I share these thoughts hoping they are of help to someone else.
Comments are always welcomed.
If you find these thoughts helpful, please share.
Comments are always welcomed.
If you find these thoughts helpful, please share.
Believing and Praying
My future is in your hands.
Don't hand me over to my enemies,
to all who are out to get me!
Shine your face on your servant;
save me by your faithful love!
Psalm 31:15-16 (CEB)
Don't hand me over to my enemies,
to all who are out to get me!
Shine your face on your servant;
save me by your faithful love!
Psalm 31:15-16 (CEB)
God, You know where I've been
You were there with me then
You were faithful before
You'll be faithful again
I'm holding Your hand
You were there with me then
You were faithful before
You'll be faithful again
I'm holding Your hand
From "Let the Waters Rise" by MIKESCHAIR
One of the classes I had to complete in order to be certified as a Lay Speaker in the United Methodist Church was a class on leading public prayer. In this class, I learned about a particular type of prayer called the collect. In such a prayer, a petition to God is preceded by a statement about God and followed by a reason for the petition.1
Consider the following collect written for the third Sunday in Eastertide:
Almighty Father,
who in your great mercy gladdened the disciples
with the sight of the risen Lord:
give us such knowledge of his presence with us,
that we may be strengthened and sustained by his risen life
and serve you continually in righteousness and truth;
through Jesus Christ our Lord.2
who in your great mercy gladdened the disciples
with the sight of the risen Lord:
give us such knowledge of his presence with us,
that we may be strengthened and sustained by his risen life
and serve you continually in righteousness and truth;
through Jesus Christ our Lord.2
In this prayer, the petition is made to God that the presence of the risen Christ be made known to the gathered congregation. The rationale for the petition is that God resurrected Christ from the dead and that seeing the resurrected Christ gave His first disciples hope and joy. The reason for the petition is that experiencing the presence of the risen Christ will provide the congregation the spiritual strength and sustenance they need to better serve God.
The collect shows us that what we ask of God is directly connected to our theology. Generally speaking, when we pay close attention to a prayer, we can learn something important about the person who is praying, specifically what the person believes about God.
Many of the psalms in the Bible are attributed to David, the shepherd who became a military leader and then later became the most beloved king of Israel. Like a number of the psalms associated with David, the thirty-first psalm is a prayer for help in a perilous time. Evidently, David has found himself in dire straits. The psalm begins,
I take refuge in you, Lord.
Please never let me be put to shame.
Rescue me by your righteousness!3
Please never let me be put to shame.
Rescue me by your righteousness!3
When I encountered this psalm recently, I observed that the psalmist apparently believes at least four things about God.
First, David believes that God is protective of God's children. He prays,
Listen closely to me!
Deliver me quickly;
be a rock that protects me;
be a strong fortress that saves me!
You are definitely my rock and my fortress.
Guide me and lead me for the sake of your good name!
Get me out of this net that's been set for me
because you are my protective fortress.4
Deliver me quickly;
be a rock that protects me;
be a strong fortress that saves me!
You are definitely my rock and my fortress.
Guide me and lead me for the sake of your good name!
Get me out of this net that's been set for me
because you are my protective fortress.4
To David, God is like a rock behind which he can take cover and a fortress in which he can take refuge. Such imagery can be found throughout the Psalms.5 David goes on to pray,
How great is the goodness
that you've reserved for those who honor you,
that you commit to those who take refuge in you -
in the sight of everyone!
You hide them in the shelter of your wings,
safe from human scheming.
You conceal them in a shelter,
safe from accusing tongues.6
that you've reserved for those who honor you,
that you commit to those who take refuge in you -
in the sight of everyone!
You hide them in the shelter of your wings,
safe from human scheming.
You conceal them in a shelter,
safe from accusing tongues.6
According to David, God shelters God's children in the same way that a mother bird shelters her young with her wings.
