Unplugging Your Prayer Practice…

It is possible for us to slide into a pattern of prayer that has lost track of Who it is we are addressing.  Someone listening to our personal prayer may think we are filled with love, wisdom and power ourselves. The God we talk to becomes one from who we are trying to wring these attributes.

“Prayer is not overcoming God’s reluctance. It is laying hold of God’s willingness.” George Mueller, 19th century saint, quoted in Breakthrough Prayer, p83.

When we pray for chronic struggles or crisis that are repetitive in one person’s life we need to remind ourselves that our faith is based on what God has promised and not on the story that we see unfolding.

Let’s keep an active memory of both God’s character and the promises found in his word. When we know we are praying to a faithful God for what he has already promised we can pray with boldness.

Each of us has a list of prayers that we have prayed a long time. Some of them may be for people we love who have wandered from the faith or not yet embraced faith, some may be for physical or mental suffering, and some for relational brokenness. Name your unanswered prayer and pray it anew with faith in God’s willingness to answer rather than allowing the enemy to tell you that God is reluctant.

To do this you may need to unplug your prayer practice and plug it in again right away. In computer language this is called reboot.

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Would It Be Cheaper If…

I have a little Koi pond that is a delight for three seasons but a litmus test for sanity during our long cold winter. The fish hibernate when it is below 50F so they have been sleeping for a couple of months and have at least that much longer to just stretch out and relax in the icy water.

It is up to me to get up everyday and, among other things, make sure there is a hole in the ice so that there is oxygen in the water. A small pump that bubbles up through an opening that is decreasing in size accomplishes this.

There is “insurance” in that there is a heating circle that can be plugged in when the temperature plummets. I don’t think it’s working as I put my hand on it in the water and it felt cold. Then I told myself that even a heater would feel cold in icy water. It must be working or it wouldn’t be loose. Then I told myself not to put my hand into the water to check the status of a plugged in electrical appliance. My being here to write this blog tells you that I did not sacrifice my life.

I have an ice chopper. It is a heavy rod with a thick blade on the end. I can’t chop without hurting my neck but I can drop it and it usually makes a dent in the ice and sometimes breaks off a section. Today I managed to drop chop a hole big enough to feel satisfied. One of the chunks that broke lose, though, dislodged the pump and I had to reach my arm, after unplugging the pump, into the icy water and try to bury the pump in a bucket of sunken stones. I found a big loose stone near the house to weight the pump down more securely.  I left the heating circle in place just in case it is working. I came back into the house and told my husband of my work.

He said, “Wouldn’t it be cheaper to just buy new fish in the spring?”

I said, “Yes,” but I remember the color of each one and they have names.

 

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With Friends Like These…

I sent out an email this morning to a few of my friends letting them know that I was in a tough place.  That I couldn’t track God in this story.

Here’s what they replied:

“God is faithful based on his character. He is tracking u

whether u can track him or not.”

 

Yours is pastoral work in the “furnace of affliction.”  Wounds are a prerequisite for effective pastoral service. (I answered this one by saying I was applying for a job in a department store.)

And then this:

Here is a verse from John Piper’s poem (yes he writes poetry too!) on Ruth.

“Are these

The only things. Grampa , that she

Could see? Just grief? It seems to me

That God was doing more.” ” Indeed

He was. But, david, sometimes creed

Can’t keep up with the speed of pain

And has to make the meaning plain

When suffering slows down. Do you

Know what I mean?”” I think it’s too

Complex, grandpa” ” I mean that what

Naomi knew of God was not

Rejected when she wept her way

Back home to Bethlehem. The day

Would come when tortoise faith would catch

The bounding hare of pain and match

His power, not his pace, and win.

Judge not from how the two begin.

 

With friends like these…

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One More Contact to Delete

           I received a phone call this week that was unwelcome but not unexpected. My childhood friend had died. This is the letter I wrote to her children:

          We live in a world that measures success but not faithfulness. Jesus measures faithfulness. When your mother/grandmother arrived in heaven Jesus said, “Well done, good and faithful servant.” 

