Praying with Daniel

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Oh that praying would be of first importance, and not our last resort!

Father, we confess that you are the great and awesome God, who keeps his covenant of love with those who love you and keep your commandments. What a privilege for us to be drawn into friendship and eternal covenant with the Godhead, and this is only made possible through the sacrifice of your Son. We thank you for that sacrifice that speaks better things on behalf of your chosen people.

Lord, we are sorry that we have not been faithful to you and to your covenant. At times, we have ignored you entirely, at other times, we have extremely worked hard to earn a right standing with you in our own strength, using our sanctification as means for our justification. We have often trusted in ourselves and things that we have made instead of trusting in you. Father, it does feel as if we are in exile once again; we have transgressed your laws and turned aside, refusing to obey your voice. We are truly sorry.

We are experiencing agonising pain and suffering in our world. Civil unrests and wars, poverty and illiteracy; climate changes and a pandemic, and the list seems endless. The unprecedented dross, degradation and death are decimating humanity and marring your image bearers. We seek your favour amid these disasters that you have allowed, turning from our sins and giving attention to your truth.

As we are covered in shame, we come to be clothed in the perfect righteousness of your Son. Even though we have rebelled against you and not kept your laws, we know that you are merciful and forgiving. Will you please shine your light in full strength on the global church? With your sharp sword, come and renew us and restore us to the place of fervency and great delight in your Son. Open our ear to hear what the Spirit of your Son is saying to us and grant us strength that we might be faithful ambassadors of your eternal kingdom.

Lord, you are righteous in everything you do, we recount your past mercies through redemptive history. In keeping with all your righteous acts, please turn away your anger and your wrath from us. Our sins and our disobedience have made us objects of scorn. Please hear the prayers and petitions of your servants. For your sake, Lord, look with favour on the church. Give ear, our God, and hear; open your eyes and see the desolation in the world. We do not make requests of you because we are righteous, but because of your great mercy. Lord, listen! Lord, forgive! Lord, hear and act! For your sake, my God, do not delay, because your world and your elect bear your Name.

We cast our fears and burdens at your feet. In our restlessness, please grant us grace to be still and to know that you are God. In our unending demands, grant us peace and freedom to accept your timetable and your ways. In our waiting, please grant us a very real sense of your presence and goodness. Help us discern between the good and the best, between the eternal and the temporary, and may the gospel compel us to love mercy, work for justice, and walk humbly with you until the day we see your face. We look forward to that Day when every knee will bow and every tongue will confess that Jesus is Lord, but until that day, please give us oil in our lamps that we may patiently endure to the end.

Amen.

*An adaptation of Daniel’s prayer in Daniel 9.

Nehemiah prays

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In light of all that is going on around us, would you lend your voice in prayer today, following in the footsteps of Nehemiah?

Oh sovereign Lord of heaven and earth, the great and awesome God, who loves relentlessly and sacrificially. Faithful and dependable are you. We love you because you have first loved us.

Please, let your ear be attentive and your eyes open to hear the prayers of your servants, prayers that are offered before you day and night on behalf of the peoples that you have made in your own image and after your own likeness. We are your people living in the world you created, and we come to you because you have promised to hear us when we earnestly seek your face; our souls thirst and long for you as a dry and parched land longs for rain.

We confess our sins to you. We have strayed away from your ways and order; we have rejected your truth and instead allowed falsehood, animosity, selfishness and hatred to fester. We have acted in unkind ways towards you and towards one another, and we have not been responsible enough to look after the world. We have neglected the poor and the needy as we have allowed our love of pleasure in me-centeredness to shape us. We are truly sorry as our sins are many, but your mercy is more.

Our paralysis seems not to be disconnected from our sins and disobedience, but we are convinced of your flood of mercy and forgiveness that you have promised to the penitent. We look to the cross of your Son where mercy and justice kiss, please relent and turn away from your wrath. Please cleanse our dirty feet and cure the leprosy of our hearts. Please clean our slate and dump our past, present and future sins into the sea of forgetfulness.

We now beg you to command your blessings upon your world at this dark hour. We, your people, whom you redeemed by your strength and your mighty hand, cry to you on behalf of your creation, may the flood of healing and restoration flow into the lives of both young and old, male and female. Cause your generosity and goodness to abound, reaching to the four corners of the earth; let light overcome darkness; let truth outwit lies; let salvation come to us all. And through it all, please make us ready to meet Your Son when he returns to bring the fullness of his kingdom. In the meantime, please let us enjoy a foretaste of the blessings of that perfect kingdom, in spite our fragility.Lord, please let your ear be attentive to the prayer of your people who delight in revering your name and give us success.

Amen.

What about suffering?

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High on the list of objections to Christianity is the problem of evil and suffering. This is not particularly surprising, as one needs to only catch a glimpse of newspapers and news channels. They are brimming with reports of all manner of atrocities and disasters, natural and man-made alike. This ill does not spare any known category under the sun. Rich or poor. Educated or not so educated. Royal or plebeian. Male or female. Whatever category one considers, varying degrees of suffering cut across all strata of human existence. Even the wider set of (non-human) living things are not spared.

Some calamities can be attributed to visible causes, and are subsequently ‘explainable’, but others remain shrouded in mystery. To such grim reality, the Bible speaks. Not in mere intellectual rhetoric or trite religious platitudes, but empathetically and ultimately in Christ, a man of suffering and one familiar with pain (Isaiah 53:3).

For the Christian, suffering brings into focus the question of how an all-powerful, all loving God could possibly exist in the face of pervasive evil and suffering. 

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Thanks for reading!

‘Sike Osinuga.