On busy days, I often utter quick prayers for
needs of the moment. Because God is our provision and He said that we have not
because we ask not, I ask, even for little things. I’ve asked Him for help with
an assignment for assistance with a flat tire, and for patience with a
co-worker.
God has graciously answered many on-the run prayers, even for little
things like a parking place near the mall.
However, other times it seems God doesn’t hear
my petitions. In fact, sometimes it feels like prayers for significant things
are blocked from getting through. In one particularly dark time, even my cries
to see my own sin echoed without response. Where is God in such times?
Recently, while reading the Gospel of John, I
think I gained insight into some of those seemingly blocked prayers. In John 6, Jesus fed the multitude with five loaves and two
fish.
After the people saw the miraculous sign that
Jesus did, they began to say, ‘Surely this is the Prophet who is to come into
the world.’ Jesus, knowing that they intended to come and make him king
by force, withdrew again to a mountain by himself.” (John 6:14-15, NIV)
When the crowd finally recognized Jesus as the
One sent from God, and the people were eager to follow Him, why did He leave?
Why did He go to the mountain?
Could it be because the crowd had their own
agenda? They weren’t ready to follow. They wanted to bring about their own
plans to make Jesus king. Even though He is King of kings, an earthly throne
was not God’s plan.
Jesus didn’t rebuke the crowd or explain how
they were wrong. When He perceived their plans, He simply withdrew. He removed
Himself.
I don’t remember all my prayers that seemed to
ricochet off the ceiling, but I know some were during a season when I was
drowning in self-pity. I wanted Him take away my pain, and to change the people
around me. Jesus had met my needs before, and, like the crowd, I wanted Him to
meet my present need. I had my own agenda rather than seeking the will of God.
Could that be why my prayers weren’t answered? Does Jesus withdraw when we try
to use Him for our purposes?
Is it any wonder my prayers sometimes seem to
return empty? I know His Spirit is still with me, that He lives in my heart,
and that He will never leave or forsake me. However, I also know that it feels
like He withdraws.
We see the rest of the story a few verses later.
The disciples had been rowing furiously but were making no headway on the Sea
of Galilee. They were stranded in the middle of the stormy sea. Jesus
approached, walking on the water and they were afraid until Jesus assured them
it was He.
“They were willing therefore to receive Him into
the boat; and immediately the boat was at the land to which they were going.” (John 6:21, NASB)
Once they received Jesus into the boat—into
their sphere, their area of responsibility and struggle—they were immediately
at their destination. They no longer had to fight to reach their goal.
When I’m trying hard to make something
happen—even by prayer—it is often like rowing in the middle of a storm-tossed
sea. Instead of rowing with all my might, do I need to stop my frantic efforts
and look for Jesus? Could it be that the only thing I need to do in order to
reach my destination is to receive Him into my boat?
I believe that when I humbly receive Him, I can
expect to reach my destination—through His power, without striving, and with
Jesus by my side. For those times when I do not immediately reach the goal,
Jesus will stay with me, and I can rest in Him and draw from Him for the
journey.
Help me, Lord, to wait on You. Teach me to
welcome and follow You in all circumstances of my life, instead of expecting
You to fulfill my agenda.
Kay W. Camenisch is the author of Uprooting Anger:
Destroying the Monster Within. She has been published in The
Upper Room and The Lookout. Contemporary Drama has
published one of her plays, and she is a regular contributor to a newspaper
column. Kay is also a pastor’s wife, mother, and grandmother. She has worked
closely in ministry with her husband, including in local churches, as missionaries
in Brazil, working with a church school, training young adults to mentor
troubled youth, and establishing and directing a ranch for troubled young men. Visit Kay's Website.
Join us this evening at 6:30 for our weekly Prayer Encounter at North Raleigh Church of the Nazarene!
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