Whisper of Compassion

Whispers of Compassion

I begin to pray. I start by thanking God for the day, not out of routine, but because I see the perfection in being able to start over, to wipe the slate clean and try again with every new dawn. I pray through my thanks and praise to Him. I'm only a couple months into my relationship with God and I can tell I'm not very good at praying. My prayers are stilted, there are long pauses where I try to get a feeling for what I should be praying for, and most of the time I can't find the right words so there is just an uncomfortable silence.

After a while, I am drawn to pray for a young woman who goes to my daughter's university. I know very little, only that she has a serious illness and is in the hospital fighting for her life. I start to pray for her recovery when I hear a soft voice say, "Hush. Pray now to console her family.” I immediately change the focus of my prayer. Reaching deep into the sadness and loss I have felt in my own life, I pour out compassion for them. I pray that God will be with them to comfort and console them in their time of grief. They are my words heartfelt, for this grieving family. Because I have experienced the depth of their loss, the intensity of their pain, I am able to pray deeply for them. This is where my painful experiences become blessings for others and eventually joy, when I understand that my pain is being used in the service of others. It would still take a while before I would get to experience that though.

About an hour after I prayed, my daughter called me to tell me the sad news that the young woman had passed away. She asked a simple enough questions, "Had you heard?" The answer that came to me was not as direct. Within me the answer was both yes and no. The prompting of the different direction to my prayer let me know where my prayers were needed, no longer for the young woman’s recovery but for her grieving family. I had no other indication that she had passed away, but I knew.

Of course, I felt great sadness for the young woman and her family, but beyond those feelings I, felt another kind of sadness. It felt so perfect to be led by God in that way. I wished I could live my life over again, hearing His perfect guidance and for everyone to feel the blessing of being guided by His hand in such a gentle and loving way. How simple it was to follow His lead and know what I was meant to do in that prayerful moment.

I also thought of my son and how feverishly I had prayed as we drove to the hospital on the night he passed away. They had told us he had taken a turn for the worse, but in actuality he was already gone. I wonder now if I hadn't been so focused on my own fear and pain, if I would have been able to hear that soft, hushed voice that would have led me to pray a different prayer. Now that I have heard that voice softly introduce the truth of this world into my awareness, I’m deeply saddened that I lived my life without it, or that any of us do. When I tell Jacob, his response below is what encourages me now to share my testimony here. Probably the quietest moment I have ever had with God is part of the inspiration for potentially the farthest my words will ever carry.

Conversation with Jacob - Being Led in Prayer

Me:
So last night I'm praying, and I start praying for a young woman at my daughter's school who was in the hospital fighting for her life. I start to pray for her recovery and a quiet voice says, "Hush. Pray now to console her family" and so I do. About an hour later my daughter texts me and says, "Did you hear that the poor girl who was so sick passed away?" I didn't know how to answer her. I knew because of what I was led to pray, but how could I explain that to her? Of course, I feel terrible for the young woman and her family, but I feel sad for another reason too. It seemed so perfect to be led by the Spirit in that way. I wish I could live my life over with that guidance and for everyone to be guided so perfectly. It makes me really sad that we go through our lives without it.
Jacob:
Wow that is powerful! But don't be sad, be encourage to share that with others.

Daily Bread

Daily Bread

In previous blogs, I’ve mentioned that when I started my relationship with God, I had some strange, self-fabricated ideas about prayer. For instance, I would say things like, “If there is such a thing as prayer, I think we get a limited supply, so don’t ever ask me to pray for your dog.” I admit, my attitude was flippant and disrespectful. In hindsight, I’m sure this served several purposes. First, it deflected any honest discussion about religion or prayer. Deeper than that, however, it allowed me to push aside any feelings I had about God, His existence, or the fact that if He did exist, it was more than a little evident that He didn’t care about me.

All of this fit very neatly into my belief system, that was, until God began to pursue me. Suddenly, I was faced with confronting my ideas about prayer. I brought this up to Jacob in the context of a situation that was taking place with my roommate. I was completely bedridden at the time. My daughter would pack food into a cooler for me before she left for work in the morning. We had a pretty casual food sharing arrangement with our roommate. Sometimes she would eat our food and stick her head into our room and say, “Oh, if you’re looking for your frozen lasagna meal? I ate it.” Other times, food would just go missing. We behaved in kind. It was not unusual for me to find one of her Hot Pockets or other snacks she had purchased in my cooler.

