May 4, 2019
Who Would Pray For Half a Miracle?
5-6-19
There is a particular pitfall in Christianity, or rather the “walk,” the life, of Christians. Even sincere and fervent Christians – I would say maybe more so with dedicated believers.
It is a type of presumption, and is totally natural: our human nature. I am not talking about rebellion or faulty belief. Perhaps we can characterize it as total faith but imperfect understanding. Believers, acting by their human natures, sometimes tend to assume, or presume, to know what pleases God.
Is this a good thing? Usually. To address this pitfall has pitfalls itself, I know. Bear with me. I will paint an exaggerated picture; but I know it is true because I have fallen into this pit myself during my Christian walk.
Of course we want to please God. And He knows when we are in the Word; and not. He hears us when we pray; and when we don’t. He knows the burdens of our hearts; when we grieve and cannot pray well – we tell ourselves – the Bible assures us that the Holy Spirit groans in Heavenly languages before the Throne. Yet we pray, and we should, fervently, and we are promised in all these things that God hears the prayers of the righteous.
Have you ever prayed about a crisis – a nephew on death’s door; an unsaved loved one; an issue with your marriage, job, finances – and prayed something like, “Thank You, Lord, for hearing my prayer. Thank you for restoring my spirit. Thank you for the guidance that you will speak to me.”
What I mean is, have you ever prayed, in effect, “Thank You, God! I’ll take it from here”?
If we pray for a miracle… why take half of it back, before God even acts?
I shook my fist at heaven for all the hell that I’ve been through, Now I’m begging for forgiveness and a miracle from You.
We sometimes – maybe oftentimes – have the spiritual feeling that a good Christian just needs a little boost, some prayerful reinforcement, that “just a little talk with Jesus makes it right.” And then, all our training and Bible-reading can kick in.
I suggest that this attitude might be something we design to impress God… not beseech of Him. God wants our total mind, soul, and body… but not merely up to a point. He needs our total commitment, and total surrender. Especially in times of total trouble.
I’ve tried to fight this battle by myself, But it’s a war that I can’t win without Your help…
Let us consider, among many personal challenges, the example of alcoholism and the ravages it inflicts on people and families. I suggest that it is not wrong to ask God for “help,” “strength,” “understanding,” a family’s “patience,” a boss’s “forbearance,” and God’s “forgiveness.” Fervent prayer… even hundreds of prayers.
But, as long as we have God’s ear, so to speak, how many of us pray for a miracle – beyond, say, receiving one more chance from a spouse; but the kind of miracle only God can enact. For instance, losing the desire? being freed from “those places”? waking up a New Creation? Not when you need more than a “fix”! When you need a miracle, not a break.
Once upon a time You turned the water into wine, And now, on my knees, I’m turning to You, Father: Could You help me turn the wine back into water?
Think, when you pray, to realize what is the nature of your Loving God, and all He wants for you… what He can do for you!
When you pray for miracles, be mindful not to pray for partial-miracles. You have taken it as far as you can go; He knows. Let Him take it from there!
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A song written and sung by T Graham Brown. Guest slideshow by a man who has lived this song:
Yes, yes, yes! Thank you for sharing this!
Wonderful, as always. I think we are taught growing up, “Don’t be greedy! Take only your share, just a little.” I also have a hard time wrapping my mind around the Lord’s generosity and power. We were told, “Ask and it will be given to you,” not “Grovel for a time and I’ll give you a pittance.” We are assured our Father in heaven will give us good things if we ask. Whatever fake limitations I’ve put on God, or His love for me, I will try to remove them!