Praying God’s Word – Promises and Power

Praying God’s Word is simply a way to pray. Prayer can be an awkward, difficult proposition for many people. Uncertainty about phrasing our communication with God makes us want to leave prayer to the “religious professionals.” It doesn’t have to be that way. God desires to speak to us and He wants us to speak to Him!

In Matthew 6; Jesus speaks about the wrong motives for prayer. The Pharisees had turned prayer into a public act to demonstrate their righteousness. Their prayers were not directed to God, but to men. In condemning these practices, Jesus taught that prayer should be addressed “to your Father, who is unseen.” Jesus presented a sincere prayer for His disciples to follow (Matthew 6:9-13). Jesus spoke aloud to His Father, suggesting that a deeper level of interaction and communion with God occurs when we actually pray God’s own words back to Him.

The Bible is a book of promises from God’s heart to ours. His promises surpass the qualities of the temporal because each of God’s promises is made by the One who possesses the authority and power to fulfill all of them perfectly. God faithfully responds to every believing prayer that is grounded upon the promises of His Word. Each promise becomes a firm building block which forms the foundation for our faith. Praying God’s Word is like uncovering buried treasure.

Praying God’s Word – Believing and Receiving

Whenever we specifically pray God’s Word, we are put in touch with the heart of God. The Psalms represent some of the most tender, urgent, and devoted prayers humankind has ever spoken to God. It is in Psalms that we discover the writers’ dedication to God, their faith in God, and their questions about God. How familiar are these emotions as we face sickness, loneliness, or betrayal? David’s disappointment and desperation reflect his perceptions of God during adverse times. Like David, there are times when we also cry out to see if God truly cares.

In Psalm 13; David expressed both his anguish before God and his confidence in God: “How long, O Lord? Will you forget me forever? How long will you hide your face from me?... But I trust in your unfailing love; my heart rejoices in your salvation; I will sing to the Lord, for he has been good to me.” David may have recalled how God chose to “hide his face” in response to the Israelites’ rebellion (Deuteronomy 31:17-18). Yet David found strength in God’s promises: “But my love will never be taken away from him [David]...Your house and your kingdom will endure forever before me; your throne will be established forever” (2 Samuel 7:15-16). Praying God’s Word out loud reminds us once again of His promises, which are irrevocable and unwavering.

As God’s children we have full assurance through the Holy Spirit who makes God’s promises a reality in our hearts. “The Spirit himself testifies with our spirit that we are God’s children. Now if we are children, we are heirs—heirs of God and co-heirs with Christ...” (Romans 8:16–17). Believing and praying God’s Word feeds His promises into our spirit. The abundance of God’s promises is our rightful inheritance as His children. In believing and receiving His Word, we experience an incredible surge of faith in our hearts. Our ineffectual doubt transforms into powerful assurance.

Praying God’s Word – Surrendering and Confirming

As human beings, we all share common needs that are emotional, physical, and spiritual. Spiritual needs should receive the highest priority because once these needs are met, other needs will be fulfilled as well. “But seek first [God’s] kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well” (Matthew 6:33). We must make heaven our goal and holiness our way.

When confronted with a serious physical or emotional need, however, it may be nearly impossible to assign preeminence to issues of righteousness and holiness. The young mother tried to ignore the wheezing respirator that infused oxygen into her newborn’s lungs. The surgical tape that secured her child’s breathing tube had inflicted large crimson welts on the infant’s delicate cheek. “She was born with her father’s dark brown hair.” The spinal meningitis had caused her vulnerable brain to swell within her skull. Patches of hair could not conceal the shaven areas with over seventy intravenous head punctures—each one mercilessly causing another ruptured fragile vein. “How I wish I could bear her pain instead.” The neonatologist words echoed...seizures, partial paralysis, or deafness. “What can I do to ease my guilt...my fears...my doubts?”

Jesus experienced intense pain, fear, and despair in the Garden of Gethsemane. Yet He fully understood that surrendering to His Heavenly Father yielded renewed hope and strength. During one of the most agonizing moments of His life on earth, Jesus uttered, “...not as I will, but as you [God] will...may your will be done” (Matthew 26:39, 42). Praying God’s Word is a two-sided coin. Not only must we place faith in God’s promises, but we must also surrender our desires so that our will aligns with God’s ways and thoughts which are always higher than ours.

And so the mother prayed, “[Jackie] dwells in the shelter of the Most High [and] rests in the shadow of the Almighty...Surely he will save [Jackie] from the fowler’s snare and from the deadly pestilence...[The Lord says] I will rescue her...I will be with her in trouble, I will deliver her and honor her. With long life I will satisfy her and show her my salvation.

Praying God’s Word assures us that our requests are in accordance with God’s will (1 John 5:14- 15).  When our prayers are harmonious with His will, our faithful prayers resonate in heaven. As the words of God are spoken, our faith is reinforced.

Understand that God hears all prayers, whether silent or spoken. The relationship between God the Father and the Holy Spirit is so close that the Holy Spirit’s prayers on our behalf need not be audible (Romans 8:26–27). But it is God hearing us speak His Word back to Him that inspires Him to move on our behalf.

When we place God’s Word into personal prayers, we begin to comprehend how much God loves us and longs to enrich our lives. As you trust God with your difficult circumstances and audibly confirm God’s promises, every concern is released and placed in God’s capable hands. Praying God’s Word is the manifestation of His glory being lived out in our lives.