Show me the path where I should walk, O Lord

To you, O Lord, I lift up my soul. I trust in You, my God! Show me the path where I should walk, O Lord Point out the right road for me to follow. Lead me by your truth and teach me for You are the God who saves me. All day long I put my hope in You. Remember O Lord your unfailing love and compassion which you have shown from long ages past. Forgive the rebellious sins of my youth…

Archive for prayer

asleep

I’m tired of repeating my sins, continuing to return to them.  I see the need to change, and pray for my Lord to change them, but am I committed to this? These are long-running things that I in some way, hope will just go away…. I’m delaying, running and hiding. Please Jesus give me a willing heart to want to change and then mold me. You’ve done it before and I know you can again … so help me to get over the hurdles I’ve put up.

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reflections on a psalm, and my seizures

It’s been a real while since I’ve gotten back into my usual patterns and cycles, one of which being prayer and reading the Bible in the morning. So, if you follow this blog at all, you’d know I’m linearly reading the Bible and am still in Psalms. Just read through several but Psalm 141 really resonated with me:

O Lord, I am calling to you. Please hurry! Listen when I cry to you for help! Accept my prayer as incense offered to you, and my upraised hands as an evening offering.

Take control of what I say, O Lord, and guard my lips. Don’t let me drift toward evil or take part in acts of wickedness. Don’t let me share in the delicacies of those who do wrong.

Let the godly strike me! It will be a kindness! If they correct me, it is soothing medicine. Don’t let me refuse it.

But I pray constantly against the wicked and their deeds. When their leaders are thrown down from a cliff, the wicked will listen to my words and find them true. Like rocks brought up by a plow, the bones of the wicked will lie scattered without burial.

I look to you for help, O Sovereign Lord. You are my refuge; don’t them kill me. Keep me from the traps they have set for me, from the snares of those who do wrong. Let the wicked fall into their own nets, but let me escape.

How many times have I felt like screaming (and have screamed out!) to God to please help me? not later but now! To accept my prayer and my arms as an offering… even though I sometimes question have I even really meant it? I might tell God to take control of what I say, but do I truly want that? I certainly don’t always act like I want my lips sealed… Many times I struggle with many things one of which is my anger. Ah how many seem to not understand that this is my struggle, but we all have ours. Words I speak to my children I participate in far too often – and far too quickly. Patience and calmness…. yes words I only frequently remember how they work… I recall Proverbs 13:3 years ago:

He who guards his mouth preserves his life, but he who opens wide his lips shall have destruction.

God’s time though isn’t always my time. I can recall back on several prayers for months on end (and some longer than that), that have been answered… some of which quite recently (and pleasantly I might add!).

But then I go and have found out that I now have seizures (some may call it epilepsy). Yeah certainly not my choice of timing… I haven’t been the most comprehensive in researching this so far, but my wife found this article that seemed to the most helpful information for myself.

The usual culprits to raise likelihood of having another seizure are sleep deprivation, increased alcohol consumption and menstrual changes. My neurologist also mentioned drug use, but we can scratch that off the list like increased alcohol consumption (unless you consider drinking a single beer once in a few months “increased”). Sleep deprivation isn’t likely either, although I could use a consistency… what the article also talks about is emotional stress:

Emotional is usually related to a situation or event that has personal meaning to you. Often you will feel a loss of control. In particular, the kind of emotional stress that leads to most seizures is worry or fear. One study found that in some patients, anxiety—another term for worry and fear—led to hyperventilation (overbreathing) and an increase in abnormal brain activity and seizures. Other emotions that have been linked with stress and seizures are frustration and anger.

In addition, the article mentions a few recommended things to decrease your chance of seizures:

  • Start (and continue) a regular sleep pattern. Try to go to bed and wake up at the same time every day.
  • Limit your alcohol consumption to a few (or no) drinks, and don’t drink too often.
  • Find an outlet to help you deal with anger, frustration, and worries in your life. Exercise, music, or conversation works for many people.

We fasted and earnestly prayed

I’m following on the heels of my last post (being a leader that seems to have failed) about the book of Ezra. I now read about the author (Ezra) and him about to start the journey back to Jerusalem. It’s interesting because in Ezra 8:22, he said to the King that “Our God’s hand of protection is on all who worship him, but his fierce anger rages against those who abandon him.” But Ezra must have still been concerned (who wouldn’t? it was a 4 month journey!) for protection. So what did they do? (8:23):

We fasted and earnestly prayed that our God would take care of us ….. and he heard our prayer.

