Friday, May 11, 2018

Praying with Paul

I just finished reading "Praying with Paul" by D.A. Carson. While a fairly "academic" book, it also has a lot of wisdom if you persevere in reading. Carson takes a look at some of the things the apostle Paul prays for and about in his New Testament letters, and then expands on them, applying them to our own prayer lives. The basic idea is that if we want to pray better, the Bible is the perfect place to look for guidance - God himself teaches us how to pray and what our priorities should be in his own Word. What better source of teaching can there be on this subject? Listening to God in this matter isn't burdensome either but ultimately a joy. Praying with greater knowledge and greater love is good for us, and brings glory to God. We can pray to God knowing that he hears us and loves us in his Son Jesus Christ and that alone gives us great motivation to pray. There is already a relationship. 

Here are just five quotes I appreciated from the last few chapters (though rest assured there were very many more):


1) “In the same way that we give thanks to God when we recognize his quiet and effective work in our lives, so also we thank God when we hear of his work in others. If we hear of substantial numbers of people in another city or country who have been genuinely transformed by the gospel, we would not think of going to them to thank them for becoming Christians. Instead, we thank God for so working in them that they have become Christians.” (149) (Chapter 10 looking at Ephesians 1:15-23)


2) “We all know senior Christians who, as their physical strength is reduced, nevertheless become more and more steadfast and radiant. Their memories may be fading; their arthritis may be nearly unbearable; their ventures beyond their small rooms or apartments may be severely curtailed. But somehow they live as if they already have one foot in heaven. As their outer being weakens, their inner being runs from strength to strength.” (162) (Chapter 11 looking at Ephesians 3:14-21)


3) “In a culture where so many people are desperate for good health but not demonstrably hungry for the transformation of the inner being, Christians are in urgent need of following Paul’s example and praying for displays of God’s power in the inner being. In short, Paul’s primary concern is to pray for a display of God’s mighty power in the domain of our being that controls our character and prepares us for heaven.” (163) (Chapter 11 looking at Ephesians 3:14-21)

4) “It is possible to ask for good things for bad reasons… Has God become so central to all our thought and pursuits, and thus to our praying, that we cannot easily imagine asking for anything without consciously longing that the answer bring glory to God?” (180)  (Chapter 11 looking at Ephesians 3:14-21)

5) "Suppose, for argument’s sake, that every time we asked God for anything and ended our prayers with some appropriate formula, such as “in Jesus’s name,” we immediately received what we asked for. How would we view prayer? How would we view God? Wouldn’t prayer become a kind of clever magic? Wouldn’t God himself become nothing more than an extraordinarily powerful genie, to be called up, not by rubbing Aladdin’s lamp, but by praying? What an easy and domesticated religion...
This is magic, not worship; it is another power trip, not hearty submission to the lordship of Christ. It is superstition, not a personal relation with the Father God who is wise, good, and patient.” (199) (Chapter 12 looking at Romans 15:14-33)


Wednesday, April 25, 2018

The Destroyer

Too often
I am he.
The destroyer.
That foggy minded
sluggish
self-centred
and cynical
destroyer.
Motivation
crumbles
under his
very gaze.
Good desires
float away
to dissipate
and die
when he
draws near.
He ruins people
with slow poison,
whole nations too.
He sings
 that gruesome lullaby
of endless ease
and lies of
blue sky days.
While the world
melts in fire
his victims watch
and care but little.
"Let someone else
fight."
"Who cares?"
"It's too late anyway."
"We're having too much fun."
And with each praise
for the destroyer
he only grows like Eglon,
freezing those who glance
upon him long
like Medusa of the ancient past.
What is his name?
What is his title?
I call him Apathy.

Wednesday, February 14, 2018

Chains

People suffer
and you
watch.
It's too much,
your heart
seems to
be always
broken,
for them
and myriads others.
You want to help
but
your hands are
tied.
Anxiety
of every sort
lies tight
around your wrists,
cold and calculating.
It whispers cruelly,
threatening,
threatening to cut you
if you even 
think about
escape.
May these chains
be broken,
may life return
to despairing limbs.
Our brothers
need our help.
We are at war.