Jesus said, When you pray, do not keep babbling like pagans… Matthew 6:7
Then [the prophets of Baal] called on the name
of Baal from morning till noon… so they shouted louder and slashed themselves
with swords and spears until their blood flowed. I
Kings 18:24-29
How should we, as Christians, pray?
That is, of course, an impossible question: prayer is
infinitely varied. We might offer prayers that have been written in advance, or
simply pray spontaneously from the heart. We might offer long, detailed
prayers, or just a few short words.
We might sing prayers in the form of songs or hymns or even
use a tongue which is strange to us. We might pack our prayers with requests,
or simply sing a song of praise to God. We might give vent to our frustrations
and disappointments on God. The possibilities are endless.
But one thing we mustn’t do: we mustn’t “babble like
pagans”, as Jesus puts it here. The word he used literally refers to “idle
repetition” or “empty words” - perhaps we find an extreme example in the dramatic
confrontation between Elijah and the prophets of Baal in 1 Kings 18: “so they
shouted louder and slashed themselves with swords and spears until their blood
flowed”. Sounds like hard work!
What matters is that our prayers are meaningful,
from the heart, and offered with true humility and childlike faith. That sounds
easy enough. But I think there is a danger, a risk that we subconsciously pile
conditions on ourselves – we get into the way of thinking that our prayers may
not be fully acceptable to God because somehow we “didn’t get it right”.
Do you know that feeling?
The devil loves to tempt us to discouragement – “Of course
that prayer hasn’t been answered! It was such a feeble effort on my part! Did I
say ‘Amen’? Was I praying on auto-drive, not really thinking or feeling what I
was saying? That person I heard was sick, did I really make an effort to feel
what he is experiencing? Did I neglect to add the key words ‘I ask these things
in Jesus’ name’ at the end (as if I might ask them in any other name!)”?
It embarrasses me to remember times in my Christian life
when I virtually prayed with my eye on my watch: “I managed 25 minutes
yesterday – I need to keep going for at
least another ten minutes…” We were encouraged to think of ourselves as “prayer
warriors” (my wife has been heard to refer to “rottweilers of prayer”) which
certainly means taking prayer very seriously, but isn’t exactly restful.
In a word, there’s a danger that we forget that God is our
loving heavenly Father and treat him as if he is a rather demanding
head-teacher.
Part of the problem is the sheer routine of life. Life is
so ordinary that, let’s be honest, unusual, special things rarely happen. And
if you’ve already prayed for a particular topic a hundred – perhaps even a
thousand – times, it’s hard to maintain any kind of enthusiasm.
But what matters is that God looks down from heaven with a
loving, fatherly eye and says, “My dear child, relax, that’s not what
matters! I see you struggling to pray, and my heart goes out to you! I see the
frustration and the dryness and I do not forget what I have seen. Your prayers
may be feeble, but they are important to me! Yes, your little prayers are
important to the God of all creation…”
So, yes, there are certainly times when prayer should be a
sustained discipline: times too, perhaps, when we need to combine it with
fasting. But the point is that in our daily lives, in the ordinary humdrum
routine of things, it can also be a refreshing thing. We can rest in the
presence of God, using few or many words. He knows even our grunts and groans,
our pathetic “O Lord’s!” (Do we take seriously Romans 8:26?) He even hears our
pleas “Lord, I’m so tired! I’m just struggling to cope. Help me!”
I joked about the prophets of Baal: their hours-long
prayers, their dancing, their gyrations, even their self-mutilation. It sounds
like hard work! Yes, indeed. And of course that is an extreme example. But we
Christians need to be careful. Prayer can and will sometimes be hard work; but
it can also serve as a peaceful, joyful thing.
Jesus saw at one point that his disciples had got into a
pretty frazzled state, what with John the Baptist being beheaded, the crowds
flocking round, and endless demands being made on Jesus, so he gave them an
invitation: “Come with me by yourselves to a quiet place and get some rest”
(Mark 6:31).
Our “quiet places” may be only for a few minutes, with our
eyes closed and in a noisy place: but let’s take full advantage of them.
Dear Father in heaven, help me to grasp that I
don’t need to prove myself to you; you know me through and through, you have
forgiven my sins, and you love me with an undying love. Please teach me how to
rest in you day by day. Amen.