A Prayer about the Gift of Church

A Prayer about the Gift of Church

Father, Son, and Holy Spirit,

You are the three-in-one God, 

one God, three distinct persons,

“the same in substance, 

equal in power and glory.” (Westminster Shorter Catechism) 

In your very being, 

you demonstrate the essentiality of community 

for the Christian. 

We were never meant to go it alone. 

You saved a people, not a person. 

After a long season of virtual church, 

it’s easy to forget how to gather 

and how important it is to gather with our church. 

As we can more safely do so, 

let us prioritize seeing one another in person, 

listening alongside our fellow believers 

to the preaching of your gospel, 

joining our voices together 

in prayers of confession and adoration and petition, 

and sharing communion as we remember your sacrifice for us.

In Jesus’ beloved name. Amen. 

Read Acts 2:42-47.

The Good News of Not Being Fine

The Good News of Not Being Fine

Hi Friends,

In this once-again “busy” month of May, as things are revving back up and graduations and end-of-school and summer vacations and other fun things start happening, I’m aware that maybe you’re not fine yet. The pandemic has taken a toll on many of us. If that’s the case for you or for someone you love, please enjoy (and share) this excerpt from From Recovery to Restoration: 60 Meditations for Finding Peace & Hope in Crisis.

Two people are better off than one, for they can help each other succeed. If one person falls, the other can reach out and help. But someone who falls alone is in real trouble. Ecclesiastes 4:9, NLT 

I guess I could blame it on my daughter. She put the idea in my head. It all started when I texted my two girls, asking them to pray because I was going to the doctor to have twenty-five staples removed from my hip. Both agreed to pray, and my younger daughter, who, as a counselor, knows the best methods for dealing with pain and stress, reminded me to take something to squeeze. Good idea, I thought.

There was just one problem. I didn’t have one of those squishy de-stresser balls. But now I was committed to squeezing, so I decided to make one. Searching my pantry for something soft, I found an old bag of mini-marshmallows. I quickly grabbed a few large handfuls and stuffed them in a snack-sized plastic bag, squeezed the air out, and sealed it. Voilá! DYI de-stresser ball! I tucked my homemade squishy ball into my jacket pocket and headed out the door.

Unfortunately, I had not anticipated the X-ray tech’s request that I empty my pockets before my scan. I tried to quickly stuff my makeshift squishy ball behind my purse, but I’m pretty sure she saw it and is still wondering about the peculiar woman who carries around a snack-sized bag of mini-marshmallows.

How did I come to be this woman—a woman who frantically stuffs a bag of mini-marshmallows into her pocket before a doctor’s appointment? I think the problem started with “being fine.” Like many people recovering from crisis, when asked how I was doing, I’d say, “I’m fine.” When friends asked me how they could help, I’d say, “I’m fine.” But, like many people recovering from crisis, I was not, in fact, “fine.”

The wisdom of Ecclesiastes is that we are not at all fine when we are trying to walk alone. Two are better than one, and three are better than two. Another person can offer us a hand to squeeze when staples are being removed; two friends can accompany us to the divorce lawyer’s office; the whole church can work together to mow our lawn, clean our house, and pay our bills when our loved one is dying of cancer. As members of the body of Christ, we are called to bear the burdens of the weak and to be stronger together (Galatians 6:2).

Dear friend, let my mini-marshmallow tale be a lesson to you: don’t be fine when you’re not. Discover the peace and hope that come from asking for and receiving help. Let your burdens be borne by those called to carry them. One day, when you are “more fine,” you will know the joy of extending a helping hand to someone who needs to squeeze it.

 

Prayer

Dear Jesus,

We confess, we are often not “fine” as we walk through this season. Thank you for sending physical hands to hold us and help us in our time of need. Give us the courage to ask for and receive help. In your kind name we pray, Amen.

 

Further Encouragement

Read Ecclesiastes 4:7-12; Galatians 6:2.

Listen to “Kindness” by Sandra McCracken.

For Reflection

Do you have the tendency to say “I’m fine” when you’re not? What specific help could you ask for or accept in this season?

