Isaiah 38:1-20 Sermon - July 19th, 2020 - Grace, Benson and Vail Why pray if God already knows everything that will happen? If, for example, he knows the exact lifespan of a person, down to the day, the minute, the second, why pray about the lifespan of a person you care about? Why pray? Answer: Because God allows your prayers to matter. He extends an astonishing invitation to you to participate with him as he unfolds the events of human life and history, including the lifespans of people you care about. One way you participate with him through prayer. The story of Hezekiah is among the true stories that shows: with God things are not so fixed that our input doesn’t matter to him. God invites the prayer of faith. The best way to learn about praying is by doing it; but there is value in learning from the prayer of someone like Hezekiah, I have 7 lessons from this story to guide our time, they are listed on page 14 of the worship folder. 1. Prayer has a setting. Prayer doesn’t happen in a vacuum. What you pray about and how you pray are determined by your unique God-given life. Hezekiah had a unique life. He was king in Judah. He had led the people of Judah to worship the God of the Old Testament as he wanted to be worshipped to an extent that no other king did. He responded to a terrifying threat of the Assyrian army coming to attack him with prayer and faith, and as a result, God decided to send an angel to kill 185,000 Assyrian soldiers in one night. So Hezekiah had a history of prayer and faith in the face of severe challenges. Hezekiah was about 39 years old when he got sick, and he either had no son, or a 7 year old son. Not entirely sure; but for a king, having a male heir was important; and especially so for Hezekiah, he was in th family line of the promised Messiah. All the way back to Adam and Noah and Abraham and David, male children perpetuated the promise of a coming Messiah; Hezekiah it seems at age 39 did not have a male child yet. Then Hezekiah got so sick that he was near death. That’s a big deal. He heard from God through the prophet Isaiah, “you will not recover, set your house in order, you will die.” That’s very unique among all the people who have ever gotten sick and near death. Usually, sick people have to live it out and see what happens. Hezekiah was given information about the future that most do not receive. The news was troubling. That’s the setting of his prayer on this occasion. When you think about your own prayer life, you need to think of it in the context of your unique God-given life. Your age, your health level, your history of challenges you’ve faced. Your skills and abilities that you’ve accrued as you’ve carried out your God given responsibilities; all of these things play into what you might or might not pray about. Probably most helpful for any of us to understand the setting of our prayers is this: we are all humans made to be image bearers of God himself, but we’ve all fallen from that image. We cause distance between ourselves and the one who wants to help us in our troubles. That distance needs to be closed if we are to pray in any meaningful way. And we have a God has found a way to close the gap between us and him in Jesus. He now invites us to invite him more and more into our lives. This leads into number 2. Prayer is part of a larger relationship of faith in God. When Hezekiah got the terrible news that he would die, he turned his face toward the wall and prayed to the LORD. What exactly is prayer? Prayer can be thought of as communicating with God about what you are doing together. And if there’s an obstacle in the way of what you’d like to do with God, it’s natural to pray about that. When Hezekiah got sick and near death and heard that he would die; prayer wasn’t suddenly something new that he did for the occasion. He was already in the habit of communicating regularly with God about what he was doing in his day to day life. He simply brought that prayer-attitude into the bad news he had just received. Hezekiah knew how enjoyable it was to live interacting with God, and he was grieved that this illness and death would interrupt what he was doing with God. He said, “Please remember, Lord, how I have walked before you in truth and with my whole heart. I have done what is good in your eyes.” Hezekiah was