Ep.192: Psalm 86: U-turn Prayers.

Hello, I’m Daniel Westfall on the channel “Pray with Me”.

In the first four verses of Psalm 86, the poet references himself twelve times. His prayer focuses on himself and his needs. God is almost an outsider in this psalm, a distant being who might be persuaded to help. Listen to the prayer. 
     Hear me, Lord, and answer me,
        for I am poor and needy (v. 1).
    You are my God, have mercy on me,
        for I call to you all day long (v. 3). 

By verse 8, the poet’s focus has done a U-turn. In three verses at the centre of the poem, every line speaks of God, and the poet does not appear even once. Listen to his praise:
    Among the gods, there is none like you, Lord;
      No deeds can compare with yours.
    All the nations you have made
      will come and worship before you, Lord;
      they will bring glory to your name.
    For you are great and do marvellous deeds;
       you alone are God (vv. 8-11)..  

I like the way this psalm shows the shifting focus of a person who is seeking God. We often get fixated on ourselves–our problems, our poverty, our needs, and how God could help if only he would listen and respond. Then somehow we find grace and wisdom to let go of ourselves, if only briefly, to focus on the great God we serve. 

Let’s pray. 

Our father, like the poet we tell you our complaints. We have heard great things about how amazing it is to serve you–but today we are stuck in the mud again. The scriptures are dry as dust. Our prayers are meandering and unfocused . Our lives are anxious and distracted. We fear the isolation of a long COVID winter. We worry about worldwide failures in politics and economics, about civil unrest and disappearing freedoms.

Our father, as we grow older, we have not discovered the joys we hoped for, only new difficulties and new sorrows. As Fosdick describes it, “…our Edens are behind us with flaming angels at the gate. We have had friends and lost them and something has gone from our hearts that does not return. . . ; we have sinned, and though forgiven, the scars are still upon us; we have been weathered by the rains and floods and winds” (Fosdick, Harry Emerson. The Meaning of Faith. Good Press: Ebook, 2019. Original work published 1917). 

But with the poet, we turn our focus to you. You alone are the God of creation, who hung our little planet in space, and set it spinning night and day, circling through the seasons. You alone are the God of salvation, who unexpectedly became a pilgrim in our world, and set up housekeeping among us, and died like a criminal. But you rose again and you offer us the gift of resurrection life. You alone are the God who gives us breath, who  hears the prayers we breathe, who breathes your Holy Spirit into us, who sends us news of your kingdom and your coming. 

Oh God, we need fresh news of you. Do not forget us. Send us your compassion and grace, be slow to anger and full of love and mercy toward us. With the poet we pray,
  Give us a sign of your goodness,
      so our enemies will see it and be put to shame,
      for you, Lord, have helped us and comforted us (v. 17). 

Amen.

I’m Daniel on the channel “Pray with Me”.

Ep.191: Pray with Heart, Mind, and Intuition.

Hello, I’m Daniel Westfall on the channel “Pray With Me”.

Today, we look at Paul’s prayer for the Philippians. He says: 

  I pray that your love may overflow more and more
        with knowledge and depth of insight  
        and that you may discern what is best,
  so that you may be pure and blameless in the day of Christ,
        having produced a harvest of righteousness
            that comes through Jesus Christ
            to the glory and praise of God (Phil 1:9-11). 

When Paul prays for overflowing love, does he expect that love to come from the heart or the mind or the intuition or the will? Trick question. We live under God’s command to love him with heart, soul, mind, and strength, so all our faculties make a contribution to love. 

I think Paul understands this when he prays for the Philippians to grow in love. 

He wants to see love that overflows. Under the influence of wine, my behaviour overflows into sleepiness. Under the influence of rain, rivers overflow their banks. Under God’s influence, our hearts overflow with love. The request is not for love to be better informed, more rational, or more carefully planned and managed. It is for love to overflow, to be life and energy, to express itself widely and freely. Like new wine, busting old wineskins.  

Jesus talked about the overflow of human hearts when he said, “Out of the heart come evil thoughts, sexual immorality, theft, murder, adultery, greed, malice, deceit, lewdness, envy, and slander” (Mark 7:21). In Jesus’ view, sin is a state of the heart, not just a set of behaviors. Bad behavior overflows from a bad heart. On the other side, Paul says good behavior flows from a loving heart, so he prays that our hearts will overflow with love.

Paul also prays that this love will be shaped by knowledge and insight. Love is the feeling and the motivation, but our motivation needs to consult our minds and respect our intuitions or insight. 

The New Testament uses the word “agape”, meaning “love”, in a way that illustrates this. 

Jesus used the word “agape” to complain that some of the Pharisees wouldn’t acknowledge him because, “They loved the praise from men more than praise from God” (John 12:43). Their “agape” love was misguided, because they preferred human praise to divine. Their knowledge and intuition told them that social respect and allegiance to their religion was more important than acknowledging Jesus. 

