Sunday, March 2, 2014

Life Group Weekly Challenge -Prayer

Life Group Family & Friends:

God has put together a great mix of people in our life group.  Authentic community is a way to describe our team of believers.  Real, honest, caring, loving, trusting, giving, joyful, carrying other’s burdens, growing, fun, etc. are all words that can describe our community.  Even with these “accomplishments” in our journey, we should always strive to go deeper to get more out of our time on earth. 
As we discussed last night, the same can be said in our community with our Creator.  We get real with Him, have joy in live, but should always be intentional with going deeper in the relationship. 

Our area of focus during LG was on prayer.  In “Praying for the Right Things,” John MacArthur says that we tend to be short-sighted and selfish in our prayers. 

In his book, Experiencing God, Henry Blackaby says that we pray but then don’t tune in to see God working, putting people or distractions in your day.

I am a champion of both of those.  I pray for health, protection, thank you for this food, help me do this, keep me from that, make my life easier, remove the distractions, etc. 

In The Prayer of George Muller (the story is at the end of this blog), George had confidence before God, loved others, and trusted God to meet all needs. 

My challenge to you this week is to pray 5 times this week in a different way.  Over exaggerate, be completely different than your typical prayers, ask in order to receive, swim in the deep end of the prayer pool, be over-the-top in selflessness.  Then we can share with each other during Life Group what we learned.

Be intentional.
Travis


  
The Prayer of George Muller

For some of you the name George Muller is familiar.  Muller was of German stock, but lived in Bristol, England in the middle of the 19th century.  In Muller’s day there were no laws protecting children from the labor houses and factories.  Living and working conditions for street children were unimaginable.  Muller saw firsthand the needs of orphans in the city.  He and his wife, Mary, took seriously the admonition in James 1:27 which says:

Religion that God our Father accepts as pure and faultless is this:   to look after orphans and widows in their distress and to keep oneself from being polluted by the world.

George and Mary Muller decided that God was leading them to help provide for the orphans and street children of Bristol.  They were convinced that God would provide for every need.  Muller vowed to ask no man for money.  He even went as far as to say that he would not talk to people about the needs of his endeavor or even ask them to make it a matter of prayer.  Muller would ask God and God alone for the resources to complete the work.

The needs of the children were met at just the right time and sometimes at the last moment.  One morning as the children gathered for breakfast they were unaware that there was no food left in the orphanage.  As they waited for their morning meal George Muller calmly said, “Children, you know we must be in time for school.”  Lifting his hand he said, “Dear Father, we thank Thee for what Thou art going to give us to eat.”  As he finished praying there was a knock on the door and a baker entered.  Having sensed God urging him to do so, the baker had been up all night baking bread for the children.


Then there was a second knock at the door.  It was the milk man who announced that his milk wagon had broken down just outside the orphanage.  He gave the orphanage his cans of fresh milk so that his empty wagon could be repaired.