News spread
last week of Hurricane Harvey leaving devastation across Houston. Watching news reports and video clips on
social media leaves me feeling dazed and small.
I know I
should pray. I’ve been a Christian for
decades and a pastor for twenty years. I
could share an impromptu sermon without any preparation on the why’s and how to’s
of praying for people.
But when
faced with mammoth disasters, I feel almost too small to pray. The devastation looms like a Goliath taunting
my puny prayers. I hear the giant
screaming, “Look at all of this trouble!
What good do you think your prayers will do? Do you really think God will use your prayers
to change any of this?”
Last week as
I tried to pray concerning Hurricane Harvey and the struggling souls in Texas,
an idea came to me.
Praying with Specificity
For years, I’ve
encouraged people to not pray general prayers but specific ones. Don’t just pray “around the world” prayers
like the following:
- God,
bless the missionaries.
- God,
be with us (He has already promised to be with His people, right?).
- Lord,
lead, guide, and direct them (aren't those three synonyms?).
Instead, I’ve
encouraged praying people to be specific in their prayers:
- Lord,
give Susan wisdom as she considers what job to take.
- Father,
provide for Dan as he needs a car.
- God,
comfort Lucy as she struggles with the loss of her grandmother.
- Lord,
help our missionary friends the Campbells feel sense presence and feel cared for as they may struggle with isolation and loneliness overseas.
One prayer
offered with specificity may do more good than a dozen generalized ones that
use religious language but don’t center on anything concrete.
A Pair of Shoelaces
The Bible
teaches and illustrates God’s specificity in dealing with His children.
Christianity boasts of a deity who contains awesome power (transcendence) yet
personal closeness to people (immanence).
One Old
Testament passage states, “the eyes of the LORD range throughout the earth to
strengthen those whose hearts are fully committed to him (2 Chronicles
16:9). The Creator and Sustainer of the
universe is able to zero in on one individual person of His creation and make
himself know to that one.
Joe
wondered, “Should one pray for a matter as small as shoelaces? I think so, for the principle of faith is not
concerned with quantity, but rather with quality. The Lord Jesus taught that if we have faith
as a grain of mustard seed, then great things can happen.”
The young
man asked God for more laces and then “went about the Lord’s work with the
shoes and laces as they were and with a heart that was content to make known
his requests to the Most High, with confidence that there is an Ear that hears,
an Eye that sees, a Heart that is touched with our necessity, and a Hand that
can be stretched forth in our behalf.”
One week
later a letter arrived from a friend in California. The writer wrote under a strong sense of compulsion,
“Somehow or other, I cannot get away from the impression that I should include
these shoelaces in my letter; and yet what a ridiculous thing for me to do!”
Joe Evans
learned in that encounter with the Almighty that He sees, hears, and knows. The Sovereign One saw His struggling servant
in Boston and then touched one person in California, long before the days of
instant communication, to nudge them to meet Joe’s need.
God uses the
prayers of one individual to touch the life of another individual.
Burden in the Woods
Later in
life, Joe took a day of prayer in the woods to commune with his Lord. A great, and somewhat strange, burden came
upon his heart to pray for the spiritual conversion of His Majesty, King Edward
VII. Dr. Edman wrote, “The burden of
prayer increased throughout the day rather than diminishing or disappearing. .
. . With great agony of soul, he prayed
earnestly for the salvation of the king until there came the release of full
assurance that prayer had been answered.”
The following
day word came across the ocean, “King Edward is dead.” Joe Evans had not known of the king’s
illness, nor had he ever met the king.
Years
passed, and one day Joe ate dinner with Dr. J. Gregory Mantle of England, who
told Joe the story of King Edward’s conversion.
Mantle asked, “Joe, did you know that Edward VII was saved on his
deathbed?”
The king
took ill and called a lord-in-waiting, ordering him to go to Paternoster Row
and find a gospel tract titled The Sinner’s
Friend given to him years earlier by his mother, Queen Victoria. The servant, after much searching, found the
booklet, “brought it to His Majesty, and upon reading it, King Edward VII made
earnest repentance and received the Lord Jesus as his Savior.”
As God’s
faithful servant Joe turned aside to meet with His Lord in the woods, the King
of England lay on his deathbed. The
Great Intercessor moved upon Joe in the woods to intercede earnestly for the
work of God in the life of the king, several thousand miles away.
God uses the
prayers of one individual to touch the life of another individual.
One Family
As I
struggled last week to know how to pray for the victims of the hurricane, it
struck me, God can use my prayers to make
a difference in the life of one person or one family.
As my perspective changed, so did my praying.
I imagined one father, one couple, one family struggling with that
storm. I began asking, Father, meet the needs of one husband and
father. Help him to help his
family. Give them wisdom and help. Get them to safety. Provide for their needs. Care for and comfort his wife and children.
As I prayed
with that spirit the next several days, I pondered, “What if 1,000,000 praying
believers asked God to use their prayers to touch one person or one
family? Might God use the prayers of
each intercessor to reach across hundreds of miles and intervene specifically
in 1,000,000 situations?”
Let’s do it,
for God uses the prayers of one individual
to touch the life of another individual.