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David Healey
David Healey is Irish, and has worked in student ministry, as head of an international Church of England mission agency and patronage society, and in marketing in the photographic industry. He now teaches photography.
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Book preview
Prayer - David Healey
PRAYER
An Adventure with God
12 STUDIES FOR INDIVIDUALS OR GROUPS
IllustrationDAVID HEALEY
IllustrationContents
GETTING THE MOST OUT OF PRAYER
Leader's Notes
What Should We Study Next?
Notes
More Titles from InterVarsity Press
Getting the Most Out of Prayer
A little research would reveal that most Christians (if they were being honest) find prayer hard. We know that we could pray more, or more sincerely, or less selfishly, than we do now. There are books, retreats and conferences to help us. Most are about how to pray, but one of the most important things we can learn from the examples of prayer in the Bible is why we pray. If we understood a little more of the importance of prayer in the outworking of God’s plans and in the way it can change us, maybe we would pray differently. One of the best ways to learn about prayer is to read and hear the prayers of the Bible. Here are some of the things we can discover as we do this.
Prayer Has Variety
One of the striking things about the Bible’s prayers is their variety. Thanksgiving in the face of conflict and difficulty are recurrent themes in Psalms and Acts, and the central focus of Mary’s prayer. Repentance, inevitable when men and women become intimate with a holy God, recurs regularly, particularly in the great intercessory prayers of Abraham, Moses, Daniel and Nehemiah. Praying for others through intercessory prayer (the main theme of studies one through six) is balanced with heartfelt prayers about their own needs. Prayer for personal circumstances is real, stark and honest in the prayer of Hannah.
Prayer Is Communication
Biblical prayers underline that prayer has at its heart two-way communication with God. Prayer and Bible study are where we talk to God and listen to him, discovering his purposes for the world and those around us—purposes always consistent with his revelation to us in Scripture. By praying we embark on an adventure to become more involved in the outworking of God’s plans. Prayer is not popularly understood to be part of the process of us being made more like Christ. But in many of the examples we will study, those who prayed were part of the way in which God answered their prayers. Nehemiah’s prayer (study three) commences with his concern about Jerusalem and ends with him asking for the resources to rebuild the city walls. Nehemiah was changed through his own prayer, as was the city and the people who lived there. Prayer is both part of God involving us in his plans, and us being remade in his likeness.
Prayer Is Important
We are told to make disciples of all nations. An essential part of missions is prayer—yet praying for others (intercession) is often one of the weakest areas of our prayer lives. Satan longs to discourage us from praying and loves to make us guilty about our prayerlessness. We are fed the lie that we have to be someone with a ministry of prayer
before we ever pray beyond our own daily concerns. In the end the devil wants us to believe that our prayers will do nothing significant. But God longs for us to pray, however we can. Impressive-sounding prayers are not necessary. Read aloud the prayers in some of the studies, and see how long they take you. Count the number of big words. You will be surprised how few there are. Prayer need not be complicated to be significant, and it is the privilege and responsibility of all of us.
The Bible shows us ordinary people, in all their weakness, fear and confused motives, being involved in God’s purposes for people, nations and ultimately the world. We can get alongside them and understand a little of why they prayed and how they saw God. We see people like us being drawn more into the purposes of God, beginning to want more of what he wants and seeing more of the world as he does.
Growing in Prayer
Each study has at its end both a suggestion for prayer and an idea with which you can try to apply what you have been learning in your prayer life. You will get the most out of these studies if you try the suggestions either in your own prayer life or with a group.
The background reading suggested in the leader’s notes is optional, but it will help you (whether or not you are a leader) in understanding both the background to the passage and some of the difficult issues that prayer opens up, as well as help you lead the study better.
God knows that we can all find prayer difficult. Remind yourself (and others) that God forgives our failings and helps us to start afresh time and time again.
Viewed biblically, the adventure of prayer is meant to involve all of us. But it is not an over-glamorized, Hollywood-style adventure. It demands hard work, commitment and perseverance. It will be high risk, at times painful, always unglamorous and possibly very costly. And we will have to learn on the job until we meet Christ face to face, when it will all be different. But it is an adventure where we journey hand in hand with the one who went to the cross and prays, day in, day out, at the right hand of the Father for us.
Suggestions for Individual Study
1. As you begin each study, pray that God will speak to you through his Word.
2. Read the introduction to the study and respond to the personal reflection question or exercise. This is designed to help you focus on God and on the theme of the study.
3. Each study deals with a particular passage—so that you can delve into the author’s meaning in that context. Read and reread the passage to be studied. The questions are written using the language of the New International Version, so you may wish to use that version of the Bible. The New Revised Standard Version is also recommended.
4. This is an inductive Bible study, designed to help you discover for yourself