Paul also used the word “agape”. Writing from his lonely prison cell he said, “Demas has deserted me, because he loved this world” (2 Tim. 4:10). Demas acted a love that led him to abandon the soon-to-be-executed Paul in favor of a safer and more comfortable life in the world.

Someone else who loved the world was God. Of him, John says, “God so loved the world that he gave his only son” (John 3:16). This version of “agape” love expresses itself in giving

Let’s pray. 

Our father, Paul prays that our “agape”, our love, will overflow with knowledge and insight. Not like the Pharisees’ fearful love, hiding from Christ behind their culture and religion. Not like Demas, running from Paul’s trouble for the safety of a secular city. Fill us with your love, our God, the wise and unselfish love with which you loved the world and gave your son. 

Jesus said he brought light into the world, but people loved darkness rather than light (John 3:19). Help us to run from the shadows of our dark hearts. Help us to run to your light, O Christ. May our hearts overflow with love, in knowledge and depth of insight.

Amen. 

I’m Daniel on the channel “Pray with Me”. 

Ep.190: Psalm 85: Turning Back.

Hello, I’m Daniel Westfall on the channel “Pray with Me”.

Today we look at Psalm 85, which uses the phrase, “Turn back” five times. 

Verse one says to God, “You turned back the captivity of Jacob”. Verse three says to God, “You turned back your fierce anger.” Do you ever feel it would help if God changed his attitude toward you, if he turned your life around? Perhaps he might turn back his anger toward you, or free you from captivity to guilt and fears and obsessions.  

The next two occurrences of “turn back” ask God to turn us around. Verse four says, “Turn us again, God our Savior, and put away your displeasure toward us”. Verse six says, “Will you not turn us again, revive us, that we may rejoice in you?” Yes, we need to turn a corner in our lives. Perhaps we need revival, a u-turn in our life toward God. Perhaps we need to turn our plodding emotional experiences to a habit of rejoicing.  

The final occurrence of “turn back” is in verse 8: “God promises peace to his people, but let them not turn back to folly.” 

Let’s pray some of the words and phrases from Psalm 85. 

Our father, revive us, turn us, so we may rejoice in you (v. 6). Your gift of new life is not just a package you deliver to our doorstep; it is the gift that Christ himself comes to live within us. As Paul said, “It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me” (Gal 2:20). O Christ, live your life within us, help us to live your life as our own, help us to hear and obey your voice within. 

As the poet says, 
  I will listen to what God the Lord says;
      he promises peace to his people. . .
      but let them not turn to folly (v. 8). 

O Lord, our world resounds with noise and folly, the noise of hurricanes and politics and video games and advertisements. We are deafened by the  noise within–anxiety for family and friends, concerns for finances, stresses about the future, the noise of temptations and obsessions and lust. Teach us to turn down the volume on our noise. Teach us to listen to your voice within. 

In the quiet, we hear you promise peace to your people. As Jesus said, “Peace I leave with you, my peace I give you” (John 14:27). O Lord, make us a people of peace. Help us walk in your peace through a winter of COVID-19, help us discern your peace in our conflicted lives, help us knit our families together in peace, to build our communities in the peace of your Spirit. 

As the poet says,
    Love and faithfulness meet together;
      righteousness and peace kiss each other (v. 10).

O Lord, in our war-torn world, in our conflicted lives, how good it is that we do not choose between righteousness and peace. For in your vision of the world, righteousness and peace kiss each other. Love and faithfulness meet together. Help us to be peaceably right and lovingly faithful to you, to your word, and to Christ within. 

Grant us the blessing Psalm 85 promises:
  The Lord will indeed give what is good,
      and our land will yield its harvest.
  Righteousness goes before him
      and prepares the way for his steps (vv. 12-13).. 

Amen.

I’m Daniel on the channel “Pray with Me”.

Ep.189: The Geometry of Prayer.

Hello, I’m Daniel Westfall on the channel “Pray With Me”.

Today, we look at Paul’s second prayer for the Ephesians. He says: 

  I pray that
    according to the riches of [God’s] glory, he may grant you
        to be rooted and grounded in love, and
        to be strong by his spirit in your inner being,
          so that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith.
  I pray that you may have power to comprehend with all the saints
        the breadth and length and height and depth of Christ’s love,
        and to know his love that supasses knowledge,
          so that you may be filled with all the fullness of God (Eph 3:16-19). 

Paul’s prayer is composed in two crescendos. If it were a modern worship song, each verse would start with mellow vocals over a quiet acoustic guitar. But it would soon escalate, with booming bass and pounding drums and vocals almost shouting.

