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Anxiety, Excitement, disappointment

18/8/2016

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This week, students all over the country have received their A Level results and many have found out what their next step will be in work or education. For every set of delighted identical twins on the front of a national newspaper, we know there will be others who are disappointed and looking at their second- and third-choice options. For many of us, it will be recalling turning points in our own lives – when you left education, what it feels like to get a letter or an email with news that could change your life, or perhaps a moment when you had the opportunity to give someone else an opportunity they were waiting for.

At these pivotal moments, it can be tempting to turn our attention inwards, or to comparison with others around us, and to miss out on seeing the flashes of God’s glory that accompany anxiety, excitement, and disappointment.

In times of great anxiety, I often turn to the glory revealed to the prophet Jeremiah. In the message given to Jeremiah, God is addressing people in captivity trying to keep their faith and culture alive. In this time of exile, anxiety, and uncertainty, God says, “I know the plans I have for you; plans for your welfare and not for harm, to give you a future with hope” (Jeremiah 29:11). I pray that we can all commit ourselves into God’s plan.

In times of excitement and looking towards a transition and a future, I am reminded of the great promise Isaiah made to God. Unlike many of the other prophets, Isaiah seems not to have been fearful or resentful. In a moment of hope, when he glimpsed the glory of God, he answered the call “Who will go for us?” with a resounding, “Here I am! Send me!” (Isaiah 6:8). I pray that we can all receive and answer our own call with such enthusiasm.

In times of disappointment or despair, it can be difficult to find relief in the words and prayers of others. The psalmists, prophets, and rulers who suffered stand as examples to support all of us through our grief. True understanding and balm, though, comes from the Word Made Flesh who is the Spirit who hovered over the waters of creation, and the Creator-Parent who formed us in the Divine image. We are looking to his example for prayer in our worship series at the moment and there can be no greater, or harder, prayer than “Your domain come, your will be done one earth as it is in heaven”. To pray earnestly and honestly for that time when the world is formed as God plans for it to be – whatever that means for us – is the hardest thing to do, but whatever we are feeling today it is what Jesus calls us to do.

Blessings,
Kate
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When you Pray

6/8/2016

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​This Sunday, we will begin a new worship series examining the Prayer that Jesus Taught (also know as the Lord's Prayer), which we find at Matthew 6:9-13. Prayer is one of the most human aspects of Christ's life and earthly ministry, because it's the point in humanity's relationship to God in which we each acknowledge that we are utterly dependent on the grace of God and make ourselves vulnerable and helpless before the Divine. 

This is not the only prayer that Jesus speaks in the Gospels. He prays for his disciples (e.g. John 17:6-26), and for his persecutors (Luke 23:34). When he prays in desperation to God, he also asks his friends to pray at the time when he most needed the support of God and his followers (Matthew 26:39-41).

Prayer is an important part of spiritual discipline that helps to nourish our own relationship with God and with others. Regular prayer keeps us mindful of the reality that God is at the very heart of our lives, and requesting prayer from - or praying for - others keeps us connected in a particularly intimate way. One of the privileges of being part of a church community is the opportunity to pray together each week and the chance to share prayer requests. 

Sometimes, prayer can be the last thing on our minds, God can feel very distant, but keeping up 'the motions' (saying a regular prayer before bed, or a grace before or after a meal) is a very simple wy of continuing to be mindful of God. Is there one thing you could do to enhance your prayer life over the coming weeks? Perhaps you could try a new way of praying, or commit to a quiet time every day? Maybe even a podcast like Pray-as-You-Go to bring God into a walk or daily commute? Whatever you find useful, share it with others, you never know who you might be blessing.

In prayer,
Kate
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