A Prayer of Gratitude for Children

A Prayer of Gratitude for Children

Heavenly Father,

On this, my older daughter’s birthday, 

and the day after Mother’s Day,

I am counting my blessings

 for how you have worked through my children 

to humble me, to shape me, to redeem me. 

Whether we have children or not, 

may we recognize their value, 

not in the child-centric way our culture does, 

but in the Jesus-centric way the Bible demonstrates. 

The disciples tried to shoo the children away 

when parents brought them to Jesus, 

but Jesus corrected them, 

saying that the “kingdom of God belongs to such as these” (Matthew 19:14). 

Why? Why does the kingdom of God belong to people like children? 

Because children in healthy families 

fully understand their dependence on their parents to supply all their needs. 

Healthy children don’t think it’s all up to them to make things happen, 

they don’t think they’re the ones in control of their own lives (except for three-year-olds), 

and they don’t think they’re stronger than they are. 

Healthy children turn to their parents for help, comfort, hope;

Healthy children do what their parents tell them to do, 

believing their parents have their good in mind.

And even though most children don’t act that way, we are your children, the children of the only perfect parent.

May we come to you as such children would. 

In Jesus’ calling name. Amen. 

Read Matthew 19:13-15.

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A Prayer about the Way to Love

A Prayer about the Way to Love

Faithful God,

As I reread the Ten Commandments you gave your people long long ago, 

I wonder if we have marginalized them. 

Do we still memorize them, 

and even more importantly, 

do we meditate on their meaning and purpose? 

More importantly than that, 

do we ask you for the power to live them out?

Do we remember that they were based on a covenant: 

You first loved us, 

and because we know that love through Jesus, 

we love you and others?

I love what Eugene Peterson says about these commandments:

He reminds us that the two tablets summarize our relationship with God and with others. 

And then he reminds us how the commandments define love: 

“For love isn’t a sentimental way of feeling 

but a sanctified way of living 

that respects the value of other people, 

respects their property,

and respects their reputation. 

Love sets the boundaries

around our relationship with God and with other people, 

not to keep us from enjoying those relationship, 

but so we can enjoy those relationships to the fullest” (Conversations: The Message Bible and Its Translator). 

Help us, Lord, 

to “walk in the all the way that you have commanded us, 

that we may live, and that it may go well with us…” (Deuteronomy 5:33).

In Jesus’ commandment-keeping name. Amen.

Read Deuteronomy 5:1-33.

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A Prayer about Learning to Pray

A Prayer about Learning to Pray

Holy Father,

Thank you for the gift of prayer.

Grow our understanding of the power and richness of prayer.

Thank you for David Powlison’s words 

that remind us of a key feature of prayer we often forget:

“We usually ask God to change events in people’s lives…

But think about the spiritual needs of each of these life situations….”

So, even as we pray,

“Lord, please bless my friend’s business,” 

we can also pray, 

“Lord, please give my friend faith that you will provide for her in this business….”

Even as we pray,

“Lord, please heal my friend from chronic pain,” 

we can also pray, 

“Lord, please sustain my friend’s hope in this hard season….”

Even as we pray,

“Lord, please bring my friend’s daughter back home,” 

we can also pray, 

“Lord, please help my friend forgive her daughter for causing so much pain….”

[Name some prayers of your own following this model….]

Thank you Lord, for the privilege of prayer. 

Please shape us more and more 

into the image of your Son as we learn to pray. 

In Jesus’ praying name. Amen. 

Read Luke 11:1-13.

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A Prayer about Remembering the Wonders

A Prayer about Remembering the Wonders

Mighty and Merciful God,

As we gather this Sunday, whether together or apart, 

may we remember your glorious deeds, 

may we remind one another of the wonders 

you have worked in this world and in our lives.

Today, let us each remember one story of grace you have written in our lives—

maybe the way you first broke through our darkness, 

maybe the way you saved our marriage, 

maybe the way you plucked us out of a chaotic situation…

As we remember these stories of grace, 

may we share them often, 

and may our sharing

grow us into a faithful people, 

people who trust you and hope in you 

and look for the day when Christ will return.

In Jesus’ wonder-full name.

Amen

Read Psalm 78:1-8.

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