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Prayer Changes

Prayer Changes

by Rev. Alexandra Robinson on October 02, 2024


Reading: Exodus 32:1-14

Yesterday, I was speaking to a church member in the Star Bright Coin Laundromat in Lewisville. We were at the Laundry Love ministry, and she was sharing how important the many years of our church’s outreach of washing clothes for the homeless and working poor has been in her life. As a servant leader in this ministry for four years, she particularly appreciates the opportunity for personal relationships to be built. As she walks around putting quarters into washing machines on Tuesday evenings, she is visiting with the clients, and hearing about their lives. Some clients share excitement for a job interview the next day, some express concern for family who are ill, and some celebrate for new babies born. When the spare change is dropped in the machine, a change happens in her. Each time she leaves, she takes a photograph of the client sign-in sheet – the names of those she has spoken with that night. This becomes her prayer list for that month – praying for them every day, until she comes back the next month and begins again.

Her beautiful expression of a prayer life offers a poignant illustration of intercessory prayer, particularly in the context of our Scripture in Exodus 32. In this passage Moses intercedes on the people’s behalf in conversation with God. For, while Moses has been on the mountain for 40 days receiving the Lord’s instruction, the Israelites have become restless and created a golden calf. God becomes angry and wants to consume them, and relinquish the promises begun with Abraham. In this moment, Moses is offered an opportunity – to become the next Abraham – and to be the new one out of whom a great nation is made. Moses turns down this opportunity for his own power, and instead, pleads for God to save the people and remember the promises made to Abraham. Instead of accepting a great honor of being the new Abraham, Moses’ humble request to save the people softens God’s heart.

Prayer is our conversation, our communication with God, sharing the needs of humanity – from our perspective. Though God is never a Santa Claus granting our wishes, God listens to our prayers and through it, I believe, has a deeper understanding of the human condition. In understanding humanity’s pain more fully through our intercession, God’s compassionate nature becomes prominent. Like Moses, prayer is our time to release power of what might benefit us, and to raise up the names of those in need.

So in those times when we wonder why we pray, let us remember that God is one who not only hears our prayers, but is impacted by them. As we engage in relationships with those in need this week during Depart to Serve, let us serve them AND pray for them. Whether our prayers change our hearts to release our power, or God’s heart for deeper understanding, may we be confident that prayer changes.

Tags: prayer, serving, devotional


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