Perhaps one reason for some of the barrenness in our prayer
life is because we are not like Hannah.
Hannah was barren and prayed to God for the ability to give birth to a
child. In her anguish Hannah prayed, “O Lord of Heaven’s Armies, if you will
look upon my sorrow and answer my prayer and give me a son, then I will give
him back to you. He will be yours for his entire lifetime.” (I Samuel 1:11) Hannah
was willing to give to God the answer to her prayer – a son - before he was even
conceived. Giving the answer to her
prayer to God with that condition set in motion the birth of her first-born son, Samuel.
Some of the barrenness in our prayer life comes because we want
to hold on to the answer to our prayers. We try to keep them close and
protected, raising them like an only child we mistakenly think was birthed to
fulfill our perceived needs. Only in the
hands of God is an answered prayer ever safe.
An overly protected child is like an overly protected answer to prayer.
It manifests a lack of trust in the parent.
As you begin to pray in 2016 utter prayers that
sound like something Hannah would pray– “Lord, if you grant this request, I
will give the answer back to you for your service and safekeeping. Before I
receive the answer to my prayer I release it back into your hands to accomplish
your will.” This kind of prayer carries
with it supernatural potential because only in the hands of God can the answer to our prayers fulfill a greater destiny and, in the end, actually satisfy the
deepest desires of our heart.
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