Second, David believes that God is faithful to God's children. He prays,
I entrust my spirit into your hands;
you, Lord, God of faithfulness -
you have saved me.7
you, Lord, God of faithfulness -
you have saved me.7
David's use of the past tense might lead us to believe that the occasion that inspires this prayer is not the first time David has asked God for help in a perilous time. He later prays,
Bless the Lord,
because he has wondrously revealed
his faithful love to me
when I was like a city under siege!8
because he has wondrously revealed
his faithful love to me
when I was like a city under siege!8
Trusting that God is faithful involves remembering what God has done in the past. Scholar John Goldingay notes in his commentary on this psalm that remembering God's previous acts "keeps those events in the awareness of the people praying and thus makes it more possible for them to hold on as the waters rise."9 David evidently sought help from God in the past and received it, so he trusts that God will help him again in the present.
Third, David believes that God is attentive to God's children; otherwise, he might not bother asking God for help. James L. Mays writes in his commentary on this psalm, "The psalm has been called a model of a prayer that is confident of being heard. This confidence informs the prayer from start to finish; to pray this psalm is to be led into and instructed in this confidence."10 David prays,
I rejoice and celebrate in your faithful love
because you saw my suffering -
you were intimately acquainted with my deep distress.
You didn't hand me over to the enemy,
but set my feet in wide-open spaces.11
because you saw my suffering -
you were intimately acquainted with my deep distress.
You didn't hand me over to the enemy,
but set my feet in wide-open spaces.11
David goes on to pray,
When I was panicked, I said,
"I'm cut off from your eyes!"
But you heard my request for mercy
when I cried out to you for help.12
"I'm cut off from your eyes!"
But you heard my request for mercy
when I cried out to you for help.12
Goldingay suggests, "People praying are invited to believe and declare that God has heard their prayer even when there is yet no evidence, to urge one another to believe that this is so, and to take courage accordingly."13 The defining story of David's people is the Exodus, in which God hears the cries of the long-oppressed people of Israel and sends Moses to liberate them. David trusts that God hears his cries in the same way that God heard the cries of his oppressed ancestors.
Finally, David believes that God is sovereign. He prays,
My future is in your hands.
Don't hand me over to my enemies,
to all who are out to get me!
Shine your face on your servant;
save me by your faithful love!14
Don't hand me over to my enemies,
to all who are out to get me!
Shine your face on your servant;
save me by your faithful love!14
To trust that God is sovereign is to trust that God has the final word in all matters. For David, trusting that God is sovereign means trusting that God is the one who truly determines his future and not the people who are seeking his life. He ends his prayer,
All you who are faithful, love the Lord!
The Lord protects those who are loyal,
but he pays the proud back to the fullest degree.
All you who wait for the Lord,
be strong and let your heart take courage.15
The Lord protects those who are loyal,
but he pays the proud back to the fullest degree.
All you who wait for the Lord,
be strong and let your heart take courage.15
To trust that God is sovereign is also to trust that God will eventually set all things right. David trusts that people's faithfulness to God will not go unnoticed by God and that wrongdoers will inevitably have to face the consequences of their wrongdoings.
What we believe about God determines how we pray, and, at the same time, how we pray reveals what we believe about God. David believes that God is protective, faithful, attentive, and sovereign, so he turns to God for protection in perilous times. What does the way you pray reveal about your beliefs about God?
Notes:
- Wikipedia: "Collect"
- "Collects and Suggested Canticles and Refrains (Daily Prayer)." The Church of England Website.
- Psalm 31:1 (CEB)
- Psalm 31:2-4 (CEB)
- Joel B. Green, William H. Willimon, et al. The Wesley Study Bible (NRSV). 2009, Abingdon Press. p. 672
- Psalm 31:19-20 (CEB)
- Psalm 31:5 (CEB)
- Psalm 31:21 (CEB)
- John Goldingay. The Old Testament for Everyone (Kindle Edition). 2020, Westminster John Knox Press. p. 2835
- James L. Mays. Psalms (Interpretation: A Bible Commentary for Teaching and Preaching) (Kindle Edition). 2011, John Knox Press. loc. 2914-5
- Psalm 31:7-8 (CEB)
- Psalm 31:22 (CEB)
- Goldingay, p. 2836
- Psalm 31:15-16 (CEB)
- Psalm 31:23-24 (CEB)

No comments:
Post a Comment