          There is a ripping hole in my heart today. It is because a friend who knew me as a child and to whom I could talk about how things were then is no longer able to pick up the phone. My last conversation with your mom was the week before she died. She wanted to talk but the amount of oxygen she needed to create breath was not available to her. My last words to her were, “ Don’t try to talk anymore. Just listen and I will pray for you.” Her last words to me were, “Thank you.” 

          One of the memories that has shaped my life is from our High School days when our Luther League was planning a trip to a national convention in Florida. We each had some money but we worked together to earn the final dollars. One of the fund raising projects was mowing our church cemetery and clipping around the gravestones. As we were working, a car pulled up and your Mom got out and joined us in the task. I wondered about that. I knew she was not going because she did not have the money. Yet, she contributed to the fund raising project, even though she would not personally benefit. 

          As an adult, I feel shame that we did not pool our money so that your Mom could have joined us. I talked to her about that in recent years but she did not recognize that she had done anything unusual. She seemed confused when I wanted to make it up to her now. 

          I remember the time the custard stand opened in our little town. The frozen custard came out of a machine and made concentric circles on the cones. A little one was 5 cents. Your Mom and I each got one that was at least 18 inches high. They were 25 cents each. 

          We rode the bus together for High School. On the first day that we got indoor plumbing at our house she got off the bus with me and we both put on our swimming suits and climbed into our bath tub. 

          Years go by but foundations don’t change. I need someone to talk to that knows my early story. There were 5 in our confirmation class. There were 3 boys and 2 girls. Now I am the only girl. 

          I want so desperately to come to her memorial service. Not for her but for me. Yet, I have peace because she understands that I have a medical appointment with a friend that I need to keep. She would probably laugh at me for being so torn up. 

          She made everybody laugh. The way she knit our Norwegian heritage into our culture by creating a family of dolls that told things as they are was brilliant and creative. 

          I want to laugh more as a tribute to her memory. 

          And when you need a mother, that remembers the things your mother remembered, please reply to this email. 

          You have been given a rare gift. A mother for whom the things of earth have grown faintly dim in the light of His glory and grace.

 

          With gratitude for having known her and grief for having lost her.

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Confused and Forgetful

These two words are nightmare terms for us as we age. We try to make them funny. I have a mug that says, “I think I may be confused but maybe I am not.” And then I have a key chain attached to an 8 x 10 plastic mat imprinted with “These are the keys I haven’t lost yet.”

Confusion and forgetfulness have become such dreaded companions to aging that we think they are the price to be paid for a long life. I was reminded recently that we, who see faith through aging eyes, do not have exclusive rights to these two experiences.

I was invited to speak to a group of young mothers. One mother was there with what looked like a big scarf draped around her neck. As I looked closer it was actually a sling that held a six-day-old baby. Other mothers came pushing a stroller or holding a toddler on one hip while balancing a plate of muffins and fruit. What surprised me most was how confused and forgetful most of them seemed to be. They asked what group they had been in last week because they couldn’t remember. The instructions for the morning schedule had to be repeated in order to be understood.  The attempt to give directions for finding a room was so unsuccessful that one of the leaders said, “I will just lead you there.”

No one in the young Mom’s group seemed to be concerned about this forgetfulness and confusion. I think they would have labeled their experience “life.” Why is it not simply “life” for those of us who are aging?

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Images in the Mirror Are Closer Than They Appear

  • Last week I misjudged the width of my car. The price I paid was the bill for a new passenger side view mirror. Today I tested the mirror and was relieved to see it respond to the adjustment button. The mirror was clean and bright. I noticed the printing on the bottom and realized that I had not seen that for a long time. Years of driving had worn the warning off the old mirror. Now I am reminded again that the images in the mirror are closer than they appear.

I wonder how many other distortions have faded from my attention.

Do I live with the reality that even if I make it to a ripe old age I have more history than future in this body?

Do I recognize that I am the older person that the younger generation is looking to for wisdom?

Is it really true that younger people can open plastic containers without an ax?

Is it possible that there is someone somewhere that can see the ingredients and the percentage of that which is daily required on the side of a bottle of vitamins?

