Who is Your Prayer Coach?

How Does Jeus Teach Us to Pray?

Are you satisfied with the effectiveness of your prayers?

Would you like to learn how to pray more effectively?

Have you ever thought about finding a coach to help you in that process?  Wait a minute now, whoever heard of a “Prayer Coach”?  Actually, I have someone to recommend in just a minute.

Think about it.

If your kids play basketball at school, they have a coach to teach them, encourage and correct them, to make them better players individually and for the team.

Or let’s say you play golf professionally and want to really improve your game, you hire a coach to help you achieve your goals.

Whatever sport or an activity you can imagine, there is a coach for it.  And one of the most popular areas for coaching today is life itself.  Everyone and his brother seems to be setting up shop as a Life Coach these days.

What is a Prayer Coach?

So if you can have a coach in all these other areas of your life, why not have a coach for one of the most important aspects of your life?  That’s right, someone to coach you how to pray.

And a lot of people have stepped up to the plate to do just that.

Just think for a minute of the countless Bible studies, sermons, books, seminars, workshops, classes, retreats, videos, etc. about how to pray that have been published, preached and promulgated over the centuries.

Wouldn’t it be great to have someone teach you how to pray, not so much saying the right words as purifying your motives?  Someone to encourage you to keep going when things get tough and correct any mistakes you might be making?

Recently I discovered someone who has been coaching me on how to pray more effectively and I would like to recommend his services to you.  I’m not saying you should stop reading your favorite books about how to pray or quit listening to what your favorite preacher has to say about how to pray.  But this guy really know his stuff.

And the great thing is, he keeps it really simple and straight forward.

Sometimes my prayers get way too complicated.  Too wordy, too long and laborious.

If you’re like me, you may catch yourself begging God for something you desperately want or pleading for something you don’t really deserve.  Or what about asking for forgiveness when you haven’t truly repented in your heart?

Or sometimes you just say the words of a prayer and that is all they are, just words.  Hollow.  Empty.  Unfulfilled.   Meaningless.

Well, my new prayer coach is helping me see how to cut to the chase and focus on the important aspects of prayer.

My prayer coach is Jesus.

How Does Jeus Teach Us to Pray?

Jesus: The Ultimate Prayer Coach

And as I said, I highly recommend his services.  No you can’t literally sit at his feet and take a prayer coaching class from him.  But you can read and study everything he said about how to pray and follow his example of how he prayed.

Jesus taught a simple little prayer which we call the Lord’s Prayer.  And the more  we imbibe the spirit of this short prayer, the more we witness its power in our own lives and the world.

Before Jesus teaches his followers this prayer, he says we should pray in “this manner.”  He did not want us to just mindlessly repeat the words over and over.   He wanted us to drink in the deeper meaning of his words.

Who did Jesus tell us to pray to?  (a) God  (b) Jesus  (c) the Holy Ghost  (d) the Virgin Mother  (e) the Saints  (f) our deceased relatives.

The correct answer is (a).  We are supposed to pray to Our Father which is in heaven, God himself.  Jesus never instructs us to pray to him.  We can ask and pray in his name, but we always should pray to the Father Himself.  This is what your prayer coach is telling you.

I have a friend who always prays to Jesus.  I pointed this verse out to him and he had trouble with it because he was taught as a young child to pray to Jesus.  He didn’t want to be disrespectful to Jesus.  But if you want to follow Jesus, you should obey his instructions, which includes praying to the Father.

Jesus said “Our Father”–His Father, your Father and my Father.  Our Father.  We have the same heavenly Father Jesus has.  And when we say “Our Father,” we are praying right along with Jesus and everyone else who is the child of God.  In those two words, we must acknowledge that our spiritual brothers and sisters have the same Father we do.

There is no “I” in the Lord’s Prayer.  It is all “we, our and us.”  We usually say “we” but do we sometimes just think about ourselves?

How do your prayers start?

The first half of the Lord’s Prayer is all about who God is.  This is the way we should start our prayers.  Usually we start with the problem.  But that’s not how Jesus is teaching/coaching us how to pray.

The rest of the prayer deals with our needs, our challenges, our sins and overcoming temptation.  It ends with a bold declaration of God’s supremacy.  Do your prayers end with this same spirit of absolute conviction of God being in complete control of everything in heaven and earth?  Let Jesus coach you on this point.  He knows you can do it or he wouldn’t expect and require it of you.

Jesus is your Prayer Coach.

Listen to him.  Take the Lord’s Prayer and go through it as if Jesus was sitting there with you saying, “This is the WAY (not so much the words) I want you to pray. Look at it in a fresh way.  What is the spirit of each line in the prayer?  What is the message and promise of each line?

