A Prayer on Fasting

O God, during this season of Lent you call me:

to fast from discontent and to feast on gratitude;

to fast from anger and to feast on patience;

to fast from bitterness and to feast on forgiveness;

to fast from self-concern and to feast on compassion.

 

O God, during this season of Lent you call me:

to fast from discouragement and to feast on hope;

to fast from laziness and to feast on commitment;

to fast from complaining and to feast on acceptance; 

to fast from lust and to feast on respect.

 

O God, during this season of Lent you call me:

to fast from prejudice and to feast on understanding;

to fast from resentment and to feast on reconciliation;

to fast from lies and to feast on the truth;

to fast from wasted time and to feast on honest work.

 

O God, during this season of Lent you call me:

to fast from grimness and to feast on joy;

to fast from suspicion and to feast on trust;

to fast from idle talk and to feast on prayer and silence;

to fast from guilt and to feast on the mercy of God.

 

May almighty God have mercy on me,

forgive me my sins and bring me to everlasting life.

Amen.

Asking Questions in Prayer

"The Conversion of St. Augustine" by Fra Angelico

"The Conversion of St. Augustine" by Fra Angelico

-by Jesse Hill

In last week’s sermon on the vice of sloth, I mentioned that one of the symptoms of sloth is that prayer becomes a difficult, obligatory act.  When we are slothful (that is, when we are apathetic towards the transforming work of the Holy Spirit) we avoid encountering God in prayer out of fear that we might have to change in some way.  As a result, our prayer time becomes a chore—a time to dispassionately recite a list of requests and minor concerns before we close the conversation off with a hurried “amen.”  

Prayer is meant to be a continuous dialogue with the Living God, enabled by His Spirit living within us.  This is why Paul is able to say that we should “pray without ceasing.” (1 Thessalonians 5:17).  When we are afflicted with sloth, prayer becomes an occasional chore, rather than a way of living in constant communion with God.  In my sermon, I mentioned that the practice of Lectio Divina would be one way to move towards a more biblical practice of prayer.  

The person afflicted with sloth might also consider deliberately asking more questions in prayer.  Because sloth causes us to pray hurriedly and only in monologue rather than dialogue, we can work against sloth by asking questions of God and then leaving room for Him to respond to us.  

 

Consider Augustine’s famous prayer:

How can I, who am [a created thing] ask you to come into me, when I would not exist at all unless you were already in me? Not yet am I in hell, after all but even if I were, you would be there too; for if I descend into the underworld, you are there. No, my God, I would not exist, I would not be at all, if you were not in me. Or should I say, rather, that I should not exist if I were not in you, from whom are all things, through whom are all things, in whom are all things? Yes, Lord, that is the truth, that is indeed the truth. To what place can I invite you, then, since I am in you? Or where could you come from, in order to come into me? To what place outside heaven and earth could I travel, so that my God could come to me there, the God who said, I fill heaven and earth?

 

Augustine echoes King David’s question of God: “Where could I go to flee from Your presence?…If I make my bed in Sheol, You are there.” (Psalm 139).  He also echoes King Solomon’s question, “Will God live on earth?” (1 Kings 8:27).  By asking questions of God, Augustine participates in the the thoroughly Biblical practice of asking questions in order to allow room for God to speak.  

Augustine, David, and Solomon all asked questions of God in prayer because they believed that prayer is a dialogue with God, a two-way conversation in which we not only share our concerns but encounter the Living God in a way that leaves us fundamentally changed.

For person long afflicted with sloth, it seems that God is always distant, and thus asking a question in prayer is daunting because the slothful cancer within says that God is too far away to answer.  The slothful person not only fears encountering God—he or she is also afraid that if they ask, God will not respond at all.  The fear is that we might ask, and hearing no answer, discover that our faith is a sham.  

The solution to this is to not shrink back from seeking God.  Scripture tells us that those who seek God will find Him.  If we believe scripture, then we believe that asking questions of God will result in an encounter with Him.  

