SPIRITUAL DIARY FOR 11/10/2019 11:15 AM
My Worship Time Focus: The
Frequency of Prayer
Bible Reading & Meditation Reference: Eph. 6:18
Message of the verse: “18 Pray in the Spirit
at all times and on every occasion. Stay alert and be persistent in your
prayers for all believers everywhere.”
When
we talk about prayer in the OT times we can see that there are specific times
that the people of Israel would pray. I
can’t help but think about Daniel chapter, I think six, when the enemies of
Daniel were trying to get him killed that they tricked the king of the Medes
and Persians to sign a law that if anyone prayed to another god than the king
that they would be put to death. This
did not stop Daniel to pray towards Jerusalem as Solomon had said one should do
when they were not living in Jerusalem.
As the church began to take over what the Jews were doing things became
a bit different, as it was a process that would take a while to change. We can see evidence of prayer at different
times in the NT. “They were continually
devoting themselves to the apostles’ teaching and to fellowship, to the
breaking of bread and to prayer” (Acts 2:42).
Cornelius “a devout man and one who feared God with all his household,
and gave many alms to the Jewish people and prayed to God continually”
(Acts 10:2). Paul also writes about this
subject in Rom. 12:12; Phil. 4:6; Col. 4:2; 1 Thess. 5:17 “pray without ceasing.”
There
is much to say about praying during different parts of the day and night in the
book of Psalms (Ps. 55:17, 19). John
MacArthur writes “There are no times when we do not need to pray and no time
when God will not hear our prayers. In
many ways prayer is even more important than knowledge about God. In fact, only though a regular and sincere
prayer life can God’s Holy Spirit add spiritual wisdom to our knowledge. D.
Martyn Lloyd-Jones wrote, ‘our ultimate position as Christians is tested by the character of our
prayer life.’ A deep knowledge of
and relationship to God are measured by his prayer life. If knowledge about God and the things of God
do not drive us to know Him more personally, we can be sure that our true
motivation and commitment are centered in ourselves rather than Him. Jesus’ deepest prayer for His disciples was
not that they simply know the truth about God but ‘they may know Thee, the only
true God, and Jesus Christ whom Thou has sent’ (John 17:3). Studying and learning God’s Word in the right
spirit will always drive the believer to know Him more intimately and to
commune with Him more faithfully in prayer.”
When
I was studying the books of 1 & 2 Thessalonians I remember that Warren
Wiersbe stated about 1 Thess. 5:17 “Pray without ceasing” that we as believers
are never to hang up the phone we have with God, be ready to pray at all times
about all kinds of different things at a moment’s notice. Now Jesus in Matthew 6:7 has this to say
about prayer “"And when you are praying, do not use meaningless repetition
as the Gentiles do, for they suppose that they will be heard for their many
words.” This kind of makes me think
about when Elijah was doing on the mountain dealing with those who worshiped
Baal, and how they worked themselves up in frenzy and even began to cut
themselves trying to get Baal to respond to their prayers.
John
MacArthur writes “To pray at all times is to live in continual God
consciousness, where everything we see and experience becomes a kind of prayer,
lived in deep awareness of and surrender to our heavenly Father.” To obey this exhortation means that, when we
are tempted, we hold the temptation before God and ask for His help. When we experience something good and
beautiful, we immediately thank the Lord for it. When we see evil around us, we pray that God
will make it right and be willing to be used of Him to that end. When we meet someone who does not know
Christ, we pray for God to draw that person to Himself and to use us to be a
faithful witness. When we encounter
trouble, we turn to God as our Deliverer.
In other words, our life becomes a continually ascending prayer, a
perpetual communing with our heavenly Father.
To pray at all times is to constantly set our minds ‘on the things
above, not on the things that are on earth’ (Col. 3:2).
We
have written about what the chief end of man is in earlier SD’s, which is to
glorify God and to bring us into intimate, rich fellowship with Him. And if we fail to come to God in prayer it is
to deny that purpose. 1 John 1:3 tells
us “what we have seen and heard we proclaim to you also, so that you too may
have fellowship with us; and indeed our fellowship is with the Father, and with
His Son Jesus Christ.” I realize that we
will have wonderful fellowship with the Lord when we get to heaven, but God’s
greatest desire, and our greatest need is to be in constant fellowship with Him
at this time now, and there is no greater expression or experience of
fellowship than prayer.
David
Jeremiah’s comments on Job 4:7-8 is our quotation from “Love in Action” for
today:
“Eliphaz said, ‘Job, let me tell you
something. Nobody who is upright ever
goes through trouble like this. Job, God
never punishes the righteous. Whatever a
man sows by way of iniquity he always reaps.
So, Job, here’s the real issue:
What exactly have you done which caused this suffering in your
life?’ One of the most painful things
that can be inflicted on troubled people is the false guilt often heaped on
them by well-meaning Christians. I come
from a strong fundamentalist background and we’re experts at all this. We are very good at helping guilt on people
even when we don’t know the whole story.
We know Job didn’t suffer because he was bad, but because he was
good! Eliphaz was totally mistaken.”
11/10/2019 11:59 AM
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