He says lots of other things about prayer in the Gospels, especially the Sermon on the Mount.  Read and study these Scriptures like they were a textbook on how to pray:  a blueprint for success, a game plan.

Follow your Prayer Coach’s instructions.  Do what Jesus tells you and your prayers will become more effective.

I have shared just a few insights here.  I could go on and on about what I have discovered, but you need to discover them for yourself.   And as always, I’d love to hear your inspiration.  Please share your thoughts in the comment section.

Blessings,

James

 

How Much Bread Can You Eat in a Day?

How much "bread" will you eat today?

“Give us this day our daily bread.”  Matthew 6:11

How much "bread" will you eat today?

I’ve often been grateful Jesus reminds us in the Lord’s Prayer to only ask for a day’s worth of bread.    I mean, what would you do with a year’s supply?  There wouldn’t be room to store it; you couldn’t eat it all and it would go stale.

More on that in just a moment.

A few days ago, I was having this great little prayer when I realized I needed to go deeper.

So instead of just praying about all the specific issues I was dealing with and things going on in the world and with my friends, I boldly asked God for more understanding.  To know Him better.  To see Him face to face, as the Bible talks about.

“God, please show me Your face, Your power and glory.”

(And for the record, the word “face” is used here metaphorically.  God is Spirit and does not have an anthropomorphic face.)

Anyway, the point is, I realized my need to see and understand and know God more fully.  Jesus said, “Ask and ye shall receive.”  So, that’s what I was doing.

But I also wondered if I could comprehend and take in so much goodness and glory.  I thought of Moses hiding between the rocks and seeing just a hint of God’s glory.   See Exodus 33:18-23.  God says to Moses, “Thou canst not see My face:  for there shall no man see Me and live.”  Who was I then, to ask such things?

But God also tells Moses, “I will make all My goodness pass before thee.”

Think about that for a minute.

All God’s goodness!  That would have to be infinite–without any limit.

God revealed it to Moses.  And it must be there for you and me too. I mean, God didn’t go anywhere.

But do we ask for it as Moses did?  Do we seek it as Jesus instructed us to?

Once in a while, maybe….maybe…sometimes under certain circumstances.  But do we consistently ask to see all God’s goodness?  Or do we usually just ask for answers to our immediate problems?

So back to the daily bread.

If we are only to ask for what we need for today, how does that match up with God revealing all His goodness to Moses in a moment?

I have not thought I could possibly comprehend and accept all God’s goodness in a day.  So,  I have often just prayed for a little bit of that goodness or bread, just the little I need to get by.

Give me what I need today.  That is a true prayer from the heart.  Jesus encouraged us to take one day at a time.

But can God give us just a little of His goodness?  Can He break up His glory and dole it out in little bits and pieces?  This is an impossibility.

I suddenly realized that I had been asking for one of my day’s worth of “bread”–one day’s worth of goodness–thinking of a day as a 24 hour period of humanly measured time.  But it could mean God’s day.  “This is the day the Lord has made.”  God’s day cannot be measured in human time.  The Bible tells us that one day with the Lord is as a thousand years.

Think of a thousand years’ worth of bread.

That’s a pretty big logistical problem if we are talking about actual bread.  Where would you put it all?  How would you store it?  Who could you give it to before it spoiled?

God is giving each of us one of His days’ worth of bread.  This is the same as when He made all  His goodness pass before Moses.   Here’s a little formula I just made up:  One of God’s days’ worth of bread=all God’s goodness passing before us.

And He will do the same tomorrow.  And tomorrow.  Every day we have all God’s goodness pass before us.

You have to ask for it.

God’s goodness, the spiritual “bread” that feeds us and sustains us, is always present.  But we must ASK for it.  We must accept it.  It doesn’t take up space as actual, physical bread does.  We must make room for it in our hearts, in our thinking.  And we can do this or Jesus would not have asked us to.

How much bread can you eat in a day?  Maybe a few slices.  Maybe you don’t eat any.

How much of God’s “bread” can you eat today?   How much of His goodness, glory and power will you ask for today?  How much will you accept?

Jesus said, “I am the bread of life.”  Christians talk about about accepting Christ as Lord and Savior and rightly so.  But it is not a one time event.  It is a daily acceptance of Christ.  We must eat this bread every day.

Christ represents the fullness of God.  I’ve never thought of it in this way before, but maybe we could say that all God’s goodness which Moses saw is really the Christ.   In Colossians 2:9, Paul talks about Christ representing the fullness of God.  And in Ephesians 3:19 he prays that we “might be filled with all the fullness of God.”

I have a long way to go to accomplish all this.  So please join me on this:  to ask for and accept all God’s goodness every day and share it with those God puts in our path.

Blessings,

James