A Prayer about How God Fills Us with Hope

A Prayer about How God Fills Us with Hope

God of hope,

Thank you for the good news this verse offers:

You are the God of hope,

and you are the one who fills us with all joy and hope.

Though first days back at work or school after the holidays

may have filled us with dread or despair,

though lonely days of missing friends and family

may have filled us with grief and sorrow,

though frightening images of citizens attacking the nation’s capitol 

may have filled us with horror or disgust,

you are pouring joy and hope into our hearts as we believe,

as we trust in the good news

that Jesus Christ was born to redeem

all sin, sorrow and suffering.

We thank you that it’s not up to us

to fill ourselves with hope,

but by the immeasurable power and endless energy of the Holy Spirit,

you are continuously pouring your hope into our hearts.

Help us today to see and name all the reasons for our hope:

[Name some ways you see God of hope filling you with joy and hope in believing].

In Jesus’ hope-giving name. Amen.

Read Romans 15:8-13.

A Prayer for Those Who Fight Disease

A Prayer for Those Who Fight Disease

Almighty God,

We lift up friends, family, and strangers, 

any who are fighting COVID, cancer, or other dread diseases.

Bring rest to their bodies as they fight off destructive invaders

that seek to do them harm,

bring clarity to their minds as they face

a dizzying array of medical procedures and medicinal protocols,

bring hope to their hearts

as they fend off the despair

that can envelop us when our bodies languish.

As our friends and family must suffer alone in hospital rooms

due to COVID,

bring the soothing of your Spirit

and the comfort of your faithful presence.

Draw our eyes to see Jesus, the best doctor,

ministering his merciful healing

to bodies, minds, hearts, and souls.

In his healing name. Amen.

Read Psalm 107:1-21.

A Prayer about Seeing the Light

A Prayer about Seeing the Light

Glorious God,

Though the twelfth day of Christmas has come and gone,

the defrocked trees lie dried and withered by the curb,

may we see the glory of Christ-with-us,

the good news that our light has come,

today and every day of this year.

Peel the scales from our eyes,

that we may see the light that has overcome the thick darkness,

your grace, and your glory,

your mercy and your kindness to us in Christ.

Indeed, may all “nations come to your light,

and kings to the brightness of your rising” (Isaiah 60:3).

Open our eyes to see the great ingathering of your people,

“the sons …come from afar…the daughters carried on the hip…” (Isaiah 60:4).

Radiate our hearts with this good news today and every day.

In Jesus’ glorious name. Amen.

Read Isaiah 60:1-5.

Best-Laid Plans: What Proverbs Says about Goals and Plans

Best-Laid Plans: What Proverbs Says about Goals and Plans

Commit to the Lord whatever you do, and he will establish your plans. Proverbs 16:3, NIV

“The best laid schemes of mice and men ‘gang aft a-gley.” So goes the line from Robert Burns’ poem from which we get out phrase “the best laid plans of mice and men often go awry.” In Burns’ poem, he writes about a poor mouse who has worked diligently to build a nest, only to have it “destroyed by Burns as he plowed his field.”[i] Like the poor mouse, we too can have our best-laid plans plowed over and wonder if there was any point in making them in the first place. Unlike the poor mouse, we have reason to hope that God is at work in the making of plans, even when they go awry.

The book of Proverbs offers wise counsel about making plans. Let’s consider four aspects:

  1. Take time as we make plans: “The plans of the diligent lead to abundance, but everyone who is hasty comes only to poverty” (Proverbs 21:5). The wise will set aside time to count the cost before launching impulsively into a project.
  2. Seek counsel as we make plans: “Without counsel plans fail, but with many advisers they succeed” (Proverbs 15:22). God has designed us to be in community—with him and with others. Our planning process should always begin with prayer. Including others in the process makes it more likely that we will set smart goals and keep moving toward them.
  3. Make plans for good and not for evil: “Do not those who plot evil go astray?n But those who plan what is good find love and faithfulness” (Proverbs 14:22). As we take time to plan and seek counsel about our plans, we want to consider our ultimate goal: How does this plan fulfill my calling to enjoy and glorify God?
  4. Commit and submit to the Lord as we make plans: “Commit to the Lord whatever you do, and he will establish your plans” (Proverbs 16:3). Proverbs 16:3 is not, as too many health and wealth purveyors have suggested, saying that if we simply write, “I commit this plan to you, the Lord will make it succeed.” It is telling us that we must, as Tremper Longman III explains, “submit our entire life’s action to God, so that even if our human plans are subverted, we can recognize an even deeper plan at work in our lives.”[ii]

Friends, as this new year begins, let’s not rush to share rash goals on social media. Rather, let’s take time in prayer and reflection to seek the Lord’s plans for us. And let us rest in knowing that even if they “gang aft a-gley,” the Lord is working “everything according to the purpose of his will,” (Ephesians 1:11), which is “good, pleasing, and perfect” (Romans 12:2).

Prayer:

Lord, help us to resist making foolish plans. Guide us by the wisdom of the Holy Spirit to make plans to “be fruitful and multiply” your glory on this earth. Give us wise counselors and friends to guide us. And help us to trust in you when things do not go as we thought they would.

In Jesus’ wise name. Amen.

Further Encouragement:

Read Proverbs 16:3, 21:5, 15:22, 16:3; Philippians 3:14 and Ephesians 1:11.

Listen to “Trust in You” by Lauren Daigle at https://youtu.be/qv-SXz_exKE.

For Reflection:

How do you go about making plans for “whatever you do?” Are there any changes you would like to make in your planning process?

(Affiliate link in footnote).

 

[i] Kim Baldwin, Farmer’s Bureau, “The Best-Laid Plans”.

[ii] Tremper Longman III, Proverbs, p. 328).

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A Prayer of Hope for Broken and Betrayed Hearts

A Prayer of Hope for Broken and Betrayed Hearts

Lord God, 

Who among us has not shed tears like David 

over the agonizing betrayal of a friend turned enemy? 

I lift up my friends to you who cry out in bewilderment:

“For it is not an enemy who taunts me—

then I could bear it; 

it is not an adversary who deals insolently with me—

then I could hide from him. 

But it is you, a man[woman], my equal, my companion, my familiar friend” (Psalm 55:12-13).

In such heart-rending seasons, 

give us the rest of the One who became your enemy that you might befriend us—

our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. 

Empower our hearts to forgive as he forgave, 

for you know we don’t have the strength. 

In Jesus’ comforting name.Amen. 

Read Psalm 55.