The person sick to death from sloth should begin by asking where God is.  Is God far away?  Is He near?  Veterans of faith know the “right” answers to these questions, yet our prayers sometimes mask a fear that God is too far away to respond.  Rather than continuing to mask our doubts, we should bring them to God.  We should pray like David, who asked, “Lord, why do you stand so far away?  Why do you hide in times of trouble?” (Psalm 10) This is a prayer that takes real faith that God will listen, rather than letting our words fall to the ground.  

 

Sufjan Stevens wrote a beautiful, David-like song asking these same questions of the Lord:  


 

Here is the full text of Augustine’s prayer:  

 

Great are you, O Lord, and exceedingly worthy of praise; your power is immense, and your wisdom beyond reckoning. And so we men, who are a due part of your creation, long to praise you – we also carry our mortality about with us, carry the evidence of our sin and with it the proof that you thwart the proud. You arouse us so that praising you may bring us joy, because you have made us and drawn us to yourself, and our heart is unquiet until it rests in you.

Grant me to know and understand, Lord, which comes first. To call upon you or to praise you? To know you or to call upon you? Must we know you before we can call upon you? Anyone who invokes what is still unknown may be making a mistake. Or should you be invoked first, so that we may then come to know you? But how can people call upon someone in whom they do not yet believe? And how can they believe without a preacher?

But scripture tells us that those who seek the Lord will praise him, for as they seek they find him, and on finding him they will praise him. Let me seek you then, Lord, even while I am calling upon you, and call upon you even as I believe in you; for to us you have indeed been preached. My faith calls upon you, Lord, this faith which is your gift to me, which you have breathed into me through the humanity of your Son and the ministry of your preacher.

How shall I call upon my God, my God and my Lord, when by the very act of calling upon him I would be calling him into myself? Is there any place within me into which my God might come? How should the God who made heaven and earth come into me? Is there any room in me for you, Lord, my God? Even heaven and earth, which you have made and in which you have made me – can even they contain you? Since nothing that exists would exist without you, does it follow that whatever exists does in some way contain you?

But if this is so, how can I, who am one of these existing things, ask you to come into me, when I would not exist at all unless you were already in me? Not yet am I in hell, after all but even if I were, you would be there too; for if I descend into the underworld, you are there. No, my God, I would not exist, I would not be at all, if you were not in me. Or should I say, rather, that I should not exist if I were not in you, from whom are all things, through whom are all things, in whom are all things? Yes, Lord, that is the truth, that is indeed the truth. To what place can I invite you, then, since I am in you? Or where could you come from, in order to come into me? To what place outside heaven and earth could I travel, so that my God could come to me there, the God who said, I fill heaven and earth?

Who will grant it to me to find peace in you? Who will grant me this grace, that you should come into my heart and inebriate it, enabling me to forget the evils that beset me and embrace you, my only good? What are you to me? Have mercy on me, so that I may tell. What indeed am I to you, that you should command me to love you, and grow angry with me if I do not, and threaten me with enormous woes? Is not the failure to love you woe enough in itself?

Alas for me! Through your own merciful dealings with me, O Lord my God, tell me what you are to me. Say to my soul, I am your salvation. Say it so that I can hear it. My heart is listening, Lord; open the ears of my heart and say to my soul, I am your salvation. Let me run towards this voice and seize hold of you. Do not hide your face from me: let me die so that I may see it, for not to see it would be death to me indeed.

From St. Augustine’s Confessions (Lib 1,1-2,2.5,5: CSEL 33, 1-5)

Easter for Families

 

Easter is a time when we can focus on key aspects of the Biblical story about Christ with our children.  From Palm Sunday, through Good Friday and on to Easter Sunday, we find out how God put into action his glorious plan of redemption!  Use this time to prepare your child’s heart to respond to God over the Easter season. 

How can you do this?

At Philpott Memorial Church we want to equip you for this task.  Check out our Easter for Families handout and try some of the things suggested:

  • Learn an Easter hymn with your children. 
  • Listen to, watch and sing the Easter story with our suggested links.
  • Spend time to be sad on Good Friday.  We have suggested some things to do.
  • Read the Biblical stories covering Palm Sunday through to the Resurrection. 

And don’t forget to make time for corporate worship at Good Friday and Easter Sunday services.

