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Transcript

COVENANT ORIENTATION

TALK 2

Introduction

Why Pray?

  • In CFC, we commit to a daily personal prayer time and to a daily reading of the Bible.

Personal Prayer Time

Lack of understanding about prayer.

I already go to Church services (Mass) and that's enough.

- Most of us may have been taught to pray early in our childhood. But what we may not have learned is why we should pray.

* Most see prayer as just asking God for things.

- Prayer for us should be a means of communicating with God and establishing a personal relationship with Him.

* As we communicate, we get to know God more, and thus have the basis for loving Him more.

* Alone by ourselves with God.

* This is necessary for us to develop a deep intimate personal relationship with Jesus.

I don't have the time.

I am unworthy.

- Some may be so filled with guilt due to our sins and weaknesses that we create a feeling of unworthiness to come before the Lord.

- We have a lot of time for the many different things we do in life.

* Our problem is not lack of time, but our attitude.

* If we considered prayer important enough, we would find the time.

- Let us ask ourselves two questions:

* If I were not too busy working, would I be busy praying?

* If God gave me some extra hours today, will I automatically allocate it to personal prayer?

- The devil would always try to convince us of our unworthiness.

- Remember that as long as there is a desire to pray, it is a clear sign of the Lord's prodding us to spend time with Him.

It is too difficult.

- The difficulty is often of our own making.

- Prayer is really very simple: it is coming into the presence of a loving God and allowing Him to love us and touch our lives.

- Techniques can help, models can guide, but it boils down to our very own personal relationship, done in our own personal way.

1. Make a commitment to pray at a scheduled time.

a) Decide when is prime time for the Lord.

* When would I be most alert or attuned to fellowship with God?

* This is not simply left-over time.

b) If possible, make this your regular prayer time each day of the week.

* Getting into this "routine" of prayer makes it easier to pray faithfully everyday.

* Be flexible in making adjustments if necessary due to your varied weekly schedule.

c) Defend this time of prayer.

2. If you are just starting to pray, start with a short time of prayer.

a) Our covenant card mentions at least 15 minutes.

* But if you would still find this long, then start with what you would be comfortable with and can sustain.

* Again, we are not legalistically concerned about the amount of time, but are after your developing a personal relationship with God. The length of time will grow as this happens.

b) Spend more time as you grow in prayer.

* You will find that 15 minutes will be very short.

What to do?

3. Look for the right place where you will not be distracted.

a) Jesus' example. Lk 5:16; Lk 6:12; Mt 14:23-24a; Mk 1:35.

b) Jesus' instruction. Mt 6:6a.

c) We owe God our undivided attention.

4. Resolve to be open to the inspiration of the Holy Spirit.

a) Techniques, like ACTS, are all right, as long as we are not locked in to them.

b) Be open to variety in the Holy Spirit.

* Quiet vs expressive.

* Different physical postures.

* Speaking and listening.

* Praying in tongues.

c) The goal is not "to pray well", but to enter into communion with God.

5. Deal with obstacles to prayer.

a) Anxieties and concerns that distract us.

* Know that you are coming into the presence of your loving Father, Who is able to provide richly for all your needs.

* Intercede for your concerns and leave these in God's hands.

b) Too much concern about the quality of our prayer.

* God is not concerned about our technique or the loftiness of our prayers, But simply with our desire to be in communion with Him.

* Prayer is the simple reality of a child coming into the presence of his/her Father.

* The Holy Spirit will help us. Rom 8:26.

c) Dryness.

* Spiritual dryness in prayer and even in our Christian life may happen. It is normal and nothing to be alarmed about.

* Sometimes dryness comes from God Himself. He seeks to find out if our faithfulness comes from the consolation and joy we experience in prayer, or simply from the reality of being in His presence.

* Thus we should just persevere in prayer through times of dryness. Prayer is our commitment, not just an emotional experience.

d) Difficulty in listening or hearing the Lord.

* Prayer is not just talking to God, but listening to Him. We listen in the silence of hearts.

* Prayer is not just asking God for things, but allowing Him to form our hearts and our minds.

* But perhaps our human nature makes it easier to talk and harder to listen. We need to learn how to do both.

1. Aside from daily personal prayer, we also need to read and meditate on the Word of God.

a) The Bible is our book of wisdom for living a Spirit-filled Christian life.

b) The Bible has power to convict us and change our lives. Heb 4:12-13.

c) The Bible can inspire and strengthen us as we face the difficulties of life.

* Frequently, our Bible reading will lead us to passages that speak directly and personally to our situation.

2. It is recommended that we incorporate our Bible reading into our daily prayer time.

a) The two are interactive.

b) A useful tool is to use a Scripture-based daily prayer guide, like “In His Steps”.

3. We should spend some other time during the week to study the Bible.

4. We should read Christian books.

a) We recommend reading one Christian book every month.

Conclusion

1. A lack of a regular prayer time reflects a lack of faithfulness to the Lord.

2. When we neglect prayer, we will reap the consequences in the form of a

powerless Christian life, devoid of peace and direction.

3. If we pray and read the Bible, we tap on to God's power.

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