While driving to an appointment, I was listening to the
Bott (Christian) radio network. The
pastor was teaching on the topic of prayer. He caught my attention when he asked the following two questions: 1) “Are your prayers becoming stale”? 2) “Do you find yourself praying for the same
things and using the same words over and over”?
If the answer was yes, he suggested we try praying the
scriptures. I wasn’t sure I wanted to
listen anymore as that idea had been introduced to me several years ago and
after trying it for a week or so I went back to praying in my own words. Somehow praying scripture made me feel I had
lost the intimacy I feel when talking to God in my own words.
However, the next morning, I decided to give it a try. I did as the pastor suggested and prayed from
the book of Psalms because as he said the whole book of Psalms is a book of
praise. I started with Psalm 23 because
the words are familiar and I am comfortable saying them.
After I prayed the first line: “The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want.”
I stopped. Then in my own words I
praised Jesus for shepherding me through a difficult time. I moved on to the next sentence: “He makes me to lie down in green pastures;
he leads me beside the still waters; he restores my soul.” Then I thanked Him for the necessities of
life especially a home in which to find solace.
With each line of the 23rd Psalm, I found that I could stop
and add my own words of praise, thanks or petition. This was definitely a new way for me to
pray. It allowed me to maintain that
closeness that I had missed in my previous attempts to pray the scriptures.
My long range plan is to choose each morning one of the
many names there are for Jesus and the scripture describing that name,
i.e., Shepherd, Light of the World,
Savior, etc. Now I’ve said good-bye to
stale, repetitive prayers.
If you find that your prayers have become stale and
repetitive, perhaps praying the scriptures would be of help to you, too.
Prayer: Father, we praise you for the beautiful words in
the Holy Bible, and we thank you for hearing our prayers in whatever words we
say them when they come from our hearts. In your Son Jesus’ holy name we pray. Amen.
Judy Welch (reprinted from the 2017 Eastridge Lenten Devotional)
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