Wednesday, March 28, 2012

More on Prayer... "Our Father"

One of my favorite group “prayer moments” is praying The Lord’s Prayer at end of our men’s group meetings. We huddle up, hold hands (Hey! They do it in the NFL!), and pray The Lord’s Prayer together. This follows the one-on-one prayer time with the focus on “How can I pray for your soul?” I like that balance of praying for the individual personal needs we bring with praying the prayer given to all of us, that applies to all of us.

There’s just something about 10 or 20 men praying that prayer together that encourages me. For a long time I prayed it loud so others could hear and follow till they learned it. Now I verbalize the words at a much lower volume so I can hear us praying in unison. I have so much more confidence in praying the words Jesus gave us than I do praying spontaneously. I never feel like I’m talking to myself when I’m saying The Lord’s Prayer.

Sometimes I just don’t know what to pray. Sometimes I don’t want to search for the right words. God knows so infinitely more than I do about the world, my life, my family, what’s right, what’s most important, and His will. Praying the exact prayer given to the disciples 2000 years ago just seems better than “winging it” with my own spontaneous prayer. Of course, I still pray spontaneously every day, all the time. After all, Jesus did say, “Ask and you will receive.” I simply want to make it a habit to ask for what is most necessary and good… “Thy will be done…”

Several years ago we stopped saying spontaneous “grace” prayers over our evening meals and began saying the Lord’s Prayer together instead. When we have guests I invite them to participate in saying the prayer. Yes, we’re saying it by rote memory, but the words mean more than any spontaneous sentence I could possibly conjure up. Has the evening meal blessing become a little less meaningful at your house? Try saying the prayer Jesus gave us with the whole family. It may breathe new life and meaning into that moment of thanks before you enjoy God’s provision.

Friday, March 16, 2012

As Funerals Go...

As funerals go, this one was as good as it gets. I’ll get back to the topic of prayer eventually, but this week I’ve been pretty much consumed with the preparations for last night’s (March 15) memorial service for Brenda. That’s Brenda Smith, a member of PCC with her husband and two sons for several years. She died in her sleep last Saturday night. I was told about her sudden death on Sunday morning between the first and second worship services. It was a challenge to preach in the second service with Brenda’s tragic death weighing heavy on my mind. Sometimes I simply pray, “God help me do my job.”

Immediately after the service I dashed to their home about 5 minutes from the church. My wife, the LPC, accompanied me. Extended family had already gathered to try and comfort Brenda’s husband and sons (ages 13 & 7). I embraced Jeff and each of his sons and then gathered everyone in the kitchen to pray. What do you pray in that situation? I have yet to find the formula or magic words that can fix such a tragedy. I believe the fact that we pray is more important than the specific words we say. It’s the act of calling upon the Lord for his presence and strength and comfort. I wasn’t there to fix anything; I there to pray and cry with the family.

Last night we had a full house for the memorial service. I would guess about 350 people came to pay their respects, grieve Brenda’s passing, and celebrate her life. Showing up makes a difference. It’s not so much what you say, the grieving aren’t likely to remember what you say anyway, it’s showing up that matters. People showed up. The service was not that different from many others I’ve officiated, at least as far as the order-of-service goes. There were a few songs, a few speakers (family members and friends), and then my message.

It was Brenda that made the difference. Those who knew her were so blessed by her sense of humor, her extreme loyalty, her optimism, her eagerness to serve others, and the Christ-like love that poured out of her heart for family, friends, neighbors, strangers, and stray animals. As the different speakers shared their stories it was as if Brenda was with us, blessing all of us again. Of course there were plenty of tears, but at some point laughter and the warm memories of her life prevailed. Before the service ended the party had already begun. After the benediction the church courtyard was filled with people eating pizza, chips, finger-sandwiches, cupcakes, and all manner of other snack-food as we celebrated Brenda’s life and gave thanks to God for giving us Brenda for some 45 years. Brenda must have been loving it. She always was the life of the party.

Perhaps my wife summed it up best. She told me that several people had said, “This is the first funeral I’ve ever been to that actually made me feel better.” Maybe it was the encouraging stories about Brenda that helped… or the music… or full-house… or the party food… or maybe even my message. Or maybe the Lord himself really was with us. He really does answer prayer you know.

Thursday, March 8, 2012

What I Really Think About Prayer


I believe in prayer, but not all prayer. There is quite a lot that I don’t believe about prayer. I don’t believe in prayer used as a magic incantation to get God to do what we want Him to do… what we’re sure He should do and no doubt wants to do, if only we’d say the right words the right way. I don’t believe if we pray long enough or loud enough God has to give us what we want. I don’t believe that if we just get enough people to pray the same prayer with us… you know, convince them that what we want is what they should want too… then God has to grant our wish. Some seem to think God’s keeping score of how many people are praying for the same thing. I just can’t see God saying something like: “Are you seeing this Peter? They’ve got 45,000 people praying for rain. Another 5,000 and I’m just going to have to make it rain.” I don’t believe in prayer reduced to a “Santa Claus list”. But sometimes I go through the motions of adoration, confession, and thanksgiving just to get to my supplication list (the more spiritual term for Santa Claus list).

That reminds me of something else I don’t believe about prayer. I don’t believe the little formulas (like "ACTS" - Adoration, Confession, Thanksgiving, Supplication) that are supposed to help us organize our prayer life are all that helpful. I can’t imagine insisting my wife follow a certain formula before I’d be willing to engage in meaningful conversation. “Before we talk about your difficult day at work sweetheart, I need you to tell me you love me, and list 3 of my attributes you respect.”

