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The Glorious Purpose of Prayer

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The Glorious Purpose of Prayer

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by Greg Grotewold

Though I have known for a long time that there are cracks in my armor, it was not until recently that I discovered to what extent. The largest of them is the most surprising. I have always considered myself rather adept at prayer but now must humbly admit otherwise. The vulnerability created by my intercessory failings is quite eye-opening.

The issue is not one of consistency or sincerity. I have always viewed prayer as central in my walk with Jesus. The culprit is inadequate application. I have taken what is a dynamic means of grace and repeatedly reduced it to a singular objective. My beseeching, to the exclusion of almost everything else, has revolved around the relief from life’s daily burdens.

There is certainly a place for such sentiment when I seek the Lord’s face. He wants that which weighs upon me to be offered up. But, if prayer is not deployed beyond this isolated need, it as spiritual weaponry will never defend as intended. My shield against the darts of the evil one will continue to be compromised, unnecessarily exposing my soul to harm.

Compare my petitions to Paul’s: “And so, from the day we heard, we have not ceased to pray for you, asking that you may be filled with the knowledge of his will in all spiritual wisdom and understanding, so as to walk in a manner worthy of the Lord, fully pleasing to him, bearing fruit in every good work and increasing in the knowledge of God” (Colossians 1:9-10, ESV).

What Paul desired for the church in Colossae was nothing short of massive. He was not petitioning the Lord for a conflict-free existence. He was not asking that their difficulties be removed. What Paul sought for the Colossians was the quintessential purpose of prayer: to intimately know Jesus and His will. There is no higher aim. He wanted them to understand the extraordinary designs the Lord has for their lives. It is what transcends the hardships and leads to a Christ-exalting life of obedience and faithfulness.

Paul’s approach to intercession has slowly infiltrated mine; the operative word here being “slowly.” I continue to surrender my daily challenges but have begun doing so in the context of Jesus’s larger plan for my life. And not coincidentally, I have become less concerned with the circumstantial and thus more apt to fight the temptation of fear and anxiety. This has freed me to start pursuing His aims with greater intentionality. In other words, the cracks in my armor are beginning to seal.

While I still have much to learn, I am discovering that steady application of the practical bears fruit. I have instituted a new routine, for example, where—prior to bowing my head—time is spent reviewing a note I recently scribbled on the inside cover of my Bible. It reads as follows. “Request from Jesus: I would desire what He desires; I would love what He loves; I would despise what He despises; I would find increasing joy in what honors Him; I would follow Him in faith.” Though it felt mechanical at first—and still does to a degree—these themes help prepare my mind. They get the focus off of me and onto the Lord.

May my prayer life and yours be an aggressive pursuit of knowing Jesus and His glorious will for our lives. And may the quest have the intended effect: a walk that becomes fully pleasing to Him.

About The Author Greg Grotewold lives in Oakdale, MN, with his wife, Sandi, and their two sons, Luke and Eli. He is a deacon in his local church and greatly enjoys serving in this capacity.