SPIRITUAL DIARY FOR 12/27/2016 8:13 PM
My Worship Time Focus:
PT-1 “The Petition”
Bible Reading &
Meditation Reference: Colossians 1:9
Message of the verses: “9 For
this reason also, since the day we heard of it, we have not ceased to pray for you and to ask that
you may be filled with the knowledge of His will in all spiritual wisdom and
understanding,”
Now we have
to go back and look at verse eight “and he also informed us of your love in the
Spirit,” and this talks about the favorable report that Paul had received from
Epaphras about the Colossian church. So
we see that since Paul got this report that he was praying for the Colossian
people. Perhaps one may think that
because this church was doing well that Paul may not want to pray for them, but
if they were not doing well that he would then want to pray for them. The truth is that Paul wanted to continue to
pray for them that they would continue to do well as they were growing up in
the Lord. One of my new favorite verses
comes from 2 Thessalonians 3:1 where Paul is actually asking that church to
pray for him, but as you look at this verse you realize that Paul was
complementing them for the good things that they were doing and in the
beginning of the book as was his custom he said that he was praying for them “Finally,
brethren, pray for us that the word of the Lord will spread rapidly and be
glorified, just as it did
also with you.” One of the things
that perhaps we forget to do when we learn that the Lord has answered our
prayers is to thank and praise Him for the answered prayer.
John
MacArthur writes the following about unceasing or recurring prayer: “Such unceasing or recurring prayer (1 Thess.
5:17) demands first of all an attitude of God-consciousness. That does not mean to be constantly in the
act of verbal prayer, but to view everything in life in relation to God. For example, if we hear of something good
that has happened, we respond with immediate praise to God for it because we know
He is glorified. When Paul looked about
his world, everything he saw prompted him to prayer in some way. When he thought of or heard about one of his
beloved churches, it moved him toward communion with God.” I hope this paragraph helps us understand
what 1 Thess. 5:17 means, and it goes along with what Dr. Wiersbe had to say
about that verse when he wrote that this verse means to a believer that we are
to keep the phone off the hook to God so we can talk to Him at a moment’s
notice in both prayer and praise.
Nehemiah is
a wonderful example of one who was praying without ceasing for his heart was
broken over the fact that the city of Jerusalem and the temple there was in
ruins and we are led to believe that he prayed often for that and so when he
was sand in the presence of the king the king asked him why he was sad. Even though this was not looking good
Nehemiah had prayed for the Lord to let him go to Jerusalem and this was the
answer to his prayers as the king would send him there. “Then the king said to
me, "What would you request?" So I prayed to the God of heaven (Neh. 2:4).”
There is a
second aspect of unceasing prayer and that is we have to be consciousness of
what is going on in the lives of people around us. This is a good reason to read the prayer
letters of missionaries so we can pray intelligently for them. Later on Paul would write to them “Devote
yourselves to prayer, keeping alert in it with an attitude of thanksgiving
(Col. 4:2).” He wrote the following to
the Ephesians “With all prayer and petition pray at all times in the Spirit,
and with this in view, be on the alert with all perseverance and petition for
all the saints (Eph. 6:18).”
MacArthur
adds “The two elements of praying without ceasing came together in Paul’s
prayer life. His love for God led him to
seek unbroken communion with Him. His
love for people drove him to unceasing prayer on their behalf. The prayers of Paul recorded in his letters
are a precious legacy. They reveal his heart
and are models for us to emulate. This
text records the first of those prayers.”
12/27/2016 8:44 PM
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