Praying Like Monks, Living Like Foolsគំរូ

Praying Like Monks, Living Like Fools

ថ្ងៃទី 7 ក្នុងចំណោម 10 ថ្ងៃ

Prayer as Participation
The assumption of biblical prayer is that God’s action always precedes my request. In other words, the aim is not to get God in on what I think he should be doing. Rather, the aim of prayer is to get us in on what God is doing, become aware of it, join it, and enjoy the fruit of participation.

Eugene Peterson describes this as praying in the “middle voice.” When we pray in the middle voice, he says, “We neither manipulate God (active voice) nor are manipulated by God (passive voice). We are involved in the action and participate in its results but do not control or define it (middle voice). Prayer takes place in the middle voice.”

Jesus not only taught us this way of prayer; he lived it. Take, for instance, Jesus’ prayer in John 17. Twice in today’s excerpt of his prayer, you can see Jesus acknowledge action that was started by God, then join the action by praying for an outcome that he will participate in bringing about.

Mary too understood praying in the middle voice. After hearing the angel Gabriel’s stunning announcement that she would give birth to the Messiah, she responded simply, “I am the Lord’s servant. May your word to me be fulfilled.” It’s a stunning prayer of surrender and participation. It’s prayer in the middle voice, as a recipient of God’s action and a responder to it.

I want what I see in Jesus and Mary. I want to cooperate with God’s redemptive work in this broken world. I want to swim with the current of God’s will, paddling my arms and kicking my legs but propelled on by a stronger current too. Praying in the voice of participation—the middle voice—is how that happens.

It should be noted, though, that this kind of prayer is a risky business. In my experience, God has a habit of employing us in response to our own prayers, because it’s impossible to know God through private prayer without equally participating with God in public mercy. To pray is to be led by the hand to broken places, broken people, and broken parts within yourself. Jesus feels at home in the company of the misfits, marginalized, oppressed, and outcast, so if you spend time in conversation with Jesus, you better believe he’ll invite you to come with him where he’s going. Try it out and you’ll find that it’s the invitation of a lifetime.

To Practice: Recognize a single situation or relationship in your life where you believe God is already working. Ask him for the deepening and furthering of his renewal there, and invite him to send you in answer to your own prayer.

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Praying Like Monks, Living Like Fools

Prayer is the source of Jesus's most astonishing miracles and the subject of his most audacious promises, and yet most people find prayer to be boring, obligatory, disappointing, confusing, or all the above. If you relate, this 10-day plan, based on Tyler Staton's newly released book by the same name, invites you to rediscover the forms and facets of prayer that might change the way you think of it forever.

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