| GROWING
EDGES
In this issue we are centering on the life of prayer and intimacy with God. And
in this regard we can find no better place for help than in the life of Jesus,
the Divine Paradigm for conjugating all the verbs of prayer. Like the reoccurring
stitch pattern in a quilt, so prayer threads its way throughout Jesus' life. Living As
he was baptized by John, he "was praying" (Luke 3:21). Before choosing the twelve,
he "spent the night in prayer" (Luke 6:12). When Jesus took Peter, James, and
John with him "up the mountain to pray," his face changed "while he was praying"
(Luke 9:28-29). After an exhausting evening of healing, Jesus got up early in
the morning "and went out to a deserted place, and there he prayed" (Mark 1:35).
Jesus' fiercest anger came when he saw how people had turned the temple, which
he said was to be a house of prayer, into a den of robbers (Matt. 22:13). It was
after Jesus finished "praying in a certain place" that the disciples asked him
to teach them to pray (Luke 11:1). Teaching And
teach them he did! And teach us he does! Not only the now famous "Lord's Prayer,"
but teaching piled upon teaching. He teaches us to come to God in the most intimate
of way, saying, "Abba, Father" (Mark 14:36). He gives us parables about the "need
to pray always and not to lose heart" (Luke 18:1). He teaches us to pray "in secret,"
to "Pray for those who persecute you," to "forgive, if you have anything against
anyone" when praying, to "believe that what you say will come to pass," to ask
"the Lord of the harvest to send out laborers into his harvest," and much, much
more (Matt. 6:6, 5:44, 9:38; Mark 11:24-25). Practicing And
the teachings are matched by continual practice, not only of prayer itself, but
of intense times of solitude—an accompanying means to prayer. Arising from the
baptismal waters, the Spirit leads Jesus into the wilderness for forty days (Matt.
4:1). After learning of the beheading of his dear friend and cousin, John the
Baptizer, Jesus "withdrew . . . to a deserted place by himself" (Matt. 14:13).
After feeding the five thousand, he immediately "went up the mountain by himself
to pray" (Matt. 14:23). When the disciples were exhausted from the pressures of
ministry, Jesus told them, "Come away to a deserted place all by yourselves and
rest a while" (Mark 6:31). After the healing of a leper, Luke seems to be describing
more of a regular practice than a single incident when he notaes that Jesus "would
withdraw to deserted places and pray" (Luke 5:16). How
Shall We Then Live? Doesn't this cursory look at Jesus' living
and teaching and practicing stir within you longings for a deeper, richer, fuller
experience of prayer? Don't you ache for a steadfast faith, a boundless hope,
an undying love? Jesus—who retreated often into the rugged Judean mountains, who
lived and worked praying, who heard and did only what he saw the Father hearing
and doing—points the way. Peace
and joy, Richard J. Foster
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