A Praying Life: Connecting with God in a Distracting World
By Paul E. Miller
“Learn to Talk with Your Father” - Chapter 4
Asking Like a Child
- Everything and anything
- Repeatedly
- Transparently
- Knowing our Father gives good gifts
Believing Like a Child
- Confident of our Father’s Love
- Asking persistently, confident in his goodness
- Confident of our Father’s Power
- Everything possible
- Without cynicism and unbelief
- Greater confidence in our Father’s power and love leads us to greater boldness to ask for the impossible.
Learning to Play Again
- Not overly concerned about praying with a set structure or pattern.
- More like the flow of a conversation with a person.
- Instead of letting your wandering mind be a distraction to your time of prayer, integrate your wandering thoughts into your conversation with your loving heavenly Father.
Learn to Babble Again
- Our Father understands our babbling, because he knows us and loves us.
- Don’t be embarrassed by how needy your heart is and how much it needs to cry out for grace. Just start praying.
- God has given us his Spirit to help us in prayer, when we don’t know what to say.
“Spending Time with Your Father” - Chapter 5
Spending Time with Your Father
- Even Jesus, the Son of God, needed times of prayer with his Father.
- He set aside times of prayer, in silence and solitude.
- Even after a busy day, he woke up early to go and pray with his Father.
Why Jesus Needed to Pray
- Clue # 1: His Identity
- He was dependent on his Father.
- If you know that you, like Jesus, can’t do life on your own, then prayer makes complete sense.
- Jesus defines his identity completely in relationship to his heavenly Father.
- Jesus’ prayer life is an expression of his relationship with his Father.
- Clue # 2: His One-Person Focus
- When Jesus interacts with people, he narrows his focus down to one person.
- This one-person focus is how love works.
- In prayer, our heavenly Father should be our one-person focus.
- Clue # 3: His Limited Humanity
- Though he was the Son of God, as man he had normal human limitations.
- Jesus didn’t multitask. He focused on one thing and one person at a time.
- He couldn’t focus on his Father and on the crowds at the same time.
- He found solitary time to pray.
No Substitute for Time
- Jesus’ example teaches us that prayer is about relationship.
- When he prays, he is not performing a duty; he is getting close to his Father.
- To grow, any relationship needs private space, time together, and conversation.
- You don’t create intimacy; you make room for it.
Praying Like Jesus Prayed
- Jesus’ pattern of morning prayer follows the ancient pattern of the psalms.
- But this is not the only time to pray; Jesus also prayed in the evenings.
- Jesus prayed out loud in the pattern of the psalms.
- Praying aloud can add a reality and concreteness to our thoughts. We pray to a God who lives and hears.
Overcoming Objections
- Constant prayer and short prayers throughout the day can’t take the place of dedicated times of prayer.
- Busyness is no valid objection.
- If you are not praying, then you are quietly confident that time, money, and talent are all you need in life.
- A dependent life will prioritize times of prayer.
Take Baby Steps
- Don’t set impossible goals.
- Start slowly with attainable goals.
- Don’t multitask.
- Get to bed.
- Get up.
- Get awake.
- Get a quiet place.
- Get comfortable.
- Get going.
- Keep going.