The following is from a column I had published in the
Jackson Citizen Patriot on Feb. 23, 2007. In light of the bitter cold and
blowing snow we have been experiencing this year, it seemed appropriate to post
it again with small modifications. Stay safe!
These white-out conditions can appear suddenly as they did that day. One minute you are cruising along, then you are blinded by snow and forced to hit the brakes.
Those situations occur in other ways in our lives. One
minute we are cruising along, the road clear ahead of us, then we are
blind-sided by an unexpected event or tragedy—the loss of a loved one, a call
in the middle of the night that a child has been in an accident, a medical test
that comes back positive for cancer or another life-threatening illness. We are
forced to drive blindly, perhaps following the faint outline of light from the
car ahead, all the while hoping we are not hit from behind. All the while
praying.
Somehow, on the freeway, I made it through safely. I don’t
attribute this to having better driving skills than those around me, nor do I
attribute this to prayer, although pray I did. Maybe I was just lucky. Maybe
God was watching out for me, maybe it just wasn’t my time. I don’t know. I do
believe in prayer, and I definitely prayed the whole drive and thanked God
repeatedly for my good fortune of making it through safely when others did not.
But I don’t claim it was prayer that saved me. Certainly,
there were others in the pile-up who prayed just as fervently as I did. How do
we explain why God appears to answer one person’s prayer and not another’s?
I’m grateful for the times God has helped me safely through
danger. I don’t attribute this to any merit on my part or special ability to
pray. To do so would be to see prayer as some magical formula by which we
manipulate God to do what we want. I pray because it is my nature to pray. We
are made by God, for God.
There is that within us that naturally calls out to Someone
greater. It is as natural as breathing. Even when we are not aware of it, there
is that within us that is always at prayer, uttering words we cannot
comprehend. As Paul tells us in Romans 8:26 (NAB), “In the same way, the Spirit
too comes to the aid of our weakness, for we do not know how to pray as we
ought, but the Spirit itself intercedes with inexpressible groanings.”
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