Steering wheel or spare tyre?
THERE are no
atheists in the frontline trench. How true, for when under fire,
even the man who had habitually denied the existence of God begins
to pray desperately.
It seems almost common to our human nature that personal danger
often turns the cynical atheist who thrives in fair-weather into
a hysterical theist who shakes the doors of heaven with his supplications.
Whatever it takes to bring us
to God in prayer must be good. But surely limiting our prayer
only to those times when we feel we need God's help is not what
God expects of us. Many Christians use prayer like an emergency
button to be pressed as and when needed. But prayer is not intended
to be like that.
Corrie
ten Boom put it very well when she asked whether our prayer life
is like a steering wheel or a spare tyre. Think about it. The
driver has his hands on the steering wheel all the time when driving.
Constant attention is paid to it, and it is used all the time.
The spare tyre, on the other hand, is largely forgotten until
a punctured tyre is discovered. Then it takes centre stage, but
only for a while, for when the problem is solved the spare tyre
is returned to its invisible and forgotten status. That, however,
is not a good strategy. After replacing the punctured tyre with
the spare tyre, too many drivers have discovered on lonely roads
or busy highways that their spare tyres are too soft. They had
failed to check and maintain their spare tyres. That is the price
of constant neglect.
The problem with treating prayer
like a neglected spare tyre or an emergency button is that we
then miss the real essence of prayer. Prayer has to do with developing
intimacy with God. If our prayers reveal that our desires are
really for the things we ask of God every now and then, then we
have missed the point. Prayer is really desiring God, more than
anything else.
As Sadhu Sundar Singh (see Page
7) said, "Prayer does not mean asking God for all kinds of
things we want, it is rather the desire for God Himself, the only
Giver of Life." Alas, our prayers often reveal misplaced
or misdirected desires.
WHEN we are converted from self-centredness
to God-centredness, we discover true prayer. Self-centred prayers
are common among Christians even when praying for the church,
as the great preacher Charles Spurgeon pointed out in his sermon
"Ask and Have."
"Moreover, if our praying,
however earnest and believing it may be, is a mere asking that
our church may prosper because we want to glory in its prosperity
then our desires are nothing but lustings after all. Can
it be that the children of God manifest the same emulations, jealousies,
and ambitions as men of the world? Shall religious work be a matter
of rivalry and contest? Ah, then, the prayers which seek success
will have no acceptance at the mercy-seat. God will not hear us,
but bid us begone, for he careth not for the petitions of which
self is the object. 'Ye have not, because ye ask not, or because
ye ask amiss.' "(Jam. 4:3)
Self-centred prayer pours loving
attention on the self. It attempts to recruit God and His help
to help fulfil the self's desire and carry out its plans. Self
remains at the centre of such prayer while self-promotion and
self-fulfilment are the primary goals. The purpose of such prayer
is similar to the "spare tyre" prayer we looked at earlier.
True prayer, however, develops
our intimacy with God, pays unhurried attention to Him and results
in our cherishing and enjoying of His presence. The primary purpose
of such prayer is to know God, not to use Him. Living in an environment
that majors on using people rather than relating with them and
loving them, it is easy for Christians to enter into prayer in
the same mode. They may continue their wheeling and dealing and
bring it into their conversations (or should it be monologues?)
with God. They try to sell their agenda to God or try to manipulate
Him to serve their unredeemed goals.
They need to hear that ultimately
our life is not about us; it is about God. The many prayers that
are prayed from the wretched prison of self must, I am sure, both
bemuse and amuse the angels in heaven who hear them. How odd it
must seem that people look constantly for gifts from the One who
Himself is the greatest Gift of all (2 Cor. 9:15). How sad when
our prayers show that we don't really believe that God has already
written the final sentence in history. Instead, our prayers bulge
with anxious requests and there is no time or space to savour
His wonderful presence. Lack of faith causes restlessness. We
fail to discover the joy and peace of resting quietly in His presence,
of giving unhurried attention to Him as we receive His life-giving
love.
The solution lies in developing
God-centred prayer. We need to recognise that God is at the heart
and centre of our lives, and that our highest joy is to know Him
intimately. We need to build our lives around prayer (and not
the other way around). Our Lord Himself had regular times of prayer,
no matter how busy He was (cf. Mk. 1:35). His prayer was characterised
by how He always addressed the Father -- "Abba", an
intimate term that showed that prayer was essentially a profoundly
loving relationship.
It is when we develop such a rich
and regular prayer life that life's dangers and challenges will
see us keeping our poise and peace.
Just like the prophet Daniel.
When he was thrown into the lion's den (Dan. 9) he was calm and
unharmed. At that point, prayer was not like a spare tyre for
him. In fact it was because prayer was like a steering wheel in
his life that he was thrown into the lion's den. He kept his regular
rhythms of prayer in spite of opposition. Surely such a prayer
life led him to know God in an intimate way. And because of this,
he had a deep confidence in God, whose presence in the lion's
den kept him calm with faith even when the breath of hungry lions
blew ominously upon his face.
How about you? Is prayer your
steering wheel or your spare tyre?