Sounds simple enough and I have definitely stopped to pray about some things, especially big things that are about to happen. But have I “earnestly” prayed about something for God to take care of? I read in my Life Application Study Bible (which rocks for someone that hasn’t really ever read the Bible before… like me) this note:

Their prayers and fasting prepared them spiritually and showed their dependence on God for protection; their faith that God was in control, and their affirmation that they were not strong enough to make the trip without him. Ezra knew God’s promises to protect his people, but he didn’t take them for granted. He also knew that God’s blessings are appropriated through prayer, so Ezra and the people humbled themselves by fasting and praying. Fasting humbled them because going without food was a reminder of their complete dependence on God. Fasting also gave them more time to pray and meditate on God. Too often we pray superficially. Serious prayer, by contrast, requires concentration. It puts us in touch with God’s will and can really change us. Without serious prayer, we reduce God to a quick-service pharmacist with painkillers for our every ailment.

I pray that God can show me what means to “earnestly” pray – to seriously concentrate on the prayers – and to understand the purpose of fasting – and the times when it is appropriate.

Starting the year off right

[Well, I've really fallen off the bandwagon on writing anything from the Sunday messages at New Venture. It's been hard lately to muster the writing skills on much. But today's message was just so completely SPOT-ON for me. Seriously.]

It’s January and what else makes sense than a message series called “Start Right”? The first part is “Listening to God”; part two will be “Walking with God”.

Before we get going though, let’s backup a bit. Before we can listen to God, we have to actually talk to Him, now don’t we? I know, I know – he knows everything but we still have to ask. Philippians 4:6-7 lays it out pretty well for us:

Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requested to God.

But talking to God seems to not always be such an easy thing, and not always improving [I sure know this as I'm in a low point]. Steve identifies a few things that could contribute to a lack of communication with God:

But what changes our communication? Usually pain and desperation. It all gets worse. You see that there is no other humanly possible way. Nothing else to be done. So we tell Him to please, please help. And He listens. Psalms 34:18 says:

God is near to the broken-hearted and he rescues those who are crushed in spirit.

[I think at this, and wonder what pain I exactly need to go through. When will my spirit be crushed? I need change for something in very particular in my life, and I have prayed for it. Yet, this behavior continues. At the core is my selfishness, myme. Please God help me. Cleanse me. Crush my spirit and my will and change me. Tonight. Now. PLEASE.]

OK – so we all should be talking to God now, right? So let’s jump back to the title of the message: “listening to God“. Hebrews 3:7-8 says:

“Today you must listen to his voice. Don’t harden your hearts against him.”

[Hardened heart? For me, that would be me determined that I know the right way, not God (or anyone else, like let's just say, maybe my wife?). Never done that one (like this morning...).]

It doesn’t make a difference that I’m not the Pope, a bishop, a pastor or whatever. God can talk directly to us. But are we listening? I mean it – are we serious in really wanting to hear from him? Or are we lightly asking and hoping he won’t “disturb our plans”? [I've done that many times, and don't recall God responding then (but it sure was clear later). There's a lot more that can be said on this, but I'm going to move on.]

Alright, so now we are listening and we do get a whisper. How do we know it’s really God or some “other spirit”? By testing:

  • Scripture test - it shouldn’t contradict the teaching of the Bible. [I struggle with this sometimes because some are really good at twisting truth! Given this, I need to remember the next tests too...]
  • Wisdom test [why I completely combine with the last test:]
  • Godly counsel test - rely on other “veteran” Christ followers’ counsel over the advice

These are just my notes on the message. To catch everything, just listen to it in MP3 audio format.

teaching a man to fish

“When you pray, don’t be like the hypocrites who love to pray publicly on street corners and in the synagogues where everyone can see them…. When you give to someone in need, don’t do as the hypocrites do—blowing trumpets in the synagogues and streets to call attention to their acts of charity! And when you fast, don’t make it obvious, as the hypocrites do, for they try to look miserable and disheveled so people will admire them for their fasting.

I tell you the truth, they have received all the reward they will ever get.Matthew 6

I personally think some things should be out in the open – like content about church sermons, and quite possibly certain aspects of our lives (this blog is kind of a diary for me in some ways). But not everything should be out in the open… some should be “in secret”. Jesus identifies three in the Sermon on the Mount, but we are only going to focus on one for this post – our “private time” with God. That means prayer.

Oh by the way – this is excerpted, paraphrased and generally taken from my church’s gathering today (9/30/07), sermon is “Part 2: Encouraging a Secret Life” which is part of the “In the Closet…” series.
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