A seasoned author recently admitted that sometimes he doesn’t know what
he is going to write about until he actually just starts writing.
“And eventually, patterns emerge that I hadn’t even seen before,” he points
out.
In any creative endeavor, as we write, compose, paint or sculpt, we begin to
see something different not just someday in a final product, but in the process
now.
In the same way, sometimes
we don’t know how to pray about a certain situation, but when we just start
praying, God changes not just what we see but how we pray.
We are often so
narrowly-focused and near-sighted that we “calculate too closely either the
limits of the possible or the sneakiness of grace,” says Ted Loder in Guerillas
of Grace: Prayers for the Battle.
In our all-too-finite
petitions, we miss His glory in the grander narrative, in how it is really
playing out, and how God is unfolding an intricate sacred design, visible only
from the other side of eternity.
It is not a matter of
enlarging our field of vision, but trusting God by praying
differently. His response to our prayers extends far beyond an “answer,”
and is certainly never confined to a singular outcome of our own creation.
Bible teacher and
theologian Nancy Guthrie challenges us to consider what we are praying for in
her essay Praying Past Our Preferred Outcomes, published by The Gospel
Coalition. “Scripture provides us with a vocabulary for expanding our
prayers for hurting people far beyond our predetermined positive outcomes,” she
writes. “Instead of praying only for relief, we begin to pray that the glory of
God’s character would be on display in our lives and the lives of those for whom
we are praying.”
When we don’t even know
what to ask or how to pray, God whispers to us, “Just start praying.”
And as we pray and seek Him, God opens our hearts, thoughts, and prayers to a
universe of which we are not even aware.
Now to Him who is able
to do far more abundantly
than all that we ask or
imagine
--[or pray]--
according to the power at
work
within us,
to Him be glory…..
Ephesians 3. 20-21
Monday, September 15, 2025
Just Start
Friday, September 5, 2025
The Whole Enchilada
"It's not what I want," my granddaughter said about the colorful rug her mom purchased for her new room.
Her family had just moved into a different house the day before. Nothing but nothing felt familiar. She hadn't known any place else as home. And this strange room certainly didn't feel like it at all, even with a new rug. Even if it was pretty with pink and blue and various shades of green.
"I don't like it at all."
The rest of the room was a collection of half-opened corrugated cartons, a partially-assembled bed leaning against the wall, the precious stuff of her life looking like a jig saw puzzle that exploded.
"What if you wait until your other stuff comes out of the boxes, like your bedspread and lamp? Think of the whole meal."
"Not gonna matter. Not gonna change my mind."
But later that night, her mom texted me, "She loves it." Even the curtains left by the previous owner somehow coordinated. Just took a little while for the other pieces to blend together.
So many things land in our lives that, well, like a strange new rug, we don't exactly like. The biggest question is what we do with it. Immediate rejection? Or trust God for His sovereignty? And give God the elbow room to bring it all together. Not as an unfamiliar piece to trip over, but something profound that God uses in our lives or for the well-being of others.
"Life is ten percent what happens to you and ninety percent how you react to it," once remarked pastor and author Chuck Swindoll.
And to riff on Karen Swallow Prior's new book You Have A Calling: God's calling on our lives may not be what we are good at, passionate about, or even like doing. But it may be just part of the whole enchilada of God's purposes in our lives. What appears as a pitiful little piece often becomes what is vital, life-changing, and eternal.
I almost didn't accept my first job in journalism. It was, as in the words of my granddaughter, not what I expected or wanted, writing about new products for a residential construction magazine for homebuilders. I daydreamed of jobs in publishing in New York. But God kept me where I was, writing about heat pumps, housing developments, and eventually publishing a book about solar energy.
I didn't care for that entry-level position. But the things I learned about writing still impact me now, decades later. I saw it as a job. God intended it as a training ground. The connections still emerge.
The strange and ill-fitting is not just a wrinkle to ignore or a problem to get over, but perhaps to embrace a new opportunity or direction or attitude.
As a child, at every pothole or dead end, my mom recited, "If you have a lemon, make a lemonade." That's what kept her going in the many hard places in her life and greatly impacted the course of her life as a musician. Trust Me in this.
How many times in life are we presented with that proverbial rug that we think we could do without? An unexpected job change, the mean teacher nobody likes, a move to a place we never would have chosen? What was God thinking? Well, a whole lot more than us.
And He is before all things, and in Him all things hold together. Colossians 1. 17
And then....well, surprise, God works it out anyway. He continues to reveal to us how they fit together in His overall story for us. Some of the stuff we despised takes on a different hue in the rear view mirror. We may not like it, but God still uses it powerfully anyway-- in our lives or a hundred other people around us. How in the world does this odd-ball situation connect to anything else? We may catch a glimpse of His purposes, but we just haven't grasped it yet as part of a complete meal or in God's eternal bigger picture.
This one ill-fitting or unpleasant piece, no thank you, I'll pass. God does not expect us to just grudgingly put up with it, but follow Him into it and watch how little disparate parts fit perfectly as into a Lego masterpiece, one tiny plastic brick upon another.
When making personal choices, the Iroquois culture mindfully considered how current decisions impact not only their own lives but to the seventh generation to come. In Biblical terms, how we walk with God radically changes one generation to the next. That ill-suited situation we encounter --or rug-- may become a family heirloom, an epic story, or perhaps a physical reminder of God's provision and faithfulness.
We will not hide them from their children, but tell to the coming generation the glorious deeds of the LORD and His might, and the wonders that He has done....to teach their children, that the next generation might know them, the children yet unborn, and arise and tell them to their children, so that they should set their hope in God. Psalm 78. 4-6
God does not promise that we will ever like particular situations, or understand why, but He calls us to be faithful in it. Nothing random here. What we encounter and how we pivot is never just about us but resounds for generations.
What we experience is not just a singular random event, or a matter of whether we like or don't like it, but part of the whole. What is God putting together? Not what this situation is doing to us, but what God is forming in us through this. The furniture in our hearts may have to be moved around for Christlikeness to fit.
"I don't like it. I don't want to be here," we cry to God. "But I want you to," He replies. "I need you to." We just can't see how it fits in. That doesn't mean it won't. Far below the surface of our whining, God's got a lot more profound stuff up His sleeve. We're gonna need it someday. Remember, the whole picture.
All things hold together. Even the hard stuff fulfills a purpose, deepens our breathing, confirms a direction, or keeps us faithful right where we are. "I don't want it. I don't like it," is not the point of the equation, but watching to see God's masterpiece emerging from the mess. The book of Habakkuk in the Old Testament starts with For I am doing a work in your days that you would not believe if told. Habakkuk 1. 5
That verse does not promise glory, fame, and a house with a pool. It is not our letting God into this, but letting God invite us in. It is not that God will fulfill, but that He is already fulfilling in ways we may not ever expect. God is a lot deeper than that. He knows what He is doing. Imagine that.
And we just don't see it coming. The rug actually fits perfectly.
Habakkuk concludes two chapters later not with everything to our liking, not something less, but with resounding hope, on which we can stake our lives.
Though the fig tree should not blossom,
nor fruit be on the vines,
the produce of the olive fail
and the fields yield no food,
the flock be cut off from the fold
and there be no herd in the stalls,
yet I will rejoice in the LORD;
I will take joy in the God of my salvation.
GOD, the Lord is my strength;
He makes my feet like the deer's;
He makes me tread on my high places.
Habakkuk 3. 17-19