Imagine faithfulness
Imagine you with Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane with your fellow disciples. You have just finished celebrating the Feast of Passover. All of Jesus’ disciples are here except Judas. It’s late but Jesus tells us to wait as He goes ahead by Himself to pray (He does that a lot) especially now.
Unfortunately, when Jesus comes back, He finds many of us have fallen asleep. Fortunately for us, Jesus looks at Peter and asks, “Could you not pray with me for only an hour?” Our scripture for today is found in the next verse. “Watch and pray that you may not enter temptation. The spirit is indeed willing, but the flesh is weak” (Matt. 26:41).
Prayer is the “faith-response and belief” that circumstances can be changed because of our prayers. Jesus instructed His disciples to watch and pray because He understood fully the weakness of our flesh. He knew the disciples would need to “gird up their loins” in preparation for the challenges that lie ahead (1Pet. 1:13). They would need to watch and pray! That is still true for 21st century disciples!
Christmas in September
If you haven’t noticed, stores are beginning to display Christmas decorations and merchandise. Even online stores such as Amazon are offering special deals for early shoppers. What would happen, if we as believers took that same approach in our prayer life?
Oswald Chambers, an early-twentieth-century evangelist and teacher best known for the daily devotional My Utmost for His Highest, offers these thoughtful “gems” on the importance of prayer.
-
-
- Prayer is not an exercise; it is the life.
- It is impossible to conduct your life as a disciple without definite times of prayer.
- Prayer imparts the power to walk and not faint.
- Jesus Christ carries on intercession for us in heaven; the Holy Ghost carries on intercession in us on earth; and we the saints have to carry on intercession for all men.
- Prayer does not fit us for the greater work; prayer is the greater work.
-
Faithfulness in prayer
In his book, “Watchfulness: Recovering a Lost Spiritual Discipline,” Brian G. Hedge shares his thoughts on prayer and how it is cultivated.
Never forget the Savior’s words watch and pray. Watching and praying always go together. To watch without praying is to overestimate our strength and sin through our self-reliance. To pray without watching is to disregard the Lord’s command in presumptuous pride.
Watching acknowledges our attentiveness to prayer. To be prayerless is to be careless and self-centered. It results in our failure to watch for the changes prayer creates. This includes changes that take place in hearts that humbly wait for God to act (Psalm 130:5-6). When we pray, we declare our inherent weakness and our dependence on God.
“Watch and pray…”
Because of the effectiveness of prayer, it is important that we be alert as to when and where to pray. That’s where watchfulness comes into play. Watchfulness requires us to be spiritually alert because our adversary, the devil prowls around like a roaring lion seeking someone to destroy. (1 Pet. 5:8).
As we see the movement of evil across our nation and around the world, we MUST watch and pray. Each day, whether we choose to or not, we are engaged in spiritual battles against the powers of darkness which seek to deceive, distract and destroy us (Eph. 6:12).
Therefore, as 21st century disciples, it is critical that we heed Jesus’ admonition to watch and pray. While Jesus has physically gone ahead of us, He has instructed 21st century disciples to faithfully, “watch and pray”. Next week we will close our study with how to cultivate watchfulness.