Jan Mutter

Family Life Pastor

Why celebrate Lent?

I’m really looking forward to Lent, beginning this week with Ash Wednesday.  More and more, evangelical churches are observing Lent and other dates in the Christian calendar. These can be wonderful seasons of concentrated prayer and reflection. Many people find that these times help them to reflect on the life of Jesus and to respond in renewed ways to his love and sacrifice. Lent is a time of repentance and cleansing, and a reminder that we are “dust” and that our only hope is in the resurrection of Jesus.  Fasting, prayer and giving are three of the traditional practices associated with Lent.  Whatever we may choose to do for Lent, I pray that it will clear away the debris and help us to hear from God in needed ways. I pray that it will make us more available to God, more able to hear His voice, and more willing to respond in the ways He leads.

 - Val Harvey

 

A Meditation on Psalm 24

Psalm 24
The King of Glory
The earth and everything in it,
the world and its inhabitants,
belong to the Lord;
for He laid its foundation on the seas
and established it on the rivers.
Who may ascend the mountain of the Lord?
Who may stand in His holy place?
The one who has clean hands and a pure heart,
who has not set his mind on what is false,
and who has not sworn
deceitfully.
He will receive blessing from the Lord,
and righteousness from the God of his salvation.
Such is the generation of those who seek Him,
who seek the face of the God of Jacob.
Selah
Lift up your heads, you gates!
Rise up, ancient doors!
Then the King of glory will come in.
Who is this King of glory?
The Lord, strong and mighty,
the Lord, mighty in battle.
Lift up your heads, you gates!
Rise up, ancient doors!
Then the King of glory will come in.
Who is He, this King of glory?
The Lord of Hosts,
He is the King of glory. 
Selah

Reading this passage, I've often been struck by how hopeless it can seem.  

The mountain of God in the psalm is a stand-in for heaven.  The people of Israel often met with God at particular mountains, (e.g. Moses at mount Sinai) which were stand-ins for the actual Holy place, which is heaven.  God does not really dwell on a mountain, but He chose to locate His earthly presence there so that people could approach Him.  

The question David asks here is “who can approach God’s holy place?”  Then he lays out some qualifiers: the one who has clean hands and a pure heart, who has not set his mind on what is false, and who has not lied.  The troubling thing is, we know from both the old and new testaments that none of us have clean hands and a pure heart.  None of us meet the standards David sets for approaching God's presence.  

What’s perhaps even worse, David says that he is describing the generation of people who seek God’s face.  Another of David’s psalms, psalm 53, says that God searched the earth for a person who seeks Him, and found no one.  Paul echoes this psalm in the book of Romans, where he says that no one is righteous, no one is pure, and no one seeks God (Romans 3).  

So who can ascend the hill of the Lord?  Only one man: Jesus!

Jesus made a way for us to enter God’s presence.  The book of Hebrews tells us that not only has Jesus made a way for us to approach God in His holy place, but that the mountain we approach is not even the same mountain that the people of ancient Israel approached.  The writer of Hebrews says that we have not come to a mountain of smoke and fire, but instead we have come to the city of God (Hebrews 12).

So the answer to the “who” in David's question is actually Jesus and all those He has made righteous.  

I’m of the persuasion that David had a unique insight that often led him to think in a messianic way.  Many of his psalms prophecy Jesus in some way, and I think this one does, too.  

See in the last section, the king of Glory.  David anticipated that even though we are unable to approach God, that God would invade our lives.  "Lift up your heads you gates, rise up, ancient doors!"  We were unable to approach God on our own, but God has come to us in strength. 

So, we whose lives have been invaded by the everlasting God, the God of heaven’s armies, are the generation who can seek God’s face, because of Jesus.  Now, we look at the world around us, and we see there are many gates which are still shut up to the King of Glory.  The work is not done.  The world has not yet recognized its King of Glory.  We look around us and we see the injustice in the world, we see sadness and suffering, we see that the world has not come in line with what God calls good.  So, let’s join David in saying “open up you ancient gates, that the King of Glory may enter!”

-by Jesse Hill