Sometimes prayer feels like I’m talking to myself. It annoys me when my wife catches me actually talking to myself out loud. I won’t even realize I’m verbalizing my thoughts in a barely audible whisper and she’ll say with a sly little smile, “Who are you talking to?”
When my prayers are more about me thinking about me I wonder if God ever feels like saying, “Who are you talking to?”
Me: “Uhhhh I thought I was talking to you.”
God: “I don’t think so.”
Me: “You’re right. I’m sorry. I’ll go back to journaling.”

Keeping a prayer journal has helped me in my prayer life more than any other discipline. It keeps me on track, focused. My own formula (I know, I said I don’t believe formulas are all that helpful) is to write a verse or even one line of a Scripture text at the top of the page. Then I’ll write a paragraph, or a page, or two or more about the verse or line that connected with me or spoke to me. I never know how the prayer will start. It feels like giving God the first word before I get to my list. It works for me most of the time. Even journaling has limitations. Sometimes ten minutes is all I’ve got. I don’t mean I’m too busy to pray longer, I mean in ten minutes I’ve covered all I need to talk about with God. I know that’s ridiculous, but some days that’s all the spirituality I can muster. Other days I can write in my prayer journal for an hour or more. Some days it feels like God is quietly whispering to me. Other days it feels like I’m just getting the obligatory prayer time out of the way... or I'm talking to myself. But I like writing, so journaling is good for me.

What if you don’t like to write? I came across an interesting website that offers a new way to pray. http://prayingincolor.com/ is based on the book by Sybil MacBeth. The premise is to doodle while you pray. From the website: “When multiple friends and family members received ugly and scary diagnoses, Sybil MacBeth found herself exhausted by the words of her prayers and stymied by a lack of focus. One summer day, she retreated to her back porch for a session of mindless doodling with a basket of her favorite colored markers. She drew a shape, put the name of a friend inside, and added lines and color. She drew another shape with another name and added detail and color. When the page was covered with designs and names, Sybil realized she had prayed. The action of drawing was a wordless offering of friends and family into the care of God. The page of drawings became a visual reminder to pray. This was the beginning of Praying in Color.”
If journaling isn’t for you, perhaps you could try doodle-prayer.

My favorite statement about prayer outside the Bible was made by Eugene Peterson in his little book, The Wisdom of Each Other. Peterson says, “The single most important thing to know about prayer is that Jesus prays, is praying right now, and for you… My life of prayer is not primarily a matter of what I do or don’t do, but of what Jesus does… is doing, ‘at the right hand of God the Father.’”

That’s prayer I believe in.

I’ve got more thoughts about prayer to come. Check back in a few days.

Monday, March 5, 2012

What's Cooking?


A number of years ago I discovered that I enjoyed cooking. It started when some friends gave us a crock-pot for Christmas. It came with a recipe book. I thought, “How hard can it be to follow instructions?” So I plugged in the crock-pot and followed directions and presto: homemade spaghetti sauce! And then chili, followed by scalloped potatoes and ham, potato soup, chicken cacciatore, ground beef casserole, and spicy rump roast. Years later I got two cast-iron skillets for Christmas. I love those skillets! They gave me the opportunity to branch out and try homemade sloppy joes, maple-glazed pork chops, pineapple upside-down cake, cornbread (a miserable failure), pecan-crusted trout, and blackened tilapia.

I took over the task of baking the turkey every Thanksgiving. Last Thanksgiving, along with the turkey, I added a few dishes a couple of great cooks at the church shared with me… corn casserole and squash dressing. I also learned to brine the turkey. Sure it was fun to see my kids and grandkids, but the real fun was all the cooking!

This past Saturday I cooked for my daughter and son-in-law and my mom and dad. At about 4:30pm I started the process with peeling and thin-slicing about 2½ pounds of potatoes. I placed them in my foil-lined grilling basket with about half a diced onion. I seasoned the potatoes and onion with garlic salt, chicken rub, oregano, basil, and pepper. After adding a couple of chunks of butter (the real stuff) I closed the foil over the potatoes making a neat package and put the basket on the gas grill for about 45 minutes.

Before the potatoes went on the grill I got the chicken breasts in the oven. I sliced 3 chicken breasts down the middle making 6 thinner servings. They fit quite nicely in my baking dish with melted butter and olive oil. Seasoned with garlic salt, pepper, and you guessed it… chicken rub, and my main dish was ready for the oven. With the chicken in the oven and the potatoes on the grill I was ready to start the sauce. One can of cream of chicken soup, ½ cup of milk, and ½ cup of red wine makes up the base. Add a little of this and that, heat it on the stove-top and you get a tan-colored sauce to pour over the chicken. Soooo good!

Everything turned out perfect. Sandy added a fresh tossed salad, dinner rolls, and a key lime pie from HEB. The 6 of us had the most pleasant meal. And yes, I enjoyed my mom’s compliments… she especially liked the grilled potatoes. Sandy is always so grateful when I cook for her; the baked chicken breast is her favorite. It is fun when the finished product turns out as good as anticipated and everyone likes it. But the real surprise in all this is how much I enjoy the process. It doesn’t feel like work to me. I like spending a few hours preparing everything and monitoring the oven and the grill. Sometimes the end-result doesn’t turn out as well as anticipated, but I still enjoy the process.

Too much of life is lived with an eye on the end result. Too often the goal is to just finish. We rob ourselves of the joy to be found in the process. A friend once told me that he thought I liked to cook so I could feel like I finished something. “The work of a pastor,” he said, “is never done.” I disagree. It’s getting my hands inside that turkey, or dipping the trout fillet in the flour, egg, and then mashing it into the crushed pecans, or seasoning the potatoes, or mixing, or slicing, it’s the process itself that I enjoy. He was right; the work of a pastor is never done. But how wonderful is the process of shepherding souls and wrestling with God’s Word!