Our budget was really tight. For the two of us, we budgeted $50 a week for groceries, which included paper goods and personal items. When my daughter would, for whatever reason, have shorter hours at work some weeks, we would have to cut back even further. There were times I would open my cooler to find only stale, cold rice for the day. During those times I was happy to have warm rice with a spoonful of peanut butter stirred into it, if my daughter happened to be home at mealtime. So I had to fight to accept His direction when God sternly instructed me each time my daughter would bring me a food item that belonged to our roommate, “Do not take anything that is not yours.”

My excuses for not doing what He commanded were plentiful:

► My daughter was actually the one taking it, I mean, it wasn’t my decision to “steal” it, so why did it matter if I ate it?
► Our roommate did the same with us, so it was really a non-verbal agreement we had with her, so how could it be wrong for us to take her food?
► I was hungry, I’m sure she wouldn’t want me to be in my room starving when there was food in the refrigerator. If the situation was reversed, I’d want her to take our food.
► I didn’t mind (all that much) when she took our food when we had some, and she probably felt the same.

Yet, I could feel God’s displeasure with me every time I accepted and ate our roommate’s food, so I started telling my daughter that I didn’t like the food our roommate had purchased, and instructed her not to bring it to me. When she continued to bring it to me (because there really wasn’t any of our food left in the apartment), I finally told her that this was a message from God. I was not to take anything that wasn’t mine, and that included our roommate’s food. She wasn’t happy about it, but she adhered to my request and stopped bringing me our roommate’s food. I told this story to Jacob and he asked if I had prayed for God to provide food for us. I explained to him that I didn’t know how to pray for things for myself. His response was, “Have you heard of the Lord’s Prayer?”

I replied that I had. Then, as was common with our text conversations, there was a pause before his next message. I sat there looking at his message, thinking. I knew the Lord’s Prayer, although I hadn’t prayed it a long time. So, I began to pray wondering if I even remembered the words. “Our Father who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name,” I prayed it with the strong reverence that I had developed for our Almighty God. “Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven,” again I prayed the words earnestly, allowing myself to express the depth of my desire to be part of God’s kingdom. Deep in prayer, I continued, “Give us this day our daily bread…” as I finished saying those words, as clearly as I have ever heard God’s voice, He said, “It has been done.”

I immediately felt joyful and so thankful! Without knowing how my need for food would be met, I knew God had answered my prayer! He was going to provide! Excitedly, I rushed to text Jacob and tell him about what had happened, to tell him that my prayer had been both asked and answered through God's grace. Then, suddenly as I tapped "send," I felt God shinning His love and approval down on me. I have never felt so loved or so much joy! It was beyond anything I thought was possible. It flooded me, covered me, filled me. I had expressed my faith that He had answered my prayer even before I had any outward sign that this was true. and He was pleased. I just knew it was because I had demonstrated a sincere expression of my unquestioning faith in Him.

I looked up at the text message above mine, the one Jacob had sent while I was having this moment with God. It read, ‘You don’t have to pray it, my point is to use it as a template for how you should pray.” I laughed to myself knowing that God had found a way for me to pray for my needs despite the fact that I felt I couldn’t, and then He answered that prayer. What an amazing and perfect God!

A couple hours later, my daughter came home from work with 3 big trays of Panda Express. Her employer had provided lunch for the staff, and these 3 trays of food were left at the end of the day. They offered them to anyone who wanted to take them. My daughter was the only one who showed interest, so the food was given to her. Moreover, there were 2 trays of chicken based meals and the third tray was a completely vegetarian dish, and my daughter doesn't eat meat. God provided for both of us!

The next day a friend had gone out for pizza and afterward decided she wasn’t going right home, so she dropped off a large pizza with only one slice missing to our apartment. She didn’t want the pizza to be wasted by going bad in her hot car. Day-after-day for weeks things like this kept happening. We somehow got another round of Panda Express. My other daughter lived in town and her refrigerator stopped working. Could she give us all her frozen food? “Of course you can!” There was so much food, the freezer was full and we had to start cooking things so we could store some of it in the refrigerator. Every day when I opened my cooler, it was filled to the top with a bounty of food inside!

