Some of us struggle in prayer. Unfortunately, I confess that I do sometimes. Does it ever feel like an obligation to you?
In his devotional book “Drawing Near: Daily readings for a Deeper Faith” February 18, here’s what John MacArthur says:
“Your prayers reveal the level of your maturity.”
Typically, Paul’s prayers reflected his concern that his readers mature spiritually. That is impossible without prayer, because spiritual growth depends on the Holy Spirit’s power, which is tapped through prayer.
Prayer is so vital that Jesus instructed His disciples to pray “at all times” (Luke 18:1). Paul commands us to “pray without ceasing” (Thess 5:17). Peter said we should be “of sound judgment and sober spirit for the purpose of prayer” (1 Peter 4:7).
Now this is the interesting part:
Scripture gives many commands to pray, but the true test of your spirituality is your compulsion to pray, not simply your obedience to commands. As a Christian you exist in a spiritual realm in which prayer is as natural as breathing is in the natural realm. Just as atmospheric pressure exerts force on your lungs compelling you to breathe, so your spiritual environment compels you to pray. Resisting either brings devastating results.
The more you see life through God’s eyes, the more you are driven to pray. In that sense, your prayers reveal the level of your spiritual maturity. Paul prayed with urgency day and night because he shared God’s love for His people and His concern for their spiritual maturity.
Examine your own prayers. Do you pray from a sense of duty, or are you compelled to pray? Do you pray infrequently or briefly? Do your prayers center on your own needs or the needs of others? Do you pray for the spiritual maturity of others? Those important questions indicate the level of your spiritual maturity and give guidelines for making any needed changes in your pattern of prayer.
Dr MacArthur then suggests that we thank God for the privilege and power of prayer. If we have neglected our prayer or prayed selfishly, we should confess our sin and to ask God to give us a sense of holy urgency in prayers. Are there people we should be consistently praying for?
Dr MacArthur’s suggestion for further study is to read Daniel 6:1-28 in light of the following questions:
What was Daniel’s pattern of prayer?
What accusation did the political leaders bring against Daniel?
What was the king’s attitude toward Daniel?
How did God honor Daniel’s faith?
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2 comments:
Hi Mac,
Haven't been over in awhile to greet you. I do appreciate teachers like John MacArthur. I have learned so much from him over the last 25 years or so. When I was in high school (many years ago) he was one of the special speakers at a Christian camp I attended. I do have that devotion book of his. It's great!
I see you had a bit of shaking going on over there in Australia. Those are fun, aren't they? Made me laugh when you said you were glad no one saw you testing your house stumps!
Take care brother-in-Christ...Kathy
Hi Kathy,
Thanks for dropping by. I still sneak a peak in at your blog once or twice a week.
Yeah, I'm really excited about MacArthur's devotional book. He's looking at prayer this month. I actually bought the book for my mother - she loves it and she's RCC - but I'm using it as well.
Blessings,
mac
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