As is usually
my custom, I rose early this morning, made some coffee, read a few chapters in
my Bible, and then went for a walk so as to spend some alone time with the Lord
in prayer. My expectations of communing
with the Lord were as big as my intentions but once I got out the door on this
beautiful quiet morning my heart became more of a marketplace than a place of
prayer.
As I saw our
truck sitting there in front of our house I realized I still hadn’t gotten
around to changing the oil on it and of course thinking about the oil change
caused me to remember that I needed to figure out where to buy an oil filter
wrench so as to remove the oil filter because the one I brought to Cameroon was
strangely missing. This then led me down
the trail of wondering how busy the market would be today since its Saturday and
if I could somehow find a mechanic who might just lend me one. Then, just about the time I got into the
“Good Morning Lord” part of my praying it dawned on me that tomorrow is Sunday
and I need to prepare for our service as well as our Bible classes later in the
day. These thoughts then led me down the
trail of thinking about the emails I still needed to answer from last week as
well as the update I still needed to write and blog article I wanted to write. Thinking about the update caused me to think
about all the work here that was still not finished and well…….Talk about
distractions!
Well the good
news is, I was able to clear my mind, give all these distractions to the Lord, and do a little praying but oh what a battle
it was to keep my mind clear so as to talk with the Lord rather than to
myself. Finally, I finished my circuit
and as I walked back in the door to sit down and write this, I wondered about
the value of my quote unquote “prayer walk”.
As I considered whether I should just go right back out there and do it
again only this time with a much more serious approach to dealing with all my
distractions, it dawned on me that distractions are life. And since life is what we pray
about—distractions may not really be distractions at all—they may be prayer
requests in disguise. In fact, perhaps
they are the very things God wants to talk about.
I’ve never
found that talking to my wife was any more intimate and pleasurable because I
came to her with a list and an agenda.
Most of the time, what passes for good conversation between us is
talking about all the distractions that interrupted our agenda and made scrap
paper out of our lists. Well, after
giving it more thought I came to the conclusion that prayer without
distractions may not be prayer at all.
Paul told us that we are to pray without ceasing (1 Thess. 5:17 ) and that we are to be anxious
for nothing but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving we
are to let our requests be known to God (Phil. 4:6). How can we pray without ceasing and over
everything and not include our distractions?
So, I didn’t
go back out on the road to repray my prayers.
I simply thanked the Lord for listening to me as I talked to Him and for
listening in on me as I talked to myself.
Then I committed all my distractions to Him.
1 comment:
This was a blessing to me!
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