Reignite Your Prayer Life
Don
Whitney / October 9, 2015
How’s your prayer life?
Hardly any question — unless perhaps someone
asks about your evangelistic efforts — can cause more chin-dropping,
foot-shuffling embarrassment for Christians than asking about their prayer
life.
Why is that? Why do so many followers of Jesus
suffer with such unsatisfying prayer lives and consider themselves hopelessly
second-rate Christians because of it?
Method Is
Our Madness
For almost all followers of Jesus, I believe
the problem in prayer is not with the quality of the Christian, but with the
method of their prayer.
Of course, no change in method will make
prayer consistently meaningful to someone who is spiritually dead. But it’s
different for those who are spiritually alive. They are born again through
faith in Christ and indwelled by the Holy Spirit. The Spirit’s presence causes
them as God’s children to cry, “Abba, Father!” (Romans 8:15; Galatians 4:6),
giving them a Godward orientation they didn’t have before.
In other words, all those indwelled by the
Holy Spirit really do want to pray. And if an individual Christian sincerely
seeks to live for Christ, and has no specific sin issue that he or she refuses
to confess and fight against, then the basic problem in prayer is not with sin
or failure, but with method.
And what is the method of prayer for most
Christians? It’s this: when we pray we tend to say the same old things about
the same old things. Sooner or later, that kind of prayer is boring. When
prayer is boring, you don’t feel like praying. And when you don’t feel like praying,
you don’t pray — at least with any fervency or consistency. Prayer feels much
more like duty than delight.
The problem is not that we pray about
the same old things. To pray about the same things most of the time is normal.
That’s because our lives tend to consist of the same things from one day to the
next. Thankfully, dramatic changes in our lives usually don’t occur very often.
No, the problem isn’t that we pray about the
same old things; the problem is that we tend to say the same old things about the same old things.
The result is that we can be talking to the most fascinating Person in the
universe about the most important things in our lives — and be bored to death.
So we can experience boredom in prayer, not
because we don’t love God, and not because we don’t love who or what we’re
praying about, but because of our method.
Solution in
the Spirit
What is the solution? Well, whatever it is, it
must be simple. God has children all over the planet, and they represent the
widest imaginable diversity in language, culture, age, IQ, education, and
Christian privilege (such as access to a Bible preaching church, Christian
books, Christian content online, and more). If all these believers, despite the
various and dramatic differences among them, are invited to pray, then prayer
must be doable by all God’s children.
The simple solution to the seemingly universal
problem of saying the same old things about the same old things in prayer is
this: pray the Bible. In
other words, slowly read a passage of Scripture and pray about all that comes
to mind as you read.
Do this, and you’ll never again be left to say
the same old things in prayer.
Simple,
Powerful, Biblical
Praying the Bible isn’t complicated. Read
through a few verses of Scripture, pause at the end of each phrase or verse,
and pray about what the words suggest to you.
Suppose you are praying your way through Psalm
23. After reading verse one — “The Lord is my shepherd” — you might begin by
thanking Jesus for being your Shepherd. Next you might ask him to shepherd your
family, making your children or grandchildren his sheep, causing them to love
him as their great shepherd too. After that you might pray for your
undershepherds at the church, that Jesus would shepherd them as they shepherd
you.
Then, when nothing else comes to mind, you go
to the next line, “I shall not want.” You might thank him that you’ve never
been in real want, or
pray for someone — perhaps someone you know, or for a Christian in a place of
persecution — who is in want.
You would continue through the psalm until you
run out of time. You wouldn’t run out of anything to say (if you did, you could
just go to another psalm), and best of all, that prayer would be unlike any
you’ve ever prayed in your life.
That means if you’ll pray the Bible, you’ll
never again say the same old things about the same old things. You don’t need
any notes or books or any plan to remember. Simply talk to God about what comes
to mind as you go line-by-line through his word.
As John Piper puts
it, “Open the Bible, start reading it, and pause at every verse and turn it
into a prayer.”
If nothing comes to mind, go to the next
verse. If you don’t understand that verse, go to the next one. If the following
verse is crystal clear, but doesn’t prompt anything to pray about, read on. If
you want to linger long over a single verse, pray from and about that verse as
long as you want.
By this method, your prayers will be guided
and shaped by Scripture, and be far more in conformity to the word and will of
God than they will if you always make up your own prayers.
Jesus
prayed the Bible in Matthew 27:46 and Luke 23:46, and the early church prayed
the Bible in Acts 4:23–26, and so can you.
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