Do I celebrate the precious truth that though outwardly I am fading away, inwardly I am being renewed every day?

Am I confident that this truth is not a distortion in the mirror but rather the gift of a loving God?

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After Forty Years…

This morning I made a video Skype call to a friend I met 40 years ago at an international Bible School held on an island off the south coast of Norway. She was from Scotland and I was from the United States, although I used every chance I could, to tell that my grandmother was born in Telemark, Norway.  In my mind I had come home to this place.

I wondered, as I dialed my friend, if it would be like talking to a stranger. Have I changed? Has she changed? Would we remember the same things? Would we find anything to talk about?

The experience at the Bible School had been intense, both regarding our experience of God from a global perspective, and our experience of knowing believers from other parts of the world.  This friend and I had become especially close.

We wrote, after our separation, on the blue airmail paper that was the primary way of contact back then. With the onset of the computer we did a few emails. But today we would see each other’s faces and hear each other’s voices again. After a few comments that reviewed our stories to each other all small talk was over.  Once again we shared only that which was deeply important to us. We shared with trust and with the familiarity of a proven friendship.

If you have had a close relationship that time has interrupted, I encourage you to make contact. It is a joy to know that we can pick up where we left off. Maybe, at a more significant place than where we left off as God has had 40 years to do transformational work.

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Does God Answer Prayers Randomly?

A week ago I received a prayer request from a friend who is a doctor in northern India. It happened that her email came through at 4:18 AM. I woke up at just that time and heard the signal that let me know I had a message.

I read the request and quickly wrote my prayer for her and clicked reply. I prayed that the fog would lift so the trains could maintain their schedules, that there would be protection from the cold, that her arthritic hands would be free from pain and that her ministry to her dying patients would be anointed by the Holy Spirit.

She replied with great gratitude for my prayer. The fog had, indeed, lifted. The train schedules were manageable. Her hands were pain free and she was able to minister with power.

I read this reply in the home of my friend, for whom I have prayed for decades, but whose pain in unrelenting and I asked God, “Why do you answer some prayers and not others?”

He replied, “I answer them all.”

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Chances

by Shirlee Vandegrift

Another week gone by. Another week ahead. A chance to confess our sins and repent. A chance to appreciate the music. A chance to visit with each other. Thank You for all of the chances, past, present, and future. We search for ways to thank You for the most important chance of all: the chance to be a child of Yours.

Father, you gave Your son Jesus for us. A sacrifice beyond measure. He paid for our sin. You gave us the gift of belief in Him. Your plans are perfect.

At times our words and thoughts are like stones sent skipping across the water, touching down in spots and sailing across spaces. They may not always make sense. We pray that You will make sense out of it all. All we want to do is live for You. Help us, please. Help us to kneel at the cross every morning and declare our faith and to be ready to tell those we meet the reason for the hope we have.

We pray in the name of our Lord and Savior, Jesus,

Amen

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New Year, New Door

Mel Lawrenz
In many doorways of the Roman Empire there was a depiction of a god with two faces pointing in opposite directions. Janus was the god of transitions. He looked ahead and he looked behind–to the past and the future. He was a kind of doorkeeper, a minder of the gate. And so our calendar’s first month, January, is named after him. On January 1 of the new year we look behind, and we look ahead.
So what’s on the other side of the doorway you’re stepping through?
One day Jesus said: “I am the gate for the sheep…. whoever enters through me will be saved. He will come in and go out, and find pasture. The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy; I have come that they may have life, and have it to the full” (John 10).
In Jesus’ day the shepherd tending a small flock would gather the sheep into a pen during the dangerous night hours and he himself would lay across the gate area, acting as a human door. And then the “door” would come open in the morning and the sheep could go out to pasture.
Here’s something I think we frequently miss. Jesus’ emphasis is not just on being a door that protects us from outside intruders, but a doorway designed to let us out into the wide world around us where the opportunities are. This is a good time for each of us to ponder: what steps might God be asking me to take this year?
What do you think? [click]
Mel Lawrenz serves as minister at large for Elmbrook Church.
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