist responded kindly but firmly, “Not every shoulder surgery is the same. Some people have easier recoveries.” I turned my back to him and stuck out my tongue. Real mature. I was, without a doubt, becoming whiny in my wait to recover. 

When we’ve been the victim of a crisis, we can easily turn to victimization as a way of life. Self-help and self-pity may look like the way out of our distress, but they often lead to more whining and less waiting on the Lord. In Psalm 130, David shows us the way out of the whine. 

He cries out to the Lord from the depths of despair. His despair in this case is not caused by enemies pursuing him or by the brutal betrayal of King Saul, but by his own sin. David recognizes the dropdown knockout power of his own sin, “If you, O Lord, should mark iniquities, who could stand?” (Psalm 130:3). He knows the Lord’s forgiveness for his sin is a sure cure for his worst injury. 

As we wait for healing from a harmful loss or a painful injury, as we wait for homes to be rebuilt or hearts to be renewed, David teaches us how to wait well: 

“I wait for the Lord, my soul waits,

And in his word I hope;

My soul waits for the Lord,

More than watchmen wait for the morning,

More than watchmen wait for the morning” (Psalm 130:6).

To wait well, we must learn to turn our eyes away from ourselves and toward the Lord. We must become good watchmen for the Lord, seeking him in the darkness, certain that he will come soon, sure that his arrival will bring relief. As Jill Carrattini writes, we have every reason to hope as we wait, for “Christ himself can transform our watching and our waiting, our lives and our deaths, bringing light where death stings, tears discourage, and darkness haunts: the Light has already come!” 

When our focus in waiting shifts from recouping losses to recognizing redemption, we see even more reason to hope, “For with the Lord there is steadfast love, and with him is plentiful redemption” (Psalm 130:7). Dear friend, as you endure this hard wait, keep watching for the Lord. In him, you will find the help you need for all of your distress.

Prayer

Lord,

We confess that we often become whiny as we wait for recovery. Help us, we pray, to see your plentiful redemption, to seek your forgiveness for our sins. Turn our faces toward you, and help us to see the dawn which has already arrived in our Savior Jesus Christ. In his very near name we ask. Amen.

Further Encouragement

Read Psalm 130.

Listen to “I Will Wait for You” by Shane and Shane https://youtu.be/dwovhY8zNQM.

For Reflection

Have you found yourself moving toward self-pity, or have you noticed yourself whining in your wait for recovery? What has that looked like? Write or say a prayer of confession, and thank God for his mercy.

A Prayer about Praying and Personalizing Scripture

A Prayer about Praying and Personalizing Scripture

Hi Friends,

Today we will pray part of Psalm 139, personalizing it as we do. I hope you try this—it can really remind us of how God is speaking to us and how we are speaking to God through Scripture and prayer. Wherever it says [name], just pray your name or the name of the person you are praying for. (If you want to change the pronouns, you can do that too!)

O Lord, 

“You made all the delicate, inner parts of [name’s] body

and knit [name] together in my mother’s womb.

Thank you for making [name] so wonderfully complex!

Your workmanship is marvelous—how well I know it.

You watched [name] as I was being formed in utter seclusion,

as I was woven together in the dark of the womb.

You saw [name] before I was born.

Every day of my life was recorded in your book.

Every moment was laid out

before a single day had passed.

How precious are your thoughts about [name], O God.

They cannot be numbered!

I can’t even count them;

they outnumber the grains of sand!

And when I wake up,

you are still with [name]!” (Psalm 139:13-18).

In Jesus’ creative name we pray. Amen.

If you like this exercise, try doing it with the entire Psalm 139. 

A Prayer about Banishing Cynicism

A Prayer about Banishing Cynicism

Creator King,

We confess, the cynicism of our age, 

“the negativity that only sees 

the worst of intentions 

behind the apparent good motives of others” (Frank Bruni), 

easily creeps into our hearts.

Under the influence of such cynicism, 

we join in the cries of the skeptics, 

we wear the scorn of the jaded. 

We think we know everything, 

and we brashly tap out our foolish thoughts.  

Banish such cynicism from our hearts and minds.

Sharpen our vision to see your handwriting in the universe—

your glory lovingly etched 

into a baby’s nose or a butterfly’s wings, 

your grace generously displayed 

in a dancer’s pirouette or a doodle’s welcome. 

Rekindle our wonder 

that you made us and loved us and saved us. 

In Jesus’ marvelous name. Amen. 

Read Romans 1:18-32.

A Prayer about Seeing God in Creation

A Prayer about Seeing God in Creation

Majestic Creator,

In these sweet days of September, 

open our eyes and ears 

to hear your eloquent creation 

calling out to us.

Though marred by the fall 

and groaning for your return, 

the heavens still declare your glory, 

the skies always proclaim your handiwork (Psalm 19:1). 

The birds of the air and the lilies of the field 

have a message for us from you—

“I created you, and I will take care of you (Matthew 6:26-31). 

I laid the foundations of the earth, 

and I laid the foundations of faith in our hearts. 

I created the morning stars that sang together, 

and I formed the voices of the children of God 

that shout for joy” (Job 38:4-7). 

Oh,Creator God, we could go on and on, 

and I pray that we do, 

that we get outdoors today 

and take a good look at your creation. 

As we do, how can we keep from praising you 

for your majesty and mercy, 

your creativity and care?

In the name of creation’s Redeemer we pray. Amen.

Read Psalm 19:1; Job 38; Matthew 6:26-31.