Imagine that your prayer is a poorly dressed beggar reeking of alcohol and body odor, stumbling toward the palace of the great king. You have become your prayer. As you shuffle toward the barred gate, the guards stiffen. Your smell has preceded you. You stammer out a message for the great king: ‘I want to see the king.’Also mentioned by Justin Buzzard, among many others.
Your words are barely intelligible, but you whisper one final word, ‘Jesus, I come in the name of Jesus.’ At the name of Jesus, as if by magic, the palace comes alive. The guards snap to attention, bowing low in front of you. Lights come on, and the door flies open. You are ushered into the palace and down a long hallway into the throne room of the great king, who comes running to you and wraps you in his arms.
The name of Jesus gives my prayers royal access. They get through. Jesus isn’t just the Savior of my soul. He’s also the Savior of my prayers. My prayers come before the throne of God as the prayers of Jesus. ‘Asking in Jesus’ name’ isn’t another thing I have to get right so my prayers are perfect. Is it one more gift of God because my prayers are so imperfect.
Some day, I hope to hear, “Hey Mack, take the cuffs off him, I think he’s a Hall of Famer!”
Saturday, July 11, 2009
Maybe I should read this one . . .
I've been seeing a lot of mention of this book lately on one blog after another: The Praying Life, by Paul Miller. I've tended lately to shy away from books on prayer (having read quite a few over the years), but this one really intrigues. Here's a quote, which I found over at Barry Simmons' the journeyman's files.
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1 comment:
Bob- Thanks for the link. I must admit I haven't read the book (yet); just found the quote at "Of First Importance." However, as you said, I'm seeing it quoted in a lot of places so it will have to go on my wish list.
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