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.