Written Prayer: Week of April 4

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What?
Each day, read a pre-written prayer or write a prayer of your own.

Why?
The earliest Christians devoted themselves to consciously communing with God, trusting that by going before him in prayer, his kingdom of love and peace and joy would take root in their hearts and spread out into all the world. The Lord answered their prayers mightily. And he would answer our prayers today as well, but we frequently find our prayer life stunted by distracted minds and a weak, thin vocabulary of prayer. Written prayers, whether composed by others or ourselves, can counter these impediments to our walk with God and can deepen and enlarge our life of prayer.

How?
The desire to grow in prayer is good, but it is an empty desire if we do not create some plan of action. Start by answering these simple questions:

  • When will I pray each day?

  • Where will I pray each day?

  • Will I write down my prayer, or will I adopt the written prayer of another in my daily time of prayer?

Writing a Prayer. Writing down a prayer especially helps to curb the tendency we all have to let our minds wander off while praying. We are forced to say something specific to God rather than allow some vague ideas and prayers to float around in our minds without ever really getting at anything. One’s pen or pencil can capture those prayers and set them before the Lord. Your written prayer could take many forms or cover various topics.

  • Simply jot down whatever prayer comes to mind in the moment.

  • Write a prayer in response to your Scripture reading.

  • Focus on one particular kind of prayer: adoration, confession, petition, thanksgiving, or intercession. (See Matthew Henry’s helpful breakdown.)

  • Center your prayers around the needs of those in your sphere of influence.

  • Pray for the church and all who are called to witness to Christ (which is all of us!).

  • Craft a poem of praise; create something beautiful for God.

We could create an endless list of topics. The idea is that you might find it helpful to pick one topic or idea and construct your prayer around that.

Reading a Written Prayer. Like Jesus’ original disciples, we often don’t even know what to pray (Luke 11:1). We can enlarge our vocabulary of prayer, however, by taking up the prayer that another believer has recorded for the benefit of the faithful. We can read these prayers as they are written, using our imagination to step into the thoughts and feelings of the original author and make the prayer our own. Or we can use these prayers as a template, summarizing and elaborating the writer’s words with our own.

The first place one might start, of course, is the Bible. Besides the Psalms, which function like the Bible’s prayerbook, God led many of his prophets and apostles to write down their prayers. One attempt at cataloging all these prayers may be found here.

We may also learn from the saints of old who have demonstrated faithfulness or the liturgies of various churches across time, space, and tradition. Some of these include:

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Feast: Week of April 11

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Advent Week Four: Love