The two high points of Paul’s crescendos? That Christ may dwell in our hearts, and that we may be filled with the fullness of God. 

Paul’s prayer reminds us that the God of creation, of nations, and of families, is looking for a home in our hearts. Christ wants to move in with us and share life with us. God wants to fill us with all his fullness.

If my life is a drop of water in a bucket, the whole ocean that is Christ wants to be at home in my little bucket. If my life is a sandbox, the seashores of all the oceans want to fill my sandbox full. If I am the most insignificant and wayward of humans, the whole person of God in Christ wants to build a palace in my life. 

Let’s pray. 

O Lord, our thoughts of you are far too small. We play in our little sandboxes with little buckets of water. But Paul opens to us the grand horizons of your love, giving us a view of the deeper, longer, broader sand on the seashore and water in the ocean. 

How can you, the eternal Christ, live in our time-bound, earth-bound hearts? How can we mortals be filled with the fullness of God? 

O Christ, this is our response: we invite you to enlarge the geometry of our hearts. Make them wider, longer, higher, deeper. Create in us a space for you. Grow us into people who can be filled with all your fullness.  

Take the narrow horizon of our lives, open it to the universe of your love.
Take the small drop of water in our lives, fill it with the ocean of Christ.
Take our weaknesses, transform them by the power of your spirit.
Take our shallow morality, root and ground it in love.
Take our self-centred lives, renovate them until they are a home for Christ. 

O God, take our empty lives and fill them to all the fullness of God. 

Amen. 

I’m Daniel on the channel “Pray with Me”. 

Ep.188: Psalm 84: Highways of the Heart.

Hello, I’m Daniel Westfall on the channel “Pray with Me”.

Psalm 84 paints some of my favorite pictures of a good relationship with God. Here are three of them:

First, the poet speaks of God’s temple in Jerusalem as God’s home. Of all the words that touch us, “home” is close to the top. The poet begins:
  How lovely is your dwelling place,
      Lord Almighty (v. 1).


The temple is not only God’s home, for the poet continues:
    Even the sparrow has found a home
        and the swallow a nest for herself,
        where she may have her young–
    a place near your altar,
        Lord Almighty (v. 3).

The birds have a safe place near God’s altar. What a wonderful picture! There where sheep and bulls are sacrificed in a river of blood, the flitting swallow makes her home where she can have her young. God’s presence is safe for all who come home to it. As the poet says, 
    Happy are those who live in your house,
        ever singing your praise (v. 4). 

Psalm 84 presents a second picture, the poet’s journey, his pilgrimage to the temple to meet God. He writes:
  Happy are those whose strength is in you,
      in whose heart are the highways to Zion.
  As they go through the valley of Baca,
      they make it a place of springs;
      the early rain covers it with pools (vv. 5-6).

Travelling a dirt road on the way to the temple in Jerusalem, the writer finds strength and refreshment. Because it’s not just a dirt road for his sandals, it’s a highway in his heart. His heart yearns for God (v. 1) and rejoices at the thought of visiting God’s home and the swallow’s home, because that is also where his heart is most at home.

A third picture in Psalm 84 is where the poet says,
  One day in your courts is better
       than a thousand elsewhere.
  I would rather be a doorkeeper in the house of my God
      than live in the tents of wickedness (vv 10-11).
Better a menial task in God’s home than comfortable lodgings with his enemies. 

Let’s pray. 

Our father, when the poet was crushed by powerful enemies and drowning in seas of despair, he prayed psalms of desperation. What a welcome break is this psalm of joy and hope and homecoming. Thank you for shining a light into my darkness, for reminding me of a safe place where even birds can nest, for teaching me that my road to your presence can be a glad highway of the heart. 

We have built other highways of the heart, but today we leave them untravelled. 

One is a highway of fantasy, imagining and longing for easy relationships, wealth, and respect. But that’s a dead end highway, for our reality never matches our fantasies. 

We have built a highway of despair, when we have found life difficult and sad and unendurable. We soldier on in the dark , doing our duty, not daring to hope for the light. This is another dead end, for you are the light of our lives and you lead us on the highway out of darkness.

Some of us have a highway of self-confidence, where we manage our own lives, convinced that hard work and discipline will achieve the outcomes we desire. But that highway leaves us isolated and unhappy, and alone.

Today we choose your highway, the highway of strength. As the writer of Psalm 84 says: 
    Happy are those whose strength is in you, 
       in whose heart are the highways to Zion (v. 5). 
You are our strength, You are our heart’s home. With the poet, we journey from strength to strength. With the birds we rest near your altar.

 Fulfill for us the promise of Psalm 84, our Lord:

    No good thing will you withhold
        from those who walk uprightly. 
    O Lord of hosts, 
        happy is everyone who trusts in you (v. 12).

Amen

I’m Daniel on the channel “Pray with Me”.