Of course, this was a wonderful example of God showing me love and understanding. He knew where I was in my immaturity with prayer, so He gave me the prayer to pray and then answered that prayer with an abundance of food. That part of the experience alone is enough to astound me. However, so much more amazing was the feeling of God’s love and approval filling me, covering me, all-encompassing. It’s hard to find the words to describe how it felt, "glorious" is the closest I can come. I never think much about heaven. Maybe I’m just not there yet in my religious development, but in that moment, from the bottom of my heart, throughout my whole soul, every bit of me ached for the day I will feel the unimaginable joy of being in His presence for all eternity.

Conversation with Jacob – Praying the Lord's Prayer

Me:
I think I still have some praying misconceptions and inadequacies I need to work on. :/
Jacob:
Well you aren't ever inadequate for prayer, but maybe we can clear up those misconceptions.
Me:
I'm still working off some of my made-up prayer rules. That can't be good. L I have glitches like how can I pray prayers for myself if I’m praying for something other people are lacking too? Why should it be okay that I put my needs above theirs?
Jacob:
Why can't you pray for both? Have you heard of the Lord's prayer? It probably is the most famous Christian prayer, many non-believers even know it.
Me:
I did know it. I have not said it in a very long time though. I'm not sure I ever prayed it.

[pause in texts]

Jacob:
You don’t have to pray it, my point is to use it as a template for how you should pray. Jesus said that prayer after someone asked him how to pray. Even if you don't say it word for word, there are good pointers.
Me:
Something just happened!!!!!! I couldn’t make myself pray for food for us when I know there are people suffering so much more than we struggle. There are people who don’t even have rice, you know? Then you sent the Lord's Pray text and I prayed it in earnest. When I got to the "give us this day our daily bread" part, I got this big message from God, "It has been done!" Jacob, He gave me the words to pray and then answered my prayer!

The Thing That Happened

The Thing that Happened

It was Wednesday, October 8th, 2014. It had been over a year since my injury, since I had been able to walk. I was perched awkwardly and uncomfortably at the end of my bed, about to practice standing, when I got a text from Jacob. It had been a month since Jacob and I met, and we had become what I termed “God friends.” I talked to Jacob about every part of my journey with God as it unfolded. He knew my struggles, including my self-acknowledged weakness in prayer. So when I realized he was texting me to ask me to pray for someone, I had a flicker of skepticism;You really want my hopeless, second-rate prayer?

The text from Jacob explained that there was a woman in his church whose niece, Amy, was 29 weeks pregnant and she needed immediate heart surgery. They had attempted the procedure the day before, but it hadn’t gone well. The surgery had taken twice as long as expected and now there were complications. Along with addressing her heart problem, the doctors were hoping to buy more time for the baby's gestation. Would I pray? I answered, “Absolutely!” and without hesitating to move back onto the bed or get in a more comfortable position, I immediately began to pray.

My prayer started like all my prayers had begun in the past, hesitant and stumbling. I tried to piece a prayer together, but as usual, there was no mistaking how bad I was at praying. I began thinking about Amy and her baby, who was at risk of being born preterm, and I thought about my experience with the death of my son who had been born prematurely. I felt my sadness and grief at the loss of my child welling up. When my son was born, I had prayed for him, not the prayers of a Christian who had faith, but the desperate, desperate prayers of someone faced with agonizing loss.

I felt a connection with God growing deep in my heart as I prayed for Amy. Then it became something more—God showed me His love for His Son as I loved my son. He showed me His pain that joined with my own. In that moment, I became a believer in Jesus Christ, the Son of the wonderful God who first pursued me; I believed in God and, now, He had introduced me to His son in this most intimate, personal, powerful way.

As I sat on the edge of my bed still trying to pray, I suddenly felt the power of God move within me. I have no other way to describe it. Then, as God's Spirit filled me, I started saying the words to a perfect prayer. There was no hesitation, no awkward silences. The words lifted up for Amy and her child, through me, were no longer my words. I was only aware of what I was saying for the first time as I heard myself speak the prayer and even then, although in English, I still only understood half of what was being prayed. Most significantly there were references to promises God has made to those who have faith, promises I knew nothing about.

At the same time, I felt energy building behind the perfect prayer that was escaping my lips and somehow I felt the prayers I had prayed for my own son years ago, combining with the prayer I prayed now, amplifying my prayer for Amy. (Trust me if I was making this up, I would have left that part out because it makes no sense to me, but I'm telling you exactly what I experienced.) Then, suddenly, I felt the energy leave me as if it was speeding towards Amy. If in that moment someone had told me Amy was healed, I would have had no hesitation believing it. I knew it was true, she would be healed.

That would be a nice place for this testimony to end, but that is only the beginning of the story. In that moment I was changed. Through that experience with God, and His expression of His love for His Son, I became a believer in Jesus Christ, deep in my heart where God had forged a connection with me over the past few months. I was sobbing, and as I began to calm myself, I realized that I felt differently. I didn’t feel like myself anymore. It was confusing. What had happened to me? Later, when I approached Jacob about this, I called it “the thing that happened,” because there were no words in my lexicon for what I was experiencing.

My prayers changed immediately after that experience. They were no longer interspersed with silences when I didn’t know what to pray, or stammering as I tried to find the right words. For the first time, the right words started coming to me easily each time I prayed. If I didn’t know how to pray for someone, I would call on the Holy Spirit to take over the prayer for me. Since that day, this call for assistance with my prayers has never gone unanswered. Through the Holy Spirit there is power in my prayers. God took me, someone who couldn’t pray, and made prayer my calling. I have seen so many of my prayers answered, I’ve heard the Holy Spirit whispering to guide my prayers, and leading me, constantly leading me, to know what to pray for people. When I’m at a loss for words, the Holy Spirit takes over and prays the prayer for me.

It’s difficult to find a place to end this blog, because this was the beginning of my life with Christ. I want to rush into telling you everything that has happened—my struggles, my calling, my heartbreak, my joy—my whole journey given to you as evidence of Our Living God. Thankfully, if the inspirations I get to write these blogs is any indication, in time you will find my whole journey represented here and through it you will learn there is never a reason to doubt that we have a living God in heaven who wants to be in relationship with you as He has with me. "For we are the temple of the living God. As God has said, ‘I will live with them and walk among them, and I will be their God, and they will be my people.’” 2 Corinthians 6:16

If you're already a Christian, I ask that you keep your heart and ears turned to God. We may not all experience God in the same way, but His message is the same for all of us—through a life of faith, faithfulness and prayer, learning by reading and studying the Bible, through serving others, and following His commandments, we will experience final victory in Christ.

If this is new to you and you feel a twinge of hope or joy when you read that scripture, or if you just want it to be true, that is God calling to your heart. How can you respond? You can reach out to someone you know who is an active Christian. You can make plans to attend church. First, though, you can pray right now inviting God into your life. Even if your prayers are stumbling and halting and you don’t know the right words to pray, pray anyway—trust me, God will understand.

Conversation with Jacob – The Thing That Happened

Me:
Since you're going to be busy this weekend, if I have something I want to talk to you about, would now be okay?
Jacob:
Yeah, you can talk to me now. Plus, I should have my phone on all weekend. I just may be very distracted tomorrow. What's on your mind?
Me:
Well, when I was praying for Amy something happened. I started praying and then I felt what I can only describe as God's power and suddenly the words that I was praying were the right words, not words I was thinking of and saying, but just there for me to say and the feeling got really big. There is more than that, but I don't know what is important to tell you and since then I feel different. I can't say better or good, but different.
Jacob:
I think this is wonderful! I think you are feeling the Holy Spirit guiding and filling you. You feel different, huh?
Me:
Yep, different in a "Huh, what is this odd feeling?" kinda way. I've never experienced anything like what happened when I was praying for Amy and you know I'm bad at praying, so that part sure didn't come from me.
Jacob:
Like I said, I don't think there is a bad way to pray as long as your heart is in the right place, and it was when you prayed for Amy? I'm excited for you! :)
Me:
I'm feeling some confusion/turmoil too. Normal?
Jacob:
Normal is a hard thing to say because, as we are learning from the Bible Study book [Hearing God, by Dallas Willard], everyone experiences this in different ways. But I'm very happy you have been praying more. Is there something troubling you? That's always worth praying about.
Me:
L Everything troubles me, Jacob! We live in a difficult world, I feel for everyone who suffers and I have a difficult life myself. I am praying a lot. I find myself praying at times when I don't even remember deciding I was going to pray, yet there I am praying.
Jacob:
That is awesome!