Showing posts with label Prayer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Prayer. Show all posts

Thursday, August 6, 2020

Find the Waypoint

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It’s time to write an August article for our church newsletter and this has normally been my time to talk about back-to-school kickoffs and such.  However, this year is not normal.  This month has been somewhat turbulent for me.  At the beginning of July, I was ready to start a new phase of meeting together, my plans were moving toward a new phase of a new normal, when we hit the brakes with an increase of COVID cases.  With this yo-yo of decisions, I feel like I have been a yo-yo of emotions. Can you relate?  With schools making plans for the Fall, the questions seem to still outweigh the answers. 

 

Our pastoral staff had a big discussion about how to deal with chaos in general. Our conversation boiled down to being faithful to what God has called us to do.  One way I think about this is a lesson I learned early as I began to hike and explore the woods.  I learned that, if I ever get lost and cannot find a familiar spot to stop, think about where I’ve come from. Look for any markers that might give me a sense of direction, and if necessary, head downhill and find water. Follow the water in the same direction until it leads to a town or road or something that helps you get home. 

I was reading Psalm 46 and the Psalmist says “God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble.  Therefore, we will not fear though the earth gives way…”  When everything feels like or maybe is in chaos, God is present to help and protect us.  Verse 4 says “There is a river whose streams make glad the city of God, the holy habitation of the Most High.”  Where God is, there is the waypoint, the presence of stability and steadiness that brings us home when we are lost, that rescues us when we are in trouble.  This Psalm has a contrast of chaos and peace.  The chaos of the world and peace found in God.  One of my favorite verses is found in verse 10 “Be still and know that I am God.”  

 

What a great lesson, in the chaos, in the unknown, in feeling lost or wandering, stop…be still… find the waypoint, the thing that can give you a sense of direction, something that is steady that will rescue.  That waypoint is not a thing, but the one true God who is present.  

 

During this season, we have opportunities to hold onto the firm fortress which is our God.  We might not have exact answers for a new school year, or when we are meeting for Sunday School or kids and youth activities, but we do know one thing: God has not left us, God is here in the midst of every circumstance.  

 

How can I know this?  Well the Bible is chocked full of stories of God’s faithfulness.  Moments of lost people (or nations) being found.  Impossible situations miraculously made possible by God.  The more I read the Bible and talk about these stories with my family, the more we look for God to turn dire situations of hopelessness or loss into hope and life.  That is who God is.  When everything is crumbling, God is a still river that faithfully guides us to safety. 

 

There is a lot we miss doing during this season, but one thing cannot be taken away, and that is our ability as individuals and families to be still with God.  To read the Bible and memorize it.  To pray and watch for what God is doing in and around us and to join in that work to be a blessing wherever we are placed.  These are the areas we can be faithful in, no matter what.

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

40 days of Prayer

Over the past few weeks we have been talking about Lent in the Boso household. Carmen has been blogging recently about Philippians 2 and not complaining. Although that has been a challenge to me in my attitude about many things, I do not feel as if that is the area I need to focus on during the next 40 days known as Lent. I have contemplated giving up foods, things, thoughts, etc. and even looked at adding things to my life, but with 2 seminary classes and multiple youth activities and family obligations on my plate I really could not add anything else to my routine.

I have felt really bad leading up to today when I was asked, "what are you giving up for Lent?" I would answer "I don't have a clue." I even resigned myself to just going through the next 40 days as normal. This morning, however, in my time with God felt that the most transforming thing I could do for the next 40 days is pray. I am ashamed to say that prayer occupies a very small percentage of my time. This is no doubt very disappointing as a Christian, but even more so as a minister who tells people that prayer changes things and the first thing we should do is pray.

My lame excuse for not praying has been "I'm very busy, have lots to do." Then I stumbled on this quote by Martin Luther about prayer:"If I fail to spend two hours in prayer each morning, the devil gets the victory through the day. I have so much business I cannot get on without spending three hours daily in prayer."
I am no where close to spending 3 hours a day in prayer, and the thought that I have so much to do that I cannot afford not to pray is very much true. I am so busy and have so much on my plate that if I am going to be effective at anything I must rely on God to work in my life and through the situations of every day.

So I am making this commitment for Lent, to spend an hour each day in prayer. My plan is to give up my lunch hour every day to get away and alone with God. Jesus spent 40 days alone in the wilderness and so through this season I will spend 40 hours alone with God being transformed and shaped into the man he wants me to be. My hope is that prayer becomes a necessity in my life that grows to even more time each day so that I can say like Luther "I have so much to do, I cannot get it done without spending my time daily in prayer."