Blog
Dear Trailhead family,
I work out every day and by every day, I mean maybe four times a week.
Perhaps you can relate.
We all understand that exercising equals a higher quality of life. We know that we feel better after working out. And yet, I (maybe we) still only move at a level that constitutes “working out” a few times a week.
For me, I blame this on my ancestors.
The people I come from worked hard. Not “worked out” hard, but worked hard.
Farmers and meat cutters and the like.
And so I find myself the first generation in my family that needs to work out to be physically strong and reasonably fit.
And that brings us to prayer.
Some of us come from a lineage of people who took prayer seriously. Maybe because of the Great Depression, the Cold War, the lack of technological distractions, or just the overt danger and unpredictability of life not that long ago, prayer became a natural rhythm of life.
But for many of us, we pray every day and by every day, I mean we pray maybe four times a week.
Maybe.
Like exercise, we are convinced that prayer is good for us. It improves our quality of life and we feel better after we pray.
And yet, if that’s all, it is easy to dismiss. I can find those benefits in other ways.
So why pray?
(We’ll get to that, but it’ll seem like we are going in an entirely different direction. Hang on.)
In Mark’s account of the life and ministry of Jesus, he quotes Jesus making this rather disruptive claim, “At last the time has come!” [Jesus] announced. “God’s Kingdom is near! Turn from your sins and act on this glorious news!” (Mark 1:15)
And no one knew what Jesus meant.
“Turn from your sins” is straightforward enough, but “act on this glorious news” about God’s Kingdom? Do we grab a sword? Build a castle? What exactly are we supposed to do?
And to further complicate the matter, what are we supposed to do with this news some 2000 years later?
And that brings us to prayer.
Pastor Eugene Peterson says about prayer, “The task is not to get God to do something I think needs done, but to become aware of what God is doing so that I can participate in it.”
The message of Jesus was that a new kingdom was upon us, a kingdom best described as the kingdom of God or the kingdom of heaven.
There is life as we have always lived it, but now another kind of life has burst in; a life where God rules and reigns.
And yet, this other life, this other kingdom, is easily missed if we aren’t searching for it. So how do we find and enter the kingdom of God/heaven?
Easy. (Thank you for asking such great questions, btw).
Through prayer, we “become aware of what God is doing [the Kingdom of God] so that I can participate in it.”
The kingdom of God is vibrant and pulsing with life and overflowing with energy.
And the kingdom is near to those looking for it, but we often look in the wrong way.
We look for the Kingdom in politics and the never-ending news cycle, we look for the Kingdom in self-help and the promises of the latest health fads, we look for the Kingdom in a pastor who has all the answers and we look for the Kingdom by building our own kingdoms.
In short, we look for the Kingdom everywhere but where the King is.
The Kingdom of God can only be found in God.
And so we pray.
We pray to the King to know the King and in so doing, we become aware of what He is doing. And when we know the King, are aware of what He is doing and we, echoing the words of Isaiah, say, “Here I am, send me,” we have entered the Kingdom of God.
Prayer moves us towards God and His Kingdom. And they need not be elaborate.
When we pray for healing or relief or reconciliation, we are praying “Your Kingdom come, your will be done.”
When we sit quietly in contemplative prayer, our posture is “Your Kingdom come, your will be done.”
When we rejoice over good things in our life, our blessing is explained by “Your Kingdom come, your will be done.”
And in those dark moments when we sob with regret or when we feel desperately alone in our misery, our anguish pleads “Your Kingdom come, your will be done.”
What humanity needs, what you and I need, is “Your Kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.”
And so my invitation to you today is to pray. Not every day/4ish times a week, but intentionally pray, multiple times a day.
And if helpful, here is how I’d invite you to do that: pray the Lord's Prayer three times a day. Morning, midday, and evening. Set an alarm or put a reminder on your phone. Pray the prayer Jesus taught his followers and then expand on it.
“Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name,”
(How can you live in deep intimacy with God and make His infinite goodness evident to others?)
“your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.”
(How do you need God’s Kingdom to manifest in your family, vocation, health, or other area?)
“Give us today our daily bread.”
(What do you need today?)
“And forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors.”
(What wrongs have been committed against you and what wrongs have you committed against others?)
“And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from the evil one.”
(In what ways are you tempted to ignore God or the Way of God? In what areas are you weak, vulnerable, or overcome?)
Amen.
Let's be people of prayer.
Because God’s Kingdom is near.
And we have been invited in.
Grace and peace be upon you,
Grant