Showing posts with label extra-ordinary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label extra-ordinary. Show all posts

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Petitionary Prayer

The Concept

The word “pray” means “to request,” and Petitionary Prayer is exactly that. God knows what we need, but he delights in us seeking him for what we think we need. He wants us to share our desires with him because he wants us to share every last part of ourselves with him. To find this basic type of prayer too simple or even too selfish is to dangerously cling to a false humility. Truly we depend on the Father for every breath, for every morsel of food, for every noble thought, for every single thing.

There is Intercessory Prayer which is seeking God to fulfill the needs of others, but Petitionary Prayer specifically lifts up our own personal requests. Because these requests are so near our heart, it is difficult to find objective clarity about them. We are masters of self-deception (Jer. 17:19). But even though we may miss the mark in our prayers, it is better to err than not to pray at all. P.T. Forsyth observes “Petitions that are less than pure can only be purified by petition.” We learn our own hearts and – even better! – the heart of the Father by asking.

Like Simple Prayer, the Petitionary Prayer is not a crude form of prayer we will one day grow out of to make way for “more advanced” prayers like eloquent adoration or mystical contemplation. We are forever dependent on God, and there is nothing base about expressing this dependence. The Lord's prayer is a series of petitions (three of which, Give/Forgive/Deliver, Foster delves into as key categories of this type of prayer). By asking the Father for our daily bread, the trivialities of the every day are lifted up and consecrated. When we come to him for everything, we will find that every meal is a heavenly gift, every stumble is quickly redeemed and forgiven, every temptation is identified and resisted through the strength of Christ. What joy it is to thank him for the gifts he gives, especially when it is something we have asked for!

The Experience

I found this exercise indulgent because it is so me-focused, but also easy because it is a form of prayer naturally injected in most of my prayer times. In fact, I find Petitionary Prayer hard to isolate; it ebbs and flows into intercession and praise and confession organically.

In a specific moment, I invited the Lord into my eating habits. I know my base desire is rooted in pride and body image, but I also know that there are health benefits and the spiritual fruit of self-control as a result of dieting. By inviting God into this basic and often profane part of my life, my hope is that all my eating moments will be full of the awareness of God's presence and his intentions towards my health and a life of moderation.

In another specific moment, I prayed for forgiveness for squandering a book idea the Lord had given me over a year ago. I have recently felt God's favor for that particular idea withdrawn after an outright rebellion of refusing to start writing. I realize I am afraid to fail, a fear rooted in pride. I have prayed for a return of his creative inspiration and his blessing to start anew. This prayer is not yet answered, but I am no longer sullenly hiding behind excuses and inaction.

Those are just two examples, tiny droplets in a river of lifetime prayer. But through this exercise, I ultimately learned that ignoring personal desires – keeping them shamefully from the light and God's influence – can lead to festering sin. By offering my needs and desires through prayer – by openly acknowledging my dependence on his providence and his will in my life – the dusty corners of my prideful heart will one day be swept clean.

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Praying the Ordinary


The Concept

A large part of my understanding of Praying the Ordinary has come from my weekly reading of The Practice of the Presence of God. Though I take from Foster an explanation of the concepts, Brother Lawrence's vision of "flipping an omelet for God" has stuck with me this whole week. I am beholden to him for the idea that we are unable to sin as long as we are in the presence of God, and I long for that to be my natural state.

Praying the Ordinary has multiple applications. It is turning ordinary activities into prayer, i.e. doing all things as unto the Lord (1 Cor 10:31, Col 3:23). It is the awareness of God in ordinary experiences (Rom 11:36, Eph 4:6). It is praying ceaselessly throughout your ordinary day and in ordinary moments because you know he is your constant companion (1 Thess 5:17, Matt 28:20).

In structuring your life around this concept, you will value small things and not only seek out the conspicuous. You will recognize the sacredness of creation. You will see that the material and spiritual realms are intertwined, not "apartheid," and in so doing, you will see that life and prayer are also intertwined and that there is no compartment in your life that God does not want to touch.

Foster says a "prayer of action" or acting within God's will, can be more effective than a prayer of words. He quotes Anthony Bloom, "A prayer makes sense only if it is lived. Unless they are lived, unless life and prayer become completely interwoven, prayers become a sort of polite madrigal which you offer to God at moments when you are giving time to him."
Praying the Ordinary is an intentional discipline in realizing that all our time belongs to the Lord Jesus Christ.

The Experience

I don't know if it is because life is funny or because this exercise awakened me to the many extraordinary everyday experiences in my life, but this week was full of conspicuous occasions to pray. And I found that praying through them made them more interesting and better experienced. I believe Praying the Ordinary as a way of life will lead one to a better lived, truly abundant life.

This week, I prayed through PMS, through the Buddhist funeral of an amazing woman, through my car not starting, through unwelcome feelings of resentment, through playing with my new puppy, through a wait at a doctor's office, through reading books, reading the news, receiving a 2-hour massage, going to sleep and waking up. I never needed an excuse to pray - it was natural; and I am certain there is never an excuse not to pray! Even distractions become occasions to pray.

I find the only thing working against this type of prayer, this type of life, is forgetfulness. I confess I went a full-day this week without remembering this exercise. It may help to assign things as mnemonic devices: resolve when you see a flower to remember its creator, resolve when you open the refrigerator door to remember your provider, etc, moving towards all things having this effect. I wrote in my prayer journal: "I believe that You abide in me, and that I do abide in you. I confess that in less than 24 hours,I forgot my resolve to be aware of your constant presence. Holy Spirit, nudge me through the day, so I am reminded of our Love Affair. May everything I see or do bring you to mind." ...I should pray that more often!

I think continuing these first 3 concepts - Simple Prayer, the Prayer of Adoration, and Praying the Ordinary - are worthwhile foundation blocks for all the more specific types of prayer moving forward in this journey. I am grateful that God has led me to put them in practice, as I feel closer to him now than I have been before.