| 
Perspectives
on Prayer
by Darla Isackson
My grandson
Ammon, who just turned two, has always been a cuddle-bug. He loves
to be held and caressed and kissed. Unlike the others who come for
only a quick hug and kiss, then want to jump down and get on with
life, Ammon will stay a long time in Grandma’s lap. I was
holding him today and revelling in the closeness of that warm little
body. He pulled away a little, sat up straight and looked up at
me with a look on his sweet baby face of pure unadulterated love
and trust.
In that heart-stopping
moment, I thought how Ammon’s expression would be the most
appropriate one I could have when I look up to my Heavenly Father
in prayer. When I pray I can imagine myself as a little child on
Jesus’ lap, looking up into His face with that same pure love
and trust, feeling absolute security and a thrill of joy at His
presence.
How different
my prayers are when I can feel His nearness and His love, when I
am trusting Him completely, seeking His will because I know He wants
what is best for me, than when I am desperately pleading to get
my will done! In 1 John 5:14 we read, “And this is the confidence
that we have in him, that, if we ask anything according to his will,
he heareth us.” I need to seek the Spirit always to know what
to ask for, to know His will, to be willing to submit to it even
when it is far different from what I think I want or need.
Open-handed
Prayer
Elizabeth Rockwook,
author of the book When Prayers Are Not Answered, told a story that
illustrates the kind of prayer that brings great peace. She tells
of wanting to take her small child’s hand to lead him across
a busy street, but finding it clenched tightly shut around some
treasured object. She had to coax him to entrust the treasure to
her. Finally, when the child would summon faith in her and turn
the treasure over to the “mysterious depths of her pocket
or purse” then the tiny fingers were free to twine with hers.
She could then keep the child safe and guide him forward to the
destination she knew was desirable for him. She says that open-handed
prayers are like this. Only when we “let go” of our
earthly treasures, our will, our wants, our concerns, trusting him
desiring His will, can we twine our fingers with His and move forward
to our destination. The principle sounds wonderful, but oh, how
hard it is to live when the thing you must “let go”
of and trust to the Lord is the life of your loved one.
In our ward
the most fervent prayers I’ve ever heard were offered for
the life of a mother of seven children. Her four youngest were girls
ranging in age from five to twelve. I’ll never forget the
prayer meeting held in the chapel for this good woman. The husband
spoke, saying something like, “I know that God controls every
atom in this universe. He is aware of every cell in my wife’s
body--especially the ones that are cancerous. If it is His will,
I know He can and will heal her, even though the doctors are giving
us no hope. But we submit to His will, and if it is her time, and
she dies, I will continue to praise His name as long as I live.”
How badly that wife and mother seemed to be needed here, yet she
died a few days later. Because that faithful family trusted the
Lord, they were able to accept His will and move forward with a
sadder but stronger faith. Watching them, marveling at their acceptance,
seeing them pull together and grow in love and testimony, my faith
was strengthened too. The Lord has truly blessed them all along
the way--recently with a wonderful woman who was spiritually prepared
through many trials of her own to be part of their family.
Heavenly
Connection
Earnest prayer is the heaven-blessed golden thread that keeps us
connected with God and Christ. President James E. Faust said: “I
have learned from countless personal experiences that great is the
power of prayer. No earthly authority can separate us from direct
access to our Creator. There can never be a mechanical or electronic
failure when we pray. There is no limit on the number of times or
how long we can pray each day. There is no quota of how many needs
we wish to pray for in each prayer. We do not need to go through
secretaries or make an appointment to reach the throne of grace.
He is reachable at any time and any place” (Ensign, May 2002,
59).
The Bible Dictionary
states: “Prayer is the act by which the will of the Father
and the will of the child are brought into correspondence with each
other. The object of prayer is not to change the will of God, but
to secure for ourselves and for others blessings that God is already
willing to grant, but that are made conditional on our asking for
them. Blessings require some work or effort on our part before we
can obtain them. Prayer is a form of work, and is an appointed means
for obtaining the highest of all blessings” (Bible Dictionary,
752-753)
Meshing
the Work of Prayer with God-given Agency
In Relief Society one day a sister told of putting her children’s
names on the prayer roll and praying for them earnestly when they
were straying; she was certain that was why the oldest was on a
mission and the others doing well. I wondered how many other sisters
like me had been praying their hearts out for years and keeping
names on prayer rolls with quite different results. Oh, that it
were so easy to get all our sons on missions--that all we had to
do was pray earnestly and with real intent and suddenly they would
listen to wise counsel. But perhaps that is a wish something like
Alma’s when he said, “O that I were an angel, and could
have the wish of mine heart, that I might go forth and speak with
the trump of God, with a voice to shake the earth, and cry repentance
unto every people! Yea, I would declare unto every soul, as with
the voice of thunder, repentance and the plan of redemption, that
they should repent and come unto our God, that there might not be
more sorrow upon all the face of the earth. But behold, I am a man,
and do sin in my wish; for I ought to be content with the things
which the Lord hath allotted unto me. . . . I know that he granteth
unto men according to their desire.” (Alma 29:1-4) And so,
if I wish that I could pray all my children on missions, pray all
my extended family out of their problems, pray that everyone might
repent and “have no more sorrow upon all the face of the earth,”
I do sin in my wish. God made agency the over-arching, under-girding
principle of the universe. All children of God must choose, and
receive according to their desires. All differ in their responses
to the Spirit and the amount of time they need to learn spiritual
lessons. I pray amiss when I pray against God’s plan of opposition,
against each person choosing and learning from the consequences
and lessons of mortality.
Receiving
Blessings Better Than We Know to Pray For
So many times our heart-felt earnest prayers result in blessings
far greater than we have the wisdom to pray for. One woman told
of a situation in her family that had caused her grief for years.
She had met with great success in her adult life; her brother hadn’t.
His envy was like a wall between them. Through the years he turned
away in ever-increasing resentment from her affirming love and friendship
to him, his wife and children. She prayed often and earnestly that
he would change his attitude. He did not change, but she did. Her
painful feelings about their relationship dissolved. She found in
their place a deep peace and acceptance of him as he was. She was
amazed. She knew she could never have achieved this peace on her
own, and hadn’t even known that was what she needed to pray
for. In addition, her continuing loving efforts toward this whole
family did not go unnoticed. The wife and children all became her
dear friends and contributed much to her life.
I have such
a great testimony of this principle. When I was praying long and
earnestly for one of my sons, little did I realize the personal
blessings that would come from those heart-deep prayers. My son
did not suddenly change his mind, come back to church, and pursue
the goals I would like him to. But my heart was so changed toward
him that I cannot think of him without an outpouring of the sweetest
kind of love--and that love has changed us both. I have gained from
those prayers the faith to keep praying for him for the duration--for
as long as it takes. By praying earnestly, coming to the Lord with
utter realization of my dependence on His love and mercy, I have
learned so much about what prayer is all about.
The
Savior Prays for Each of Us
In 3 Nephi 17:21 we read, “And when he had said these words
he wept, and the multitude bare record of it, and he took their
little children, one by one, and blessed them, and prayed unto the
Father for them” And so does he pray for each of us. I am
his little child, and so are you. He weeps and prays over us and
loves us enough to include each of us in all his promises. We are
part of his infinite sacrifice and part of the plan of salvation.
We are part of His plan in such a way that He has given each one
a particular mission and blessings reserved just for us. He knows
our names, but so much more. He knows the intent of our hearts,
our righteous desires, our every pain. He knows how much we want
to live on a higher plane, love better than we love. He knows how
deeply we desire to experience the atonement in our own lives, to
be clean every whit, to be a witness of Him by the light of our
countenance. But how can we do all this?
Praying
for Charity
Moroni tells us to “pray unto the Father with all the energy
of heart that ye may be filled with this love, which he hath bestowed
upon all who are the true followers of his Son, Jesus Christ.”
God bestows the true love of Christ when we pray for it. We don’t
earn it, we don’t get “good enough” to have it--God
bestows it. Only through charity we can forget self, feel whole,
and radiate Christ’s love. Is it His will that we have charity?
Undoubtedly. So when we pray for charity, we pray for that which
“never faileth.” And we can pray with full faith that
our prayers will be granted.
***
Note: Last notice
of half-price offer on Darla’s tapes and booklet. Offer expires
May 31st, 2003
Call Rosehaven
Publishing toll-free at: 1-888-790-7040 or go to their web page:
www.rosehavenpublishing.com
for:
To Be a Mother, the Agonies and the Ecstasies, is a unique 16-page
booklet with full-color cover, written specifically to mothers with
grown children. It contains not only the comforting piece Darla
quoted from entitled “The Savior Makes Up the Difference for
Mothers, Too,” but four poems and some fine prose by poet
laureate Emma Lou Thayne. Now only $1.99.
“The
Juggling Act” and “Peace of Mind” are hour-long
inspirational audio tapes that focus on the Savior’s comforting
power in our lives. They are sure to lift the heaviest heart and
give new perspectives for Christlike living. Now only $2.99 apiece!
Also check the
special introductory offer with the book that Darla wrote with Ross
and Susan Woolley (who were involved in the Alta View Hospital hostage
situation) about pioneering clinical traumatologist Barry Richards.
Sudden Trauma! When Life Will Never Be the Same Again contains revolutionary,
gospel-based principles for healing emotional wounds caused by the
traumas of life. Receive a FREE copy of THRIVING AFTER SURVIVING,
the first book to discuss PTSD in layman's terms, with every copy
of SUDDEN TRAUMA purchased before May 31, 2003! (While supplies
last.)
Click
here to sign up for Meridian's FREE email updates.
© 2002 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
|