Back in the day, seafaring folk used a "flare gun" to call for assistance when in need, desperate need, on the high seas. Before GPS and long distance radio and satellite communications, they would fire off flares into the sky, hoping someone would see and heed their call for help.
People unstudied in Prayer might too often use prayer as a nautical flare gun, God please do something for me to mitigate my affliction.
But as we grow, hopefully, more mature, and go beyond our rote or formulaic prayer routine, we might paraphrase JFK, and ask not what God can do for us, but what we can do for God.
When we ask God to guide us, if we do not engage in prayerful study of His word, we might as well fire up a flare (prayer) gun.
I saw a recent Star Trek Voyager episode where Seven of Nine would ask questions, but then not listen for the answer.
We speak to God through prayer, but God mostly speaks to us through His word.
People unstudied in Prayer might too often use prayer as a nautical flare gun, God please do something for me to mitigate my affliction.
But as we grow, hopefully, more mature, and go beyond our rote or formulaic prayer routine, we might paraphrase JFK, and ask not what God can do for us, but what we can do for God.
When we ask God to guide us, if we do not engage in prayerful study of His word, we might as well fire up a flare (prayer) gun.
I saw a recent Star Trek Voyager episode where Seven of Nine would ask questions, but then not listen for the answer.
We speak to God through prayer, but God mostly speaks to us through His word.