A Heart
For Prayer
When
You said, “Seek My face,” my heart said to You,
“Your face, Lord, I will seek.” —Psalm 27:8
While traveling on an airplane with her 4- and 2-year-old
daughters, a young mom worked at keeping them busy so they wouldn’t disturb
others. When the pilot’s voice came over the intercom for an announcement,
Catherine, the younger girl, paused from her activities and put her head down.
When the pilot finished, she whispered, “Amen.” Perhaps because there had been
a recent natural disaster, she thought the pilot was praying.
Like that little girl, I want a heart that turns my thoughts
toward prayer quickly. I think it would be fair to say that the psalmist David
had that kind of heart. We get hints of that in Psalm 27 as he speaks of facing
difficult foes (v.2). He said, “Your face, Lord,
I will seek” (v.8). Some say that David was remembering the time he was fleeing
from Saul (1 Sam. 21:10) or from his son Absalom (2 Sam. 15:13-14) when he
wrote this psalm. Prayer and dependence on God were in the forefront of David’s
thinking, and he found Him to be his sanctuary (Ps. 27:4-5).
We need a sanctuary as well. Perhaps reading or praying this
psalm and others could help us to develop that closeness to our Father-God. As
God becomes our sanctuary, we’ll more readily turn our hearts toward Him in
prayer.
Teach me, Father, what it means to run to
and have You as my sanctuary. Help me not to
worry about the words I say, but just to express my
heart to You and to nestle down close to You.
and have You as my sanctuary. Help me not to
worry about the words I say, but just to express my
heart to You and to nestle down close to You.
In prayer, God can still our hearts
and quiet our minds.
I look forward to seeing you this evening for our weekly prayer encounter at 6:30pm
North Raleigh Church of the Nazarene.
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