As I look back on my life, there have been many experiences that have
shaped and defined who I am. One of those was being diagnosed with
prostate cancer. I never thought the “cancer” label would ever be
attached to me—a relatively young guy in excellent health with energy to spare. And yet, it was.
I made it through surgery without incident, but recovery nearly did
me in. I was exhausted. I was fearful. I was despondent. I was weak. Was
I ever going to get better? Were my best days now long gone?
For many months I prayed to God for help, and for healing, and for
hope. Week after week, I crawled into the pulpit to deliver my prepared
talk, sustained only by the prayerful persistence that connected my
heart to God’s.
Though I was wobbly and wounded on nearly every front, the more I
pursued interaction with my Father, the more divine strength I sensed in
my life. The more I knocked on the doors of heaven, asking for rest to
invade my tired days, the more I found God ready and willing to carry
the burden I bore.
[Pull Quote] The more I knocked on the doors of heaven, asking for
rest to invade my tired days, the more I found God ready and willing to
carry the burden I bore.
Yes, my knuckles may have become bruised from all that knocking, but
my soul was refreshed, revived, and healed. Healed from despair… healed
from anxiety… healed from suffering… healed from grief. Every ounce of
healing I desperately needed was found by way of earnest prayer.
I’ve always been intrigued by a particular parable Jesus told in Luke
11 that has to do with this idea of persisting in prayer. Here, Jesus
sets the stage for how His followers are to make their requests known to
God.
In the story, a man has the nerve to show up unannounced at his
friend’s house—and at midnight, no less—to borrow not a smidgen of food,
but three large loaves of bread (a day’s worth of meals in those
times). The friend essentially blows him off: “Get lost! I’m trying to
get some sleep in here!” But the man will not be dissuaded from making
known his desperate request. After all, he has an empty cupboard and a
hungry houseguest waiting back at home. What is he supposed to do? Show
up empty-handed? And so the man keeps knocking. And eventually, the
loaves are his.
Jesus taught us in Matthew 7 that when we ask, it will be given to
us. When we seek, we will find. When we knock, the door will be opened
to us. This is the tantalizing trifecta He conveyed to His disciples,
and it’s the same offer He extends to us. Let the truth of it seep deep
into your bones because God promises that it is so!
So don’t pray fleeting, infrequent prayers, but passionate, persistent prayers. As you’re faithful to knock, you’ll find the